Starring NYC (Columbia University)
http://www.savingcountrymusic.com/adam-matta-exemplifies-creative-cross-genre-collaboration
http://www.examiner.com/article/5-minutes-with-new-york-beatboxer-adam-matta
“Adam, the embodiment of a human musical instrument, backed [Rhiannon Giddens] up with perfectly timed beats and phonic scratching. When the Luminescent Orchestrii joined them on stage, Adam's horn-sounds were corporeal and sharp, a true virtuoso of aural orchestration.” Examiner.com (NY)
http://www.savingcountrymusic.com/adam-matta-exemplifies-creative-cross-genre-collaboration
http://www.examiner.com/article/5-minutes-with-new-york-beatboxer-adam-matta
“Adam, the embodiment of a human musical instrument, backed [Rhiannon Giddens] up with perfectly timed beats and phonic scratching. When the Luminescent Orchestrii joined them on stage, Adam's horn-sounds were corporeal and sharp, a true virtuoso of aural orchestration.” Examiner.com (NY)
“And then
there was the incredible Matta, able to use his voice to make a mournful
trumpet solo or thumping bass solo, or lay down a jaw-dropping,
how-does-he-do-that hip-hop beat behind the thumping hit "Hit 'Em Up
Style." Matta even took a turn at lead vocals for a country lament about
how his cheating woman makes it hard for him to "smile and beatbox at the
same time." Madison.com
“The east side was abuzz after the Carolina Chocolate Drops wowed a big
crowd at last summer’s Orton Park Festival, so small wonder that the Barrymore
Theatre was packed last Friday night to see the band’s return to town. But the
band member everybody was talking about after the show wasn’t even part of the Drops
last summer. Human beatbox maestro Adam
Matta joined the band late last year, and his vocal pyrotechnics were
astounding, whether he was adding a mournful trumpet under a ballad or a
complex funk drumbeat underneath the Blu Cantrell cover “Hit ’Em Up Style.”
Again and again, you marveled, “How are those sounds coming from that guy?”
Square
"Man, I
can feel the 808 coming from your f@!!n chest!!!" Henry Rollins
“…a wizard… he went beyond
beat-boxing. It was as if Girl Talk's music lived inside him. At one point, he
even busted out the f*cking Tom Tom Club!” Detroit Metrotimes
“[Adam Matta
was]..a treat…” New York Times
"Like a
John Coltrane solo, Adam's Beat Boxing creates narratives which mere words
could never accomplish." Reg E Gaines, playwright, Bring in da Noise,
Bring in da Funk
"...beatbox
maestro..." Wired
"...virtuoso..."
Flavorpill
"....brilliant...like
sonic abstract expressionism..." Ithaca
"...clever..."
The Star Tribune
"......his
ability to remix his own voice is remarkable, at first singing over a synced
beat and then slowing it down, speeding it up, dubbing, scratching, even using
the layrngeal equivalent of a wah-wah pedal. He's wonderful to watch in these
moments, right hand on the mic, left hand flailing in time, drops of spit and
sweat flying off him. He must get terribly dehydrated...." Village Voice
"...Matta
is the soul of ['Beatbox Bard'], and because his mic covers his face
throughout, we only see his impassive almond eyes and his quiet, rhythmic
physical presence — until the curtain call, when the mic drops and the person
behind the performer breaks through. With throat, tongue, voice and breath he
creates not just beatbox rhythms (an urban tradition already a quarter-century
old), underscoring or counterpointing the play's action, but an entire
soundscape..." Ithaca Journal
"...incredible..."
Art or Something Like It, CUNY TV
"His
beats are unsurpassable, but what really makes this guy wail is the mind inside
the body heretic." Lynn Book, professor, Sarah Lawrence College
“Matta is a focal point of any performance. His
vocal-pyrotechnics include evocations of drum & bass and jazz combos to
horn arrangements and hip-hop. While he defies categorization, he could be said
to fit into the progressive realm of "crossover jazz", a la
performance art. You'll find him blending a unique approach to live vocals with
layered realtime, electronic wizardry. His collaborations are likely to
resonate with fans of anyone from Bobby McFerrin (with whom he has worked) to
DJ Logic.” Mapcidy
“A lot of people have heard of beatboxing, but
they haven't seen anything like Adam. Adam is a master, a dynamo.” Dom Flemons,
of the Carolina Chocolate Drops, in Mother Jones
“Matta is a
human beatboxer who can do absolutely unbelievable things with
nothing more than a microphone.” Mother Jones
“his
presence is a reverent percussive touch” - PopMatters, July 2012
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