FUNKSGIVING 23 @ IMAC

FUNK FILHARMONIK’S 23RD FUNKSGIVING ANNIVERSARY SHOW
FRIDAY NOV. 28TH
8 PM
I M A C
370 NEW YORK AVE
HUNTINGTON, NY 11743
631 549 2787
631 549 9666
WWW.IMACTHEATER.ORG

MEMBERS $28.50 / NON $37.50

DON’T MISS IT

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A Benefit for Matt Miller

MONDAY AUGUST 27TH
7 PM
IL PIATTO
107 South Street
Oyster Bay, NY 11771
Phone: 516-922-9293

FEATURING FUNK FILHARMONIK, FRANK BELLUCCI ALLSTAR BAND
MR SHIFTY, A DRUM CIRCLE, AND OTHER INVITED ARTISTS

$20 Donation
with all proceeds to Matt and his family

SILENT AUCTION AND RAFFLE PRIZES
Our friend and colleague, drummer Matt Miller, has Lymphoma which has kept him from working for the last year and a half. He and his family are in financial crisis and need our immediate help.

So join us and make it out for a great night of music and love.

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Funksgiving 22 @IMAC in Huntington

FUNKSGIVING 22!
FUNK FILHARMONIK’S 22ND ANNIVERSARY

FRIDAY NOVEMBER 23RD @ 8 PM
All ages admitted
$37.50 / Members $28.50

IMAC
370 New York Ave
Huntington, NY 11743
Phone: 631-549-9666
Email: BOXOFFICE@IMACTHEATER.ORG

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Funk Filharmonik at Piccolo of Huntington

Thursday, June 7th, 2007 at 9:30pm
Come join us for Dinner and the Funk or just hang and get Funked Up
Host Dean Phillipis Invites all interested in a (5) course (5) Star Sit Down Dinner including Top Shelf Open Bar and (2) Funk Shows to call Denise at 631.424.5592 for reservations. This joint is small and can accommodate about (50) for dinner so these seats will go fast. Cost is $125/person plus Tax and Tip.
A $25 deposit/person is required.
There will be no cover for you Funk lovers that just want to hang at the World Class Top Shelf bar.

Piccolo Restaurant of Huntington
215 Wall Street
Huntington, NY 11743
631.424.5592

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The Cutting Room

Wednesday April 25th, 2007
19 W 24TH ST.
BTW BROADWAY & 6TH AVE
212 691 1900
www.thecuttingroomnyc.com
Advance tix at:
www.smarttix.com
$12 IN ADVANCE
$15 AT THE DOOR
10:00 PM

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Thanks to all our hardcore fans!!!

Funksgiving 21 was a total blast!
At the top of the list was the unveiling of
our long awaited originals.
I hope you enjoyed listening to them as we had playing them.
They’ll be much more of that in the future.
Happy Holidays

ps If anyone has any photos of that special night, please share them w/us.
send them to funkinfo@aol.com

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Rocco Benefit In New York City

By Chris Jisi - Senior Contributing Editor

On September 23rd, Manhattan’s Le Bar Bat hosted a benefit for Tower Of Power’s Rocco Prestia, who is recovering from his July liver transplant. The event was co-organized by drummer Lee Finkelstein and bassist Jack Knight of the New York-based Tower Of Power cover band Funk Filharmonik, as well as Victor Wooten’s manager Danette Albetta, and Bass Player Senior Contributing Editor Chris Jisi.

Guests included celebrity bassists Francisco Centeno, Jerry Barnes, Lincoln Goines, Matt Garrison, Steve Bailey, Doug Wimbish, Lonnie Plaxico, and Will Lee, each of whom sat in on a tune with the 12-piece funk unit. High points included Garrison’s boppish blowing on “Credit,” Bailey’s solo piece “Rocco Gibraltar,” “Wimbish’s effect-frenzied solo on Earth, Wind & Fire’s “Shining Star,” Will Lee’s bounding romp through “What is Hip?,” and Lonnie Plaxico’s deep, improvised upright grooves on a 30-minute version of “Squib Cakes” that featured TOP horn alum Lenny Pickett, Greg Adams, Norbert Stachel, and John Scarpulla, and New York mainstays Lew Soloff and Lou Marini. Rocco himself called from California mid-set to offer his thanks.

Sponsors included D’Addario, Samson/Hartke, the Bass Collective, BASS PLAYER, and Fodera; their donated products, along with CDs from the guest musicians and Rocco t-shirts designed by Fotovision Multimedia Corp., were raffled off all night. Four-and-a-half hours later, over $11,000 had been raised for the Rocco Prestia Medical Fund.

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What the Funk?

By Daria Marmaluk-Hajioannou

What is hip? To a growing legion of fans and music biz admirers, it’s the 13-piece, Long Island-based Funk Filharmonik. Theirs is a saga of more than a dozen accomplished musicians, each with their own busy touring, gigging and recording schedules, who come together on a regular basis to drive their friends and fans wild-just for the funk of it.

With their beginnings in the mid-’80s, “The Funk” (as they are known to their loyal following) are not the product of any recent “back to the ’70s” trend. And the players are no slackers, either. Members from this incredibly tight funk “orkestra” have since gone on to play with an impressive list of major acts including Paul Simon, Michael Jackson, Stevie Wonder, Ray Charles, Nancy Wilson, Omar Hakim and many others. One of the Funk’s three lead vocalists, Tom Bowes, left the band briefly to sing for Tower of Power a few years ago, and sax player John Scarpulla currently plays in both bands. Also among the stellar horn section is founding Funk member Ozzie Melendez, whose performance resume reads like a roster of outstanding Latin acts.

Several factors seem to contribute to the band’s continued hype and success: the killer horn section, the energy of the live performances and the presence of three lead vocalists. With varied ranges, the band’s lead vocalists are also backed by several of the other players, giving the songs the dynamics and fullness that many bands can only dream of achieving. There’s no doubt about it; the group seems to have something for everyone, as well as a universal appeal that has been winning over devoted fans among musicians and the general public for over a decade.

It all began somewhere around 1984, recalls drummer Lee Finkelstein, when a group of musicians playing the New York City and Long Island music circuit kept running into each other. They hit it off musically and decided to rent a rehearsal space with the sole purpose of jamming on music they all knew and loved. It was a hot summer and band members remember battling for a spot near the air conditioner while each shouted out material they wanted to cover-favorite Steely Dan tunes, Earth Wind and Fire hits and funk staples like “Soul Vaccination” and “Down to the Night Club.” Still just playing for kicks, the band was mentioned to a prominent nightclub owner who booked them immediately, sight unseen, recognizing the all-star lineup. The club owner’s bet paid off and the emerging band began to pack the house at the Brokerage in Bellmore, New York-then one of the hottest spots for music in the Long Island area. Later, while each of the musicians kept up their individual gigs, The Funk would also migrate to venues in Manhattan and make other select appearances in the tri-state area. A growing reputation and a funky demo tape would land them prime dates at private parties as well as corporate and special engagements, including shows for the 1997 Audio Engineering Society music trade conference and performances for the Comedy Central network.

The Funk is currently comprised of Tom Bowes (vocals), Sandy Rose (vocals), Tim Lawless (vocals), Dave Lavendar (guitar), Jack Knight (bass), Greg Schleich (keyboards), Lee Finkelstein (drums), Steve Finkelstein (percussion), Alex Stewart (baritone and tenor sax), Ozzie Melendez (trombone and backing vocals), John Scarpulla (baritone and tenor sax), Vinnie Cinquemani (trumpet and vocals) and Ron Fox (trumpet). Despite whatever else they may have on their schedule, they return regularly to the band’s roots at the Brokerage. Steady engagements are usually scheduled for the last Thursday of every month, except in November when they host their own special celebration on the holiday eve-now dubbed “Funksgiving”-a live show guaranteed to satisfy the most discriminating tastes just as everybody else is finishing up their holiday turkey.

Over the years, newspaper columnists have heaped praise upon the band, describing them as “a must-see attraction” and “ridiculously good,” as well as encouraging a trend of New York City residents commuting to Long Island to check out the show. Another columnist commented on the composition of the crowd at the regular Brokerage gig, noting that the enthusiastic audience contained the oddest mixture he had ever seen-young punks, longhairs, working class locals, Manhattan yuppies and dedicated fellow musicians-and drew the conclusion that the band must be doing something right. Some kind of magic was happening there.

Players in the Funk Filharmonik would definitely agree. Their love for the material and enjoyment in playing with each other is the undercurrent of the band. In fact, no one expected The Funk to catch on like they did. But year after year, the gigs continued to provide musical pleasure for audiences and players alike-and amassed an impressive book of charts and Funk Filharmonik favorites expected by their fans. “We like to keep things fresh,” says Finkelstein, who adds that members will sometimes play “stump the band” with the audience or mess around with well-known songs like playing a reggae version of a pop standard-on the spot with no previous rehearsal. The audience gets a kick out of not knowing exactly what to expect. No somersaults or stage theatrics, just solid musicianship and the occasional solo on frying pans.

Along with talent, Finkelstein thinks that a major part of their musical success is having the band’s business act together and keeping a good attitude toward all aspects of musicianship. He should know. Along with playing and performing a good portion of The Funk’s booking and business management functions, Finkelstein has achieved notice for a variety of other projects, including playing on “The Bill Cosby Show” and performing with other bands such as Jim Pin.

Despite rave reviews and popular enthusiasm, Funk Filharmonik still hasn’t recorded any formal albums or planned any elaborate tours out of the New York City area. It’s not for lack of love for the project, though. Conflicting schedules and previous commitments make it hard to get the whole band together for extended periods or involved projects. There may be a recording in the works, however, concedes Finkelstein. It may be a living room recording or a formal studio project or, who knows, maybe some smart record company exec will pick up on the fact that this band has an enduring appeal and a live show that just won’t quit. But for right now, both players and fans are happy being a part of The Funk phenomenon that survives and thrives on one important founding principle: playing music for the love of it.

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A Funky Thing Happened…

By ROB TAUBE

“Funk,” like “swing” or “clave,” is one of those musical qualities that’s easier to feel than define.

You can find funk in a lot of different places: it’s there in the tight, muscular punches of James Brown’s band, in the sassy, percussive horn and bass lines of Earth, Wind and Fire, in the suave, street-smart arrangements of seventies-era Marvin Gaye, and in every single thing Stevie Wonder has ever done.

“It’s more of an attitude than anything else,” said drummer Lee Finkelstein of Funk Filharmonik, a 12-piece band appearing next week at Le Bar Bat.

“It started in New Orleans in the fifties,” Finkelstein said. “Drummers started going from one-bar phrases to two and even four-bar phrases, and that created a real edge. Later on, in the sixties, [drummer] Clayton Fillyau invented the James Brown beat. Then bands like Sly Stone and Tower of Power added more horns, and the horn section became like a percussion instrument. Eventually, it developed into an enormous groove.”

With their five horns, two singers, and five-piece rhythm section, the Filharmonik is dedicated to the perpetuation of that groove. Their shows are full of vigor and intensity from start to finish, with slow or mid-tempo tunes placed sparsely in the set just to break things up. Almost everyone in the crowd hits the dance floor, and those that don’t can be seen blissfully gyrating where they sit or stand.

The group has been working Le Bar Bat once a month for nearly four years. The club’s midtown location makes it a good place to be seen and pick up jobs–plus top-notch musicians who back up stars like David Letterman, Chaka Khan, the Neville Brothers, and Madonna have become friendly with the band and have even played the gig on occasion.

The Filharmonik just celebrated their 16th anniversary at a club called the Brokerage in Bellmore, Long Island, and they have no plans of breaking up or slowing their schedule anytime soon.

“We started out totally for fun, just to play the music, and it became this phenomenon,” Finkelstein said.

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Review from the Island Ear

“The quality and universal appeal of a funk show is unmistakably indicated by their diversified audience; all music fans need to dip from this well.”

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