Cantonese Traffic
Cantonese Traffic
Cantonese Traffic is a power trio from Rochester NH whose mission is to take music to a higher ground. The members, Mike Allard (Guitar and Vocals), Zac Arnault (Bass and Vocals), and Rory Dean (Percussion), create a very unique fusion of blues, jazz, funk, psychedelic, reggae, and rock. Some of their main influences include Miles Davis, John Coltrane, The Grateful Dead, Jimi Hendrix and the Band of Gypsies, Ten Years After, Humble Pie, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, James Brown, Marvin Gaye, and many many more.
These Influences are evident on their debut album, “Proceed With Caution” (released April 18th 2008). They have great musicianship and can perform both electric and acoustic sets. They are versatile enough to play a rippin’ electric blues set and a more mellow acoustic set while maintaining their unique sound. Cantonese Traffic’s debut album, “Proceed With Caution” is available now and can be purchased at iTunes, CDbaby, and Bullmoose Music in Portsmouth NH.
Also, be sure to keep an eye out for Cantonese Traffic’s sophomore album, “The Chronicles of Canton”. For online sale soon!
Here’s what some others have to say:
“Cantonese Traffic finds that middle ground between Frank Zappa, Prog Rock and Bela Fleck. Blazing technical solos are replaced with thoughtful, blues-inspired statements around solid melodic themes. A simple description would be polished gut music. Real, honest, Cantonese Traffic. Dig it.”
-Thom Keith; Avant Coast Music, Trio Encompas, Equal Time
“Cantonese Traffic are a musical elixir capable of creating various musical landscapes with melody and groove. Despite their age, they possess the wisdom and prowess of bands many times their age, and in a world notable absent of younger bands, these lads are a fresh-air breathe in a smoggy sky.”
-Marty England; Pondering Judd
Check out our review in Portsmouth’s “The Wire” magazine!
Cantonese Traffic in “The Wire” Full Review
‘Proceed With Caution’
by Cantonese Traffic
Listening to the debut disc from Rochester’s Cantonese Traffic, it’s not hard to deduce some of the young power trio’s prime influences. From the opening guitar chops, a rich aura of classic 1960s and ’70s blues-based rock suffuses the room. With Mike Allard on guitar and vocals, Zac Arnault on bass and vocals and Ian Martin on drums and backing vocals, the band comes out of the gates with a style that echoes Hendrix’s Band of Gypsies, The Allman Brothers Band, The Paul Butterfield Blues Band and countless others.
Released this year on the band’s own indie label, Abdul Jabbar Records, the album has drawn early praise from respected local musicians like Pondering Judd’s Marty England and Equal Time’s Thom Keith. When Allard rips a prolonged, spine-tingling solo midway through the first track, “And I Stay,” it’s easy to see what all the hype is about.
The next tune, “Sudden Cry,” has a darker and less celebratory tone that communicates the band’s social conscience. “If Satan is the prince of darkness, then man must be the king, and as humanity crashes down, the cries of the children ring,” Arnault sings before a torrent of screaming guitar strings blots out the words...
-Written by Matt Kanner from "The Wire" Friday, 23 May 2008
Read the rest by clicking the link above.
In addition, visit our MySpace page: Cantonese Traffic MySpace Page