Two-time GRAMMY® Award-nominated bassist, producer, songwriter and celebrated studio musician Stu Brooks signs his first solo deal with Dine Alone Records and announces The 40HZ EP due December 8. The upcoming, five-track EP was written and produced by Stu himself and features a stacked lineup of guest appearances, including Patrick Stump, Angelo Moore, Jason Aalon Butler, and Paul Leary.
Dub Trio co-founder and sought-after road musician, Brooks is thrilled to share the lead single, “Sound The Alarm,” featuring Patrick Stump. What began as an instrumental track, “Sound The Alarm” evolved into a song inspired by a combination of sounds, ranging from 70’s dub reggae icons Augustus Pablo and King Tubby to the early 80s post-punk of The Pretenders and The Clash.
Brooks had this to say about the song: “I took these two genres and tried to tie them together into a song. Between the chorus groove and verse groove, there are abrupt stylistic transitions that I think have the effect of pulling the rug from under you.” Patrick Stump, on working with Brooks, stated: “Stu’s a good friend and a stellar musician. I was ecstatic to be asked to work with him on what became a song venting our anger and horror at the state of the world.”
Brooks continues to speak on “Sound The Alarm”: “I applied this famous bass sound of the MT-40 to the bridge juxtaposed with intense feedback from guitars. What I love is the clash of unlikely genres. Genres are representations of culture, and I love the concept of bringing cultures together through music. Patrick also laid down some guitars and wrote and played the horn parts. He played tenor, alto, trumpet, and trombone. He’s an inspiring guy.”
Speaking about the forthcoming The 40HZ EP, Brooks said: “I find commonality in all types of music, and, I’m always trying to string different genres together. I believe there’s a way to thread dub, reggae, punk, hip-hop, trap, industrial, experimental jazz, and rock altogether. I’m drawing on all of these influences.
I always hope my music will be a cathartic experience. Maybe you’re able to release an emotion and, when you’re done listening, you’ve changed a little bit.”
Photo Courtesy: Alex Bemis
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