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Color Red Records: A Label, Sound, and Vision

Courtesy John R. Wisdom
We want people to recognize Color Red as a guarantee of quality, as a must-have label.
Eddie Roberts
Eddie Roberts
guitar
The New Mastersounds
band / ensemble / orchestraRoberts took the long road to Color Red Music headquarters on Colorado Boulevard in Denver. Born in Wales, he left home at eighteen to join the Leeds College of Music (UK) in 1989 and founded the soulful, retrofunk small combo The New Mastersounds a decade later (1999). (

Wes Montgomery
guitar1923 - 1968

Buddy Montgomery
piano1930 - 2009
A multi-instrumentalist who plays guitars, percussion, and other instruments on The New Mastersounds' The Deplar Effect (2022), Roberts knows his way around the sound of music. But the business of music marches to a completely different beat. "I know how to make good music, I have a great network, but in terms of broadcasting, how to monetize YouTube, I have no ideaand I don't want to have a clue," Eddie explained.
Roberts had more than a clue, however, about who would have a clue and eventually partnered with a team of industry experts to help design a platform to help independent musicians build their own communities and careers launching Color Red in 2018.
In addition to Roberts who serves as President and artistic director, Color Red's current core personnel consists of Leah Concialdi (Director of PR & Marketing), John Lawrence (CFO), Nick Houchens (Operations Manager), Chris Ball (Graphic Designer), Brandon Jay (Distribution Coordinator), and Dylan Brown (Studio Manager). Musicians can linger in writing and recording their music at Color Red's Denver studio because they can stay for dinner and spend the night instead of shutting down, packing up, and leaving for a restaurant or hotel. And their fans can watch videos from the sessions (including interviews) alongside streaming or downloading the final productions from the label's website. "We want people to recognize Color Red as a guarantee of quality, as a must-have label," said Roberts.

Reed Mathis
bass, electricClay Welch
guitarThe above is more than writer's hyperbole: It really helps to read Mathis' vision and purpose for Electric Beethoven in his amazing liner notes before digging into this music. Mathis unravels and weaves a narrative thread that connects the histories of Caribbean, jazz, hip-hop, and dance music through the city of New Orleans and the person of

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971
Hear No Evil lands in your ear with stunning audio crispness and clarity as it rockets through and orbits around Beethoven's classics "Ode to Joy" and "Fur Elise" and familiar refrains from his Fifth and Seventh Symphonies. Mathis' arrangement smooths out "The Fifth" into a trip-hoppy four/four head-bobbing beat, and its uncluttered production creates sonic room for the groove to keep expanding as it circles through seven minutes. In the middle section, the drums slip and slide into a more pronounced swing-jazz beat and pull the rest of the ensemble into a New Orleans stroll! "The Fifth" is an excellent introduction to the "Classical Funk in Orbit" sound and feel of Electric Beethoven.
The band shimmies into "Ode to Joy" on a slinky rhythm guitar riff that slithers as if lifted from a

Prince
multi-instrumentalist1958 - 2016

The Meters
band / ensemble / orchestraElectric Beethoven enters "The Seventh" on a big, bouncy beat and a guitar riff that borrows its sound from the signature James Bond guitar riff, introducing an air of mystery later picked up by an eerie synthesizer melody that floats over and haunts the rest of the arrangement. Drummer Raymer leads the band into a tumbling doubling of the tempo to close "The Seventh" like a supercharged space-age samba.

Love & Gravity addresses these two heavy topics in relaxed soul-funk blended by producer Kelly Finnigan (from San Francisco's soul stirrers " data-original-title="" title="">Monophonics) into a slippery soulful sound. Even its relative briefnessless than forty minuteshelps Love & Gravity feel like a classic "two sides, twenty minutes" vinyl LP and sound like music from inventive jazz-funk pioneers

Roy Ayers
vibraphone1940 - 2025
On "For the Better," producer Finnigan builds the band into a thick groove that wraps around lead vocalist Richard Love like a soft, comforting soul blanket. Love's voice naturally suggests the late

Donny Hathaway
vocals1945 - 1979
"Take You Home (To Mother)" almost seems too traditional a sentiment to express in its whirlpool of psychedelic funk. The ensemble vocal chorus, spacy production, Leo Plummer's shimmering guitar, and Taylor's bass depth bombs oddly come together like wobbly, off-center

Love & Gravity sunsets with its title track, which floats on waves of mellow electric blue sound into a hippie-soul mantra about reaching for universal love. Fuzztone guitar leads the ensemble higher in sound and intensity, setting up keyboards which pull Love's vocal up to the top of the mix, which then leads the chorus into a cinematic closing fade.

The different global influences on Euforquestra (their website advises: "think euphoria + orchestra") evident from their self-produced 2006 set Explorations in AfroBeat (subtitled A fusion of Nigerian and Cuban music rooted in Yoruba tradition) and on subsequent sets like Fire (2014) still sound loud and proud. These Afrobeat, Afro-Cuban, and Caribbean strains help weave together the band's unique, world music overall sound.
The leadoff "Arizona to Georgia" kicks this set open from its pounding opening drumbeat. Sharp and sticky rhythm guitar simultaneously chops up the rhythm but holds it together, ushering in a funk-with-vocals jam that suggests groove bands like

Ozomatli
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1995
In 2020, Euforquestra traveled to The Democratic Republic of the Congo through the US Department of State's Arts Envoy Program for Exchange Programs, and brought "Show Me the Way" by Congolese pop star " data-original-title="" title="">Papa Wemba, shimmering from hot juju guitars and soaring African chorus, home for this Color Red debut.
The longest track, "Higher," combines the quicksilver rhythms of Africa and the Caribbean, a big and bouncy R&B horn sound, and jazz flexibility and improvisation into the best music of this set, especially the energetic and free-flowing solos by trombonist " data-original-title="" title="">Scott Flynn and drummer " data-original-title="" title="">Jeff Peterson.
The slinky rhythm, soulful falsetto, and seductive sound would have made "Satisfied" another first-rate

Prince
multi-instrumentalist1958 - 2016


Telmo Fernandez
guitarYarel Hernandez
bassChristian Delgado
drumsThe leader's guitar playing embodies the overall classic 1970s Latin jazz sound and production polish on "El Maldecido"especially Fernandez' electric guitar, which floats and stings in the languid ballad "Mayabe," for example, with the needlepoint sharpness yet hazy blue mellow of forebearers

Grant Green
guitar1935 - 1979

Wes Montgomery
guitar1923 - 1968
"Cuchifrito Pa' Los Pollos" rips into its lusty, vibrant groove like a racecar roaring down an open speedway. Percussion and piano pour fuel on each other's rhythmic fires, while horns blast the landmark hook from "Never Go Back to Georgia" as an ensemble and then explode into a round of saxophone and trumpet solos. As the first serving, "Cuchifrito Pa' Los Pollos" is a great opening tune.
Two other pieces sumptuously celebrate the musical brotherhood that pulses like hot, thick blood throughout Latin America and the Caribbean. Piano sets up "Mis Hermanos Latinoamericanos" with a rollicking bounce, and while this song features male and female vocals, the leader's electric guitar also sings: Fernandez plays in a mellow tone, slightly behind the beat so it feels more relaxed, with notes coming down like cool blue frost which covers then melts into the music.
"El Maldecido" culminates in the epic "Rumberos Latinamericanos." All the percussion, horns, basslines, and vocals seem to flow through Rey's powerful piano as a continuous stream of Latin sound that the leader's guitar explores in a joyous sound, brimming with technique and emotion. As this last song winds down, it feels like Telmo Fernandez & the Latin Soul Beat finally cut loose. (Note: Temlo Fernandez has passed since this recording, leaving this document of his musical spirit.)


Tim Carman
drumsMatthew Stubbs
clarinet
Steve Fell
guitarKen Clark
organ, Hammond B3Tim Carman Trio
band / ensemble / orchestraWith eight tunes in forty minutes, Key Lime approximates the length as well as the sound of one of those classic soul-jazz albums by artists such as Jimmy Smith,

Grant Green
guitar1935 - 1979

Jimmy McGriff
organ, Hammond B31936 - 2008

Pat Martino
guitar1944 - 2021
"Blues For Bob" opens this set with more than seven minutes of full throttle organ trio funk energy. Fell unravels a nearly perfect guitar solo, tossing chords which land as cool and slick as blue satin sheets, then peeling off knotty yet mellow blue licks, all powerful echoes of

Kenny Burrell
guitar, electricb.1931
Carmen's hard yet articulate drumming also drives tunes by mainstay jazz composers

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930

Bud Powell
piano1924 - 1966
Eddie Roberts has described Carman's soulful expression of the genre as "soul-jazz how it's supposed to sound."


The New Mastersounds
band / ensemble / orchestraThe Deplar Effect first sounds cut from the same small combo organ funk style and sound of Key Lime but then it grows into different branches and fruit. Roberts's electric rhythm guitar hook is jangly and grabby, but drummer
Simon Allen
saxophone, tenor
Georgie Fame
piano and vocalsb.1943
Add vocalist " data-original-title="" title="">Lamar Williams Jr., son of late Allman Brothers' bassist
Lamar Williams
bass, electric
Living Colour
band / ensemble / orchestrab.1984
Several other titles also seem influenced by the band's recording location in Iceland. The tight instrumental work and crisp turnarounds in "Let Me in From the Cold" twist and shout out an up-tempo nod to 1960s vocal jazz, while Williams' hearty vocal begs a cold-hearted woman to try a little tenderness, all in three white-hot minutes.
The instrumental "Hot Tub" manages to maintain its warm and natural, organic group sound and yet flatters each contributing voiceTatton's groove-a-licious keyboards, Roberts' tangy and twangy electric guitar, Allen's fat backbeat and Shand's cool and steady bassin a production that sounds as cold and distant as Iceland.

Nikki Glaspie
drums
Robert Walter
organ, Hammond B3
George Porter Jr.
bassb.1947

The Meters
band / ensemble / orchestraThe recording was brought back from Iceland to Color Red studios in Colorado. Subsequently (and completely unrelated), Big Chief

Donald Harrison
saxophone, altob.1960

Roy Haynes
drums1926 - 2024

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020

Terence Blanchard
trumpetb.1962

Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990

Other Color Red subsidiaries include Color Red France, which represents Color Red throughout Europe, remix curation & European A&R via Marcos Flores (aka DJ Marcos Boricua), Color Red Japan, and sublabel partners that include Floki Studios, and Buena Vista West Records.
Tracks and Personnel:
Hear No EvilTracks: The Fifth; Elise; Ode to Joy; Moonlight Sonata; The Path; The Seventh; The Seventh (Michael Menert Remix); The Fifth (Tae Meyulks Remix); New Moon; Ode to Joy (Combsy Remix); Elise (Sidecar Tommy Remix); New Path; Ramps & Vamps; To Love the World.
Personnel: Reed Mathis: bass, musical arrangement; Todd Stoops: keyboards, electric organ; Clay Welch: guitar; Josh Raymer: drums; Jason Hann: percussion; Karl Denson: saxophone; Scott Flynn: trombone; Drew Sayers: tenor saxophone; Jonny Jyemo: drums; Ryan Jalbert: electric guitar; Dan Africano: bass; Michal Menert: remixer; Sidecar Tommy: remixer; Tae Meyulks: remixer; Combsy: remixer.
Love & Gravity
Tracks: Alone; For the Better; Take You Home (To Mother); Reflection; Feel Right; 10:28; Righteous Walk; S.O.L.; Love & Gravity.
Personnel: Leo Plummer: electric guitar, background vocals, acoustic guitar; Richard Love: vocals; Brian Swislow: percussion, synthesizer, keyboards, acoustic piano, background vocals, talk box; Lex Razon: drums; Peter L. Ciotti IV: drums; Thatcher Holvick-Norton: percussion, congas, drums; Ian Taylor: electric bass guitar, background vocals, synthesizer; Kelly Finnigan: background vocals; Jonathan Woods: vocals.
While We Still Got Time
Tracks: Arizona to Georgia; Giving It All; Show Me the Way; Move the Earth; Still Got Time; Higher; Muck; Satisfied; So She Feels Better; Hands on the Wheel.
Personnel: Matthew Wright: vocals, clavinet, Fender Rhodes, electric organ; Mike Tallman: guitar, background vocals; Otis Lande: bass guitar; Jeff Peterson: drums; Austin Zaletel: saxophone, vocals, bass clarinet; Scott Flynn: trombone; Gabe Mervine: trumpet; Kim Dawson: vocals; Jeff Franca: percussion; Evry Lahaluma: drums; Esperance Mbanzila Milongo: background vocals; Joel Mbidy: guitar; Tyson Meya: vocals, acoustic piano; Amoureux Kimpioka: percussion.
"El Maldecido" ("The Cursed")
Tracks: Cuchifrito Pa' Los Pollos; Mayabe; Nacimiento de El Maldecido; El Maldecido; Mis Hermanos Latinoamericanos; Asojano (Arara'); La Palma; Nerida, La Facultosa; Tierra De Bibijagua; Cuba Linda; Rumberos Latinoamericanos.
Personnel: Telmo Fernandez: songwriting, arranging, tres macho, background vocals; Piter "El Carri" Carri: vocals; Eudis Mojena: background vocals; Harold Rey: background vocals, acoustic piano; Alejandro Escalera: flute; Jorge Vistel: trumpet; Escandaloso Xpósito: alto saxophone; Arnaud Desprez: tenor saxophone; G. "Mandela" Bell: trombone; Ton Risco: vibraphone; Yuvisney Aguilar: timbales; Angelito Herrera: bongos; Juan Viera: tumbadoras; Yarel Hernandez: bass; Christian Delgado: drums.
Key Lime
Tracks: Blues for Bob; Scoochie; Key Lime; Not a Tear; Driftin'; Buster Rides Again; Sonnymoon for Two; Insomnia.
Personnel: Tim Carman: drums; Steve Fell: electric guitar; Ken Clark: electric organ.
The Deplar Effect
Tracks: Watchu Want; Gonna Get In My Way; Hot Tub; Let Me in from the Cold; Highlining; Organism; Meet You in the Sunshine; High on the Mountain; Could've Been So Good; Hey, It's All Right; Northern Lights; Georgie Famous; Before.
Personnel: Eddie Roberts: guitar, acoustic guitar, tambourine, congas, wood block, shaker; Joe Tatton: electric organ, Fender Rhodes, acoustic piano; Pete Shand: bass; Simon Allen: drums, bongos; Lamar Williams, Jr.: vocals; Wade Koeman: handclaps; Gene McAward: handclaps; Patrick Rowley: handclaps; Matt Walker: handclaps; Chad Pike: cowbell; Sasha Crooks: vibra-slap.
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