21/1/10 Scene Magazine CD Review


14/12/09 AlbumOfTheWeek (Music Blog) Review

I'm speechless, my music made reknown oz music blog Album Of The Week
Some totally unexpected comparisons made here. haha. Thanks again to the peeps there for checkin' out the tunes.



andrew chen - you just might
[independent: 2009]

Bedroom musician Andrew Chen sent Album of The Week his EP "You Just Might" that he released entirely independently a while back, and until recently we hadn't really given it due props. This dude writes the songs, sings the words, plays guitars, bass, keys, synths, drums, makes the beats and performs the samples all on his lonesome lone. Boyfriend got a bit of free time on his hands. But clever hands they are.

This record is a nice little slice of neo-soul, r & b goodness direct from Andrew's boudoir studio straight to your ears. These tunes are definitely an acquired taste - so tune out now if R. Kelly ain't your thing. He starts off with a nice, under-the-moonlight Nineties-style r & b track "You Just Might" - very "soulful crooner's gonna get laid tonight missus" type shit. The second tune, the groove-driven "Come On Down" wears an obvious heart-on-sleeve Michael Jackson Off The Wall-era influence. You could definitely hear Usher (dance man, pants man and all round beefcake) singing it. This stuff is good finger clicking stuff, people.

Our favourite song on the album is "Higher" - a neo-soul pants dropper that reeks of D'Angelo's best known track "Untitled" - the one which had that epic shirtless, pantsless, throbbing groin muscle music vid? He also pulls out some throaty Tom Waits style croaking on the lower register which is pretty awesome too. This guy has genuine songwriting talent - the stuff gets in your head and you can sing along to it almost immediately. So there's a few typically embarrassing r & b moments: "Stranger Girl" and "Fall Behind" are kind of gross - cliched romantic balladry with over-earnest 'love hurts' lyrics, and the first few tracks are infinitely more interesting than the second half of the EP, but Justin Timberlake would definitely sing this stuff. PS JT is cool. Andrew Chen will soon be discovered and be attending Puffy's White Party in a couple of years and that is pretty freaking cool.

1/12/09 Rave Mag CD Review


11/12/09 Rave Mag LIVE Review


Drew & The Intentions Album Launch REVIEW (Friday, 11 December 2009) Written by peter B
LIVE:
Drew & The Intentions CD Launch, supported by The Rooftops & Cheapfakes, The Globe, Friday 4 December 2009
Drew & The Intentions
Photo by Josh Robertson
 

Cheapfakes feature members of Brisbane's dub/soul/funk outfit Dubdoubt. The band is not real tight tonight, and despite some nice backup vocals from the musicians, these sexy Ska geeks aren't starting off with enough energy for the small, early punters. The best song is 'Theif', with its smooth retro secret-agent-man style groove. Despite the keyboard being pretty soft tonight, there is a lot of potential here, and would be worth seeing them in a packed-out room. Towards the end of the set the toes are tapping and you can see bodies starting to shake. But just when the people have warmed up and ready to dance, the song is over. While the lead vocal is easy on the ear (I wish he wouldn't keep holding back on the higher notes, of which he's very capable), and the sax solos impressive, the overall feel is just that little bit too white.

Up next is The Rooftops, fronted by an arm-swinging vocalist Euan Gray, with the old saxophone round his neck. From 'Rice's easy-going groove to their upbeat triple J's favourite, 'Les We Forget', these guys are basically a really tasty combination of story and soul. The growing crowd responds to Gray's sax solos and his charming vocal phrasing by getting up and having a bit of a dance. Throughout the set, Keyboardist Peta Wilson's smooth touch add a nice contrast to the boys' seemless horn arrangements. 'In the Morning' sees the band try out their 3-4 part harmonies which really bring their signature soulful goodness to the next level. The audience keeps dancing as the room, and the band, get noticeably tighter. Later on they even indulged in a 3-way sax/trumpet/sax solo, which would have been too chaotic for most bands, but not this bunch of classy players!

The room is close to capacity when Dru & The Intentions take to the stage oozing confidence and enthusiasm. Dressed to kill, they waste no time in calling the audience to 'Come On Down' and get the party started. With his hyperactive backup singers, Andrew Chen starts on a high and keeps his spirit there throughout the night. The guitarist, after struggling to find his groove in the opening number, shows us some seriously tasty licks in The Escape - a ballad that builds up to a dramatic climax. 'Morning Rain' sees Drew on an acoustic guitar fronting a band that is seriously trying to keep up. His relentlessly soulful, near-perfect voice soars high above the Globe's slope of mesmerized punters.
Drew & The Intentions
Photo by Nick Wiggins
 
Next up, Dru's groovetrain pulls in to Soul Central with 'Higher', winning this tough crowd over. Gone are the wall of complex arrangements and unnecessary trimmings - and the audience laps up the simple groove on the dancefloor. This is by far the best performance of the night, especially with all the vocals working with, not against, eachother. Drew & the Intentions is what happens when you cross Babyface with Nina Simone, with a bit of Joss Stone & Sly Stone thrown in. The punters finally give in to the music of Drew & The Intentions on the last epic song, 'Love 2 U' coupled with Just My Imagination & Everyday People. Eventhough often times you can literally see the nerves on stage, and the level of tightness required for the show isn't quite there yet, Drew's classy Prince-like theatrics make it all worthwhile. For me, the Motown-esque moments feel most natural and comfortable, but it's clear that they want a lot more than that. This ambitious project is a reminder that there's good deeds and there's good Intentions, and there's a lot of steps in-between!

Peter B
 
Band Links:
 




 

25/11/09 Time Off Interview




“I’M STRIPPED NAKED ON THIS ALBUM,” SAYS ANDREW CHEN, FRONTMAN FOR LOCAL FUNKADELIC/BLUEJUICE/MOTOWN OUTFIT DRU & THE INTENTIONS. HE IS TALKING ABOUT THE BAND’S NEW RECORD YOU JUST MIGHT, WHICH WAS PRODUCED ALMOST ENTIRELY IN CHEN’S BEDROOM. TONY MCMAHON TAKES DIY NOTES.

“Drums. Loop. Riff. Bass, keys, random found sounds and kitchenware,” Chen goes on, explaining the process of making a record entirely by yourself. “Sing, sing, sing for days. Cry. Realise it all doesn’t work. Delete everything. Go out and see a kickass band play live. Go back into the bedroom studio, and smash it in 30 minutes flat. Bingo! The You Just Might EP is a very honest, intense, and personal statement. That’s why I think this DIY bedroom aesthetic works. It’s real.”

Chen reflects on the meaning of soul music, and suggests that his band’s extraordinarily eclectic sound comes from the disparate musical experiences of the band members.

“With Dru & The Intentions, many of us play in a diverse range of bands: jazz, funk, psychedelic pop, electro, prog. I arranged the live show to bring out the best in my bandmates. ‘Soul music’ moves me both intellectually and viscerally. It gives people time to reflect, room to express, the freedom to swing. ‘Soul’ is for the head and for the heart.”

Chen indicates that the launch of You Just Might will be both heavily rehearsed and chaotic.
“We’re locked up in the rehearsal room at the moment, waiting for the big moment. There will be a light show, lots of set changes, a mini-acoustic set, and a crazy eyes-closed fantasy bit. It will be a full-on five senses experience, splat in the middle of summer. I’m still trying to figure out how the hell we’re going to pull it off. It will be a surprise since the CD launch will be the very first time we are revealing this to the public.”

WHO: Dru & The Intentions
WHAT: You Just Might (Independent)
WHERE & WHEN: The Globe, Friday December 4
 

25/11/09 Scene Magazine Interview


24/11/09 Rave Magazine Interview

Dru & The Intentions
Tuesday, 24 November 2009

ImageMORGAN JOHNSON checks in with local musician ANDREW CHEN, and chats about his current soul-infused project DRU & THE INTENTIONS.

Launching his debut LP under the Dru & The Intentions moniker, the young home-studio boffin chats about moving to Singapore, expanding from a one-man band operation to taking in seven members, and creating a new style of soul revue.

 

MORGAN JOHNSON: You recently changed your name – was this as a result of discovering Dru Hill?

ANDREW CHEN: I’m not too familiar with Dru Hill. I had to Wikipedia that one actually. No, Dru came from an old bandmate of mine who used to egg me on whenever they wanted me to play a guitar solo on stage. “Play it Dru, tear it up!” My solo album, You Just Might is still under my birth name, Andrew Chen, because it’s a very personal album. I’m fully exposed.

MJ: There has been something of a resurgence for soul in popular music – why do you think this is?

AC: Firstly, if you don’t mind me paraphrasing the great Stevie Wonder, I’d like to think of ‘soul’ not as a genre, but rather as a feeling. An attitude. Like how jazz is an attitude. ‘Soul’ moves people both intellectually (with jazz-inspired harmony, groove and pocket), and viscerally (talk about Let’s Get it On). It gives people time to reflect, room to express, the freedom to swing. I’d like to think the resurgence has something to do with how ‘soul’ is for both the head and the heart. A recent album that fulfils this would be Trouble Being Yourself by Aussie indie-funk/hop/R&B extraordinaire Yeo.

MJ: How has shifting from Melbourne to Singapore to Brisbane informed your scope, in regards to music making? Where do you call home now?

AC: I call Brisbane home now. I feel so fortunate growing up in such vastly contrasting societies. We left Melbourne for Singapore when I was eight, but around then I was a classical violinist and pianist. I picked up a guitar and got into a few thrash bands in my teens, as there was quite a formidable metal scene in Singapore. Eventually I got work playing bass, keyboards, guitars and writing arrangements for a few working bands, cutting my teeth on the local circuit. Last year, when I was 17, I discovered indie artist-producers like Gotye, and I decided to move back to Australia, this time to Brisbane for Uni to start a proper music career. I’m currently completing a Music Production degree at the Con.

MJ: What initially attracted you to making soul and R&B?

AC: It could have been my mum’s Phil Spector records. Or our Uni lecturer giving us hours on Motown and “groove and pocket.” This sparked my love for early soul, inspiring one of my album tracks in particular, my ode to cathartic songwriting, Higher. Being Asian, I grew up drenched in bucket-loads of classical, studying the violin passionately for over a decade. I’ll never forget this. It taught me a lot about discipline and musicality. My violin teacher was a massively charismatic daredevil of a performer, and his rule was that every single note had to mean something. Don’t play it if you don’t feel it. Soul and R&B does that for me.

MJ: You’re playing with a seven-piece band, how have your songs expanded from their home-studio solo recordings?

AC: With The Intentions, we’re always open about suggestions and ideas, and since many of my band-mates play in other bands in different genres, specifically jazz, psychedelic pop, and prog, these influences get filtered in to our live show, with elements drawn heavily from those styles. We like to collaborate, but I try to bring in arrangements so that we have something down on paper, a starting point or sketch.

MJ: How did you come to find your players?

AC: Open mics, stealing members from different local Brisbane bands, and pulling in my best mates from Uni who were just so fun to work with! We’ve got Brendan Cox from prog-rockers Conversations With The Sun, Kellie Jade from The Travelling So-and-Sos, rhythm section Nick Watson and Gene Stevens from jazz-funksters Sidewalk Trio, Jordan Wiggins from emerging indie pop act This Means That, and one of my favourite keys players (and a killer DJ too!) in Ben Miles.

MJ: Your songs tend to reflect a loose-limbed soul and R&B aesthetic. How does this correlate live?

AC: Think Funkadelic-meets-Bluejuice. That’s all I’m going to say. We’re locked up in the rehearsal room at the moment, waiting for the big moment at our CD launch.

MJ: Get Down It's Motown is coming to Australia in the New Year – do you view this as a good thing, or with some trepidation?

AC: Get On Down, It’s Motown? Oh, that’s great for a certain crowd, but I feel inclined to say that that’s not really my thing at the moment. I dig original indie music, and while the classics are great to learn from and sing-along to, I’m always on the lookout for something fresh and quirky. That said, I still find myself belting out Temptations tunes in the shower all the time. I’m learning to play the drums at the moment, and my drummer Gene Stevens has just shown me a whole heap of Motown grooves, which are plain badass. I learnt groove by studying the Funk Brothers. My bassline on Morning Rain is quite Jamerson-inspired.

MJ: Being the main impetus behind Dru & The Intentions, are you an Ike Turner, Berry Gordy or more a Chess brother?

AC: Hm … tough one. They are all so cross-pollinated and diverse! I’d like to think that there’s just good and bad music. No record labels, stations, colours, genres, ages, genders. That said, I love Isaac Hayes and Quincy Jones for their orchestration. Stevie and Marvin for their vision and style. I’m also a crazy Brian Wilson fan. I’m a record producer and engineer, so naturally a lot of my idols are studio producers. I want to produce music that lifts people, and brings people together. That’s what the song Come On Down is about. Brother don’t pick a fight, let’s jam. That’s what The Intentions are about.

ANDREW CHEN launches his album with DRU & THE INTENTIONS at The Globe Theatre in Fortitude Valley on Dec 4. YOU JUST MIGHT is available from Rocking Horse Records, iTunes, and his website www.andrewchenmusic.com.

22/10/09 CD Review Today Newspaper



You can listen to the entire album HQ and download it for $5 at
The Online Store
Or you can get the CD delivered to your doorstep for $10 at
Rockinghorse Records


Thank you!
Much love,
Andrew

10/9/09 Five dollar dream

Here, my friends:

http://andrewchen.bandcamp.com/

is where you can official purchase my album by downloading it onto your computer.(paypal/visa/mastercard/americanexpress)


AUD$5 for now.

Thanks once again for supporting independent music. It gives me so much joy and happiness to say that I am actively involved in contributing to the thriving independent music scene, where artists are just like you and me - everyday people with something to say.

Hope to hear from you soon, please do send me an email (andrew@andrewchenmusic.com) if you have any thoughts or concerts whatsoever. For those who want signed and hard copies of the album, PLEASE hang tight, I will get to you very soon!

I love you all with every ounce of my skinny frame.
Radio airplay and concert footage to come soon!
Adios!

With love, sincerity and deepest care,
Your Andrew

PS: right now I am pushing with all my might for media exposure and radio airplay. if any of you have access to itunes, please search for my album, and give me a rating & review. i will owe you eternally. industry people look for all sorts of fan-activity, so your efforts will no doubt contribute to me getting a better shot at this industry.



10/9/09 Whoa, iMix!

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Industry musings, muso musings, production and engineering musings.
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© ® 2010 Andrew Chen