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Monday
08Jun2009

BRITTANY BOSCO

 

BRITTANY BOSCO

Brittany Bosco on MySpAcE

I am the future of soul/funk/experimental


Click to BUY or STREAM albumCd Baby.com - This silent, secretive, somber, and sly city of Savannah has given birth to a super soulful, spirited, sassy and sensational woman of structure, providing supple vibes of hip hop. Miss Brittany Bosco has stunned us from the moment she stepped on stage. Continuing her journey through music and art, Brittany’s CITY OF NOWHERE, gives us exactly what we need to save this dying world from funklessness.

She has the talent to inject the ‘shock effect’ on every ear drum that beats to the tune of her voice. This collaboration of soft melodies and up-beat hip bangers gives us a great taste of who Brittany Bosco really is. As a listener, you will know exactly what is going on with her, she doesn’t like to hide anything from her fans. Bosco’s creativity marks her as an individual in the way she moves her voice, rocks her clothes, and carries herself as the artist that she is. Let your body move to each track filled with energy and hype. Bringing you class and funk, there are good vibes in your forecast. Bosco has created a world of transformation. Take a chance. Take a ride. In the words of Ahmad, she’ll “make ya bounce like a check”. Ladies and gentlemen of the world, I introduce to you, Miss Brittany Bosco.

Review from Creative Loafing:

Brittany Bosco is not an alien, that much we do know.


Though she may be from out of town, her sound is rooted in something more akin to Sarah Vaughan's earthiness than Outkast's outer space. Since the age of seven, the Savannah native has trained in choral and operatic music, which allows her to do the kind of free-range vocal grazing foreign to many young singers. "Black Keys," from her recently released Spectrum EP sounds like a hip-hop-era Vaughn, with lush vocals floating over jazzy, electro beats. "Her tone was impeccable," says Bosco, describing her admiration for Vaughan's ability to convey so much feeling through vocal manipulation. "And that's what I want my music to portray, the spirit of Sarah. Yet I have my own style."

While Bosco vocally distinguishes herself, certain other-worldly themes admittedly inspired her to fashion her own Funkyolon, the destination she invites listeners to on Spectrum's intro. "Like Janelle [Monae] has Metropolis and Erykah Badu has the Vortex [tour], this is their world, and I just wanted to create my own," she says. "When you come to my shows, you're entering into Funkyolon – that's the continent leading up to the 'City of Nowhere.' It's just more conceptual if people are more familiar with a place."
Currently majoring in fashion design at Atlanta's SCAD (Savannah College of Art and Design) she's also part of the Big Up, a collegiate collective of music and design students who independently produced and packaged Spectrum.


It's an arresting, genre-bending mix: "8-Trak" combines rough soul vocals with a throbbing Caribbean backdrop and jazzy horns. "City of Nowhere" boasts whispery R&B vocals over a laid-back electro-beat. And "Black and White" puts Bosco's bluesy tone front and center over a sparse, heartbreaking piano.
"I'm trying to create my own buzz, my own sound," Bosco says. "I'm not gonna tell you verbatim what's going in my life, but if you listen you will actually catch pieces of what's going on with me and also in me."

Review from clutchmagonline:

Bravo for Bosco
MONDAY MAR 16, 2009 – BY RIF RAF

From jump when looking at the packaging of the Spectrum EP, you can’t fight the urge to sit in, listen to, and play with the varied landscape of sound on this all too brief introduction. On Spectrum the second EP from Bosco (The City of Nowhere EP actually came first), you find a comfort, an authenticity in Bosco expressing herself in various genres. Not even just genres, but just a broad artistic arc she shares with the “Big Up Crew”, a small cadre of fellow Savannah College of Art and Design alum. In every step of the process from eye candy packaging, promotion materials, to her exhaustively energetic live shows Bosco has raised a few eyebrows to her statement about who she is as an artist. Clutch finally caught up with the Savannah born and raised artist – between a recent impromptu visit to Chicago, and fresh off a show at San Francisco’s 330 Ritch. For insights behind the Spectrum LP, random influences, why she loves The Cosby Show, and just exactly who is Brittany Bosco.

“I’d describe my sound as Gnarls meets a new-age Janice Joplin mothered by Sarah Vaughn”. Its quite clear Bosco is at heart a contemporary artist, albeit one with very big influences in musical eras bygone. “Man, I watch a lot of old movies and films, I love Jazz, not really a T.V. person, but movies and theatrics I love.”

Starting with almost a jolt, “Welcome to Funkyolon” foreshadows, with a collage-like patchwork of blaring horns, tumbling go-go drum rhythms, and general sonic mixture that is a testament both to the production lent by D.C. native Alex Goose and the vocal range of Bosco.

While tracks like City of Nowhere and Glitch have a contemporary bend, the rest of the EP journeys full on and head first into Jazz, Soul, Funk and Blues. Solely because it may be the clearest hint at pinning Bosco into a specific style, Black Keys stands out. Here Bosco nestles vocals between a jazzy eardrum tickling xylophone melody and a kinetic mashing loop of high hats and kicks. As refreshing as all that is, what’s a really welcome switch-up is the latter half of the song where Bosco flexes her classical vocal training. Still, if Black Keys is the standout, Bosco is not shy about exercising her own creative span.

“I want to be booked by Essence Festival, Warped Vans Tour, then I want to do Afropunk, and then go to the Blues Room and do a straight up Jazz standards concert . . . Sunset Junction, SXSW, CMJ, I want them all…”
Black and White for instance almost sounds like a dramatic soliloquy, with minimal composition, and almost gut-wrenching vocals that convey a raw intimacy – which Bosco does equally well in Blues for Blue. With that in mind, as free spirited as this EP feels clocking in just under 30 minutes, every track seems to be carefully picked, from what you would imagine is a vast musical cache. Comparing her 2 favorite performances to date and the feel of this EP, you get the definite sense Bosco can hold her own in either setting.

“I’d have to say my senior class recital which was at a Cathedral. I practiced like a month for that recital. That and my introduction to Atlanta and the world at a “Fuggin Awesome” show. My set was originally two songs, ended up being five, sold out of CDs, the crowd was in it, and I went home exhausted. Those are my two favorite shows so far.”


Spectrum [pun intended] paints Bosco in a prism of varied influence and expression, as if the wavelength of her expression effortlessly re-tunes with each track. Spectrum flows in a way that makes each song feel like a scratch on the surface of what we can expect in the future. While aware and flattered by comparisons, Bosco is confident in her own identity as an artist. “I really admire a lot of the people I get compared to” but credits her uniqueness to crossing into various genres. “I’m comfortable adapting to various demographics”. One could imagine what a live EP recording of Bosco would sound like, as she hints towards one major source of inspiration: her fans. “Like in Cali, I didn’t know I had as diverse a fan base I have . . . I did not know. That opened my eyes up. . . you cannot stereotype people just from the type of music you make. It was amazing for me to see that, because there were only like eight or nine African Americans in the crowd. I want to make a song about that… ” Explaining further, “This one lady was like, I love your music can’t believe you came here! And I was like ‘WHAT?’ Cause’ I just go home, to my little house and cook food and chill, and have the same problems and struggles as everyone else.”

“It’s crazy” Bosco continues alluding to her upcoming opening show for electro-funk-hop-soul trailblazers J*Davey ““Maybe a year and a half ago I wondered if I’d ever perform alongside artist on this level – and now people are starting to look at my work similarly. It’s just crazy.”
Still, Bosco, despite having a very playful carefree element to her craft (probably in part evident by her identifying most with the characters Olivia and Denise from the Cosby Show), has moments of being very critical of her own work. When asked is there ever a piece of work she’s somewhat embarrassed of she replies emphatically “Yes, yes! I wish they would stop playing it. One of my first songs…its buried, and it can stay buried. The EPs main short coming is that its varied approaches and short run time will likely leave you wanting more . . . or with more questions about who Bosco is as an artist. Still, the mystery of just what Ms. Bosco has in store aside is a question worth entertaining and definitely worth the listen.