Store Front  Account  Search  Product List  Basket Contents Checkout 
Sign In

Affiliate Login 

Choose a category.

Bluegrass, Newgrass,
and other Fine Pickin'

Books, Magazines,
& Other Goods

Comedy

Compilations, Tributes,
and Soundtracks

DVD Audio

DVDs and Videos

Electronic, Hip-Hop,
and DJs

Gift Certificates

Harmonized Records

HGMN Hall of Fame

Holiday Music

Home Grown Music
Network Members

   56 Hope Road
   8traC
   Acoustic Syndicate
   Addison Groove Project
   Afromotive, The
   ALO
   Amy Hendrickson & the Prime Directive
   Barefoot Manner
   Bellyfull
   Big Fuzz
   Big Wu, The
   Blount Harvey
   Blue Method, The
   Bockman
   Bomb Squad
   Boogie Hustlers, The
   Bourgeois Gypsies
   Brainchild
   Brew, The
   Bridge, The
   Brotherhood of Groove
   Brothers Past
   Bump
   Burnin' Smyrnans, The
   BuzzUniverse
   Cadillac Jones
   Caveman
   Cerulean City
   Charlie Wheeler Band
   Chef Dave
   Chicago Afrobeat Project
   Contact
   Cornmeal
   CX-1: The Blackhole Bluegrass Boys
   David Gans
   Deep Banana Blackout
   Deep Blue Sun
   Delta Nove
   Disco Biscuits, The
   DJ Williams Projekt
   Dread Clampitt
   Dubconscious
   Entrain
   Equaleyes
   Euforquestra
   Euphonic Brew
   Eymarel
   Fifth House
   Foxy Moon Baby
   Future Rock
   Garaj Mahal
   Giving Tree Band, The
  Gnappy
   Grace Potter & The Nocturnals
   Green Lemon
   Green Light
   Herbert Wiser Band
   Home Grown Compilations
   Home Grown Gift Certificates
   Hot Buttered Rum
   Hot Day at the Zoo
   Hypnotic Clambake
   Infradig
   J-San & The Analogue Sons
   Jamie Janover
   Jango Monkey
   Jazz Mandolin Project
   Jazzam
   Jeff Bujak
   Jimmy Landry
   John Brown's Body
   Josh Dion Band
   Josh Phillips Folk Festival
   Kan'Nal
   Keller Williams
   King Johnson
   Lake Trout
   Laura Reed & Deep Pocket
   Lefty Williams
   Living Daylights
   Lotus
   Malah, The
   Mantras, The
   Max Allen Band
   Mecca Bodega
   MJ Project
   MO2
   MODEREKO
   Moonshine Still
   Moses Guest
   Motet, The
   NBFB
   New Deal, The
   New Mastersounds, The
   New Monsoon
   Nucleus, The
   Odd Meters
   One Under
   Papa Grows Funk
   Papa Mali
   Perpetual Groove
   Pnuma Trio, The
   Polyester Pimpstrap
   Poogie Bell Band
   Public Property
   Quactus
   Ragbirds, The
   Rainmaker
   RAQ
   Recipe, The
   Reeltime Travelers
   Revision
   Roots Of Creation
   Ryan Montbleau Band
   Saltwater Grass
   Scarecrow Collection
   Sci Fi
   Scythian
   SeepeopleS
   Shanti Groove
   Signal Path
   Sim Redmond Band, The
   Slip, The
   Smokin' Grass
   Sol Driven Train
   Sol'Jibe
   Soldiers Of Jah Army (SOJA)
   Sound Tribe Sector 9
   Spam Allstars, The
   Speakeasy
   Stanley Maxwell
   Steppin' Razor
   Steve Kimock Band
   Strangefolk
   Stratospheerius
   Sugar Free Allstars
   Superfrog
   Taj Weekes & Adowa
   Telepath
   Ten Ton Chicken
   Tennessee Jed
   The Station
   Thousands of One
   Three Legged Fox
   TR3
   Turbine
   U-Melt
   Umphrey's McGee
   Vinyl
   Vorcza
   Xavier Rudd
   Yamagata
   Yo Mama's Big Fat Booty Band
   Yonder Mountain String Band
   Zach Deputy
   Zen Tricksters
   Fiction 20 Down
   Lubriphonic
Home Grown
Compilations

Jazz, Funk, Fusion, and Soul

Kid's Stuff

New Releases

Other Offerings: Rock, Indie,
Pop, Classics, and Oddities

Psychedelic and Progressive
Rock

Reggae, Dub, Afrobeat, World
& Global Rhythms

Roots, Blues, Gospel, and
Acoustic

Smilefest Merchandise

Specially Priced
Clearance items

Stickers & Decals

T-Shirts, Hoodies, Hats, & more

Vinyl LP's


Credit Card & Check Processing

Gnappy



Gnappy - ...Is This A Machine? Gnappy - ...Is This A Machine?
Code:Gnappy2
Price: $13.00
Quantity in Basket: none
 

Gnappy - Austin, TX

It's a familiar question by now. "Why Gnappy? What does it mean?" The answer is simple. It means "funky." "I grew up in Houston," says guitarist/producer Buck McKinney. "Gnappy was slang for 'funky.' It might mean funky 'weird,' or funky 'groove,' but it always meant 'funky.'"

The name fits. Muddy Waters once sang "the blues had a baby, and they call it rock and roll." If 70's-era groove-jazz had a baby, they might just as well call it Gnappy. Combining elements of 70's jazz-funk with 60's horn-driven pop, Gnappy sounds like the bastard son of Tower of Power and Average White Band, with a healthy dose of Wired-era Jeff Beck thrown in for good measure. That's not to say that Gnappy is an exacting "throwback." To the contrary, Gnappy's sound is less "tribute" than "homage," and its reverence for vintage funk is balanced by an appreciation for hip-hop, modern jazz and electronica. But roots run deep, and Gnappy's roots run decidedly to the groove.

Gnappy unveiled their contemporary approach to the funk-jazz idiom on their eponymous 2001 debut - an album that landed on many critics' top-ten lists, and held-down the "Featured Artist" page of internet-giant Napster for an unheard-of 4 weeks. The achievement clearly suggested that Gnappy could hold their own in a peer-to-peer world dominated by indie-rock, hip-hop and pop, and may be as good an argument as any for the promise of "cross-over jazz." In the words of one music critic, "if you heard Gnappy's MP3s on Napster before its early demise like I did, you probably became hooked." (Music Revue).

In 2003, Gnappy released their follow-up Is This A Machine? - which, again, received near-unanimous critical acclaim and upped the ante for 21st century funk-jazz. The result - "63 minutes of classic groove - dig it." (Austin Chronicle).

Gnappy's third album, Unloaded, is perhaps their most ambitious musical statement to date - a deliberate piece of work in which the compositions speak as loudly as the performances of them. From the unforgettable theme of the title track "Unloaded," to the modern boogaloo "Gatorade Brain," to the staccato double-horn attack of "Sushi Pimp" - Gnappy exhibits a dizzying array of moods and styles, and yet all of the songs share a cohesive modus operandi - tight arrangements, crisp performances and focused melodies. For the involved listener, this taught, turn-on-a-dime approach yields rich rewards. Guest appearances add to the bounty, including the trumpet-work of fellow Austinite Ephraim Owens (Karl Denson's Tiny Universe, Blaze). Additional surprises include Gnappy's first vocal performance (on title track "Unloaded"), and the hip-hop workout "Bahl Hornin'." Icing on the cake is Gnappy's four-way musical ping-pong match "Grease Don't Freeze," which nearly blows the roof off the joint. In the end, Unloaded may be the most aptly-titled album of the year. Like a veteran prize-fighter, Gnappy leaves it all in the ring.

“Smart, sharp and boogie – rock & roll reality braced with bop chops.”– Austin Chronicle

“Crisp and clean Tower of Power-influenced compositions.” – North Texas Daily

“High energy charms . . . ominous single-line hooks . . . face-slapping hip-hop.” - Jazz Times

“All the down-and-dirty funk sensibilities of George Clinton [with] a spacy, acid-jazz edge . . . this is exciting, listener-involved music, with hooks that keep you on the tip of your toes.” - Music Revue

“Oh mama, they may hail from Austin, Texas, but this band is pure New Orleans jazz-funk . . . creating music that is at once smoky and ebullient.” - Lafayette Daily Advertiser


Current Tour Dates

click here for tour dates

Other WWW Resources


Visit the official Gnappy Website