| Status | new collaborative album with Jamaican reggae legends, Sly and Robbie, out next month!! |
|
Join the Mailing List |
AMP FIDDLER Biograpy
Amp Fiddler is an accomplished musician who has shared stages and studios with everyone from Prince and George Clinton to Primal Scream and underground
"I think the essence of the second record, and what makes the difference, is that I had a lot of different energies," he says. "Last time, a lot of what was on there were old songs that I had to finish, by adding new parts to the old, but this one is starting from fresh. And I think that's liberating and empowering. This time I put my own vision together."
Afro Strut, Amp's second solo album, finds him stepping onwards and upwards as he continues to define his own, very singular style. It's also a record made with reference to a wider world – a world that has warmly embraced Amp and his music. Two tracks – Right Where You Are and Ridin' – were recorded in
Waltz Of A Ghetto Fly set an impressive benchmark for Amp's future music to match, but with Afro Strut he shows how to follow up a cult classic. The most striking contrast between the two records is in song structure: Fiddler has tweaked his formula, and replaced some of Ghetto Fly's looser jam-based compositions with tighter, more traditional song forms, and as a consequence his lyrics, which had tended towards the universal but unspecific, have now solidified somewhat. "I'm always happy with the songs I write, regardless of what anybody thinks," he emphasises, "but I guess we all have something we have to grow towards, and there's always areas for learning. We all have to do better at something."
That kind of humility is rare in today's me-first, celebrity-lust culture, but Afro Strut proves that being honest with yourself as an artist can reap massive dividends. Writing mainly at the piano – rather than the Ghetto Fly approach of assembling songs piecemeal from different jams and ideas-generation sessions – gave Amp a tighter focus.
Amp considers the records to be from different viewpoints – essentially, Ghetto Fly was the world seen through the eyes of a child, in simplistic, clearly defined terms; Afro Strut, instead, reverberates to an inner rhythm, and concerns itself more with the nuances and subtleties an of an adult point of view. With "Waltz" Amp gave us an innocent, open-hearted perspective of neighbourhood life - his testament to everything he saw round about him, from the ghettofly characters he'd watch from his porch to scenes from his elder brothers' lives, all mixed in with his unique take on love and relationships. The journey he continues with Afro Strut is necessarily different, reflective of the more solid standpoint his experiences as a touring musician around the globe have given him. Last time out, you know how he felt, and got a good idea about how he lives his life and views the world: this time, you're there beside him as he wanders around, taking in the sights and sounds, meeting friends, hanging out and chewing the fat.
Though by no means religious, Amp is deeply spiritual, and this side of him comes out in tracks like Faith, another collaboration with the former Tony, Toni, Tone and Lucy Pearl mastermind Raphael Saadiq, and Heaven, a duet with Stephanie McKay. "Heaven is really kind of like a traditional soulful song that really reminds me of something from the past," Amp says. "I think that spiritual side of me is always there, and it's calming to know that you can bring that to an audience."
As before, most of the record was made at
It was to
Afro Strut is a record that reflects not just the life experiences but the musical make-up of its creator. After learning piano as a child, Fiddler studied music at
Amp's low profile through the 1990s can be put down to both his remarkable talent for landing background work on important records – he was asked to sit in on a session for a demo after an acquaintance spotting him walking down a New York street, and when the artist, Maxwell, was signed, Amp ended up helping make his acclaimed Urban Hang Suite debut – and the time he has to take to raise his son. A single parent, Amp addresses the difficulties of the lifestyle on Afro Strut's Find My Way, though the song is more about the experiences of a close friend than his own. "It's about his situation with child support, and the women he has who keep him locked in that situation," Amp sighs. "It affected me differently, because I choose to be responsible to my son. I think that's important, but not everybody has the possibility to do that with their child."
Afro Strut continues to reflect Amp's day-to-day life on Seven Mile, but draws deeper on the experiences he's faced bringing up his son as a single parent; the environment he savoured and the experiences he's learned about from being around the kids who hang out at
Amp will always keep moving forward – and as he embarks on the next stage of his journey, bringing Afro Strut to the world, he seems ready for whatever the experience will throw at him. But most of all, he's itching to bring another little bit of Seven Mile to the rest of the world.
http://www.ampfiddler.com/
http://www.myspace.com/amp
http://music.blackplanet.c
http://www.virb.com/ampfid



Amp Fiddler




This artist recommends


