Sex Mob is a band out of time: a smartly old-fashioned quartet of world-class musicians with a satchel full of charts. Sex Mob is a band of the now: post-modern waltzes mutating into dub-echoed free jazz. Sex Mob is social music: a rollicking midnight set with clatter and drinks and a band. Sex Mob is a happy contradiction: an experimental jazz outfit whose music has slid readily into the mainstream via Saturday Night Live, MTV, and National Public Radio. Dime Grind Palace is a house of deeply lasting pleasures: underground trombone legend Roswell Rudd bellowing and blowing over sweetly surprising changes. Dime Grind Palace is a house of sudden revelry: an accessible groove-etched hootenanny of frayed squawks and squeals. The winners of two Downbeat Critics' Polls (Best Beyond Group, Best Acoustic Group) have made what bandleader and trumpeter Steven Bernstein calls his \dream record.\ After four LPs focusing on the songbooks of others (including Duke Ellington and James Bond composer John Barry), the seven-year running Sex Mob has turned in an album of original material in their own unique voice, the result of an ongoing dialogue between master players (saxophonist Briggan Krauss, bassist Tony Scherr, and drummer Kenny Wollesen) and a diverse palette of inspirations ranging from the Art Ensemble of Chicago to Dixieland to Little Richard. \The album is really about the evolution of the band,\ Bernstein says. I wanted to make a record for music-heads,\ continues Bernstein, the man who the New York Times called a \rogue historian of jazz.\ \I think everyone has a music-head inside of them,\ he says. \I wanted to turn people on the way the Charlie Haden Liberation Music Orchestra record turned me on. It was real listenable, but there was all this slightly scary stuff going on there. It's not background music. And neither is this.\ If anyone could fuse lovingly academic excursions with good time party music, it's Sex Mob, who have found themselves in the weird and desirable niche as the downtown scene's late night hang of choice, a favorite of fans, musicians, and critics alike. A good half-dozen musicians blew through the disc's raucous New York sessions last December: pianist and saxophonist Peter Apfelbaum (Hieroglyphics Ensemble, Trey Anastasio), slide guitarist David Tronzo (John Cale, Spanish Fly), mandolinist John Kruth (biographer of Roland Kirk), tubist Marcus Rojas (Henry Threadgill, Sly & Robbie), and clarinetist Doug Wieselman (Lounge Lizards), Mark Stewart (Bang On A Can All-Stars). And then there was Rudd, whose presence brings Sex Mob full circle. A longtime hero of Bernstein's (who, not coincidentally, played on the aforementioned Charlie Haden LP), Rudd is known as the father of free jazz trombone. \Roswell was kind of the original inspiration for the band,\ Bernstein says, who put Sex Mob's original weekly gig together as a platform to work on his slide trumpet playing. With Rudd as a starting point, Sex Mob developed a wholly original sound. As such, Dime Grind Palace is a pure dilution of that. \Dime Grind Palace is a further idea of the different things that could happen at a Sex Mob gig,\ Bernstein continues. \If you had come to see us at any point in time in the last year-and-a-half, something you would've heard - or, rather, felt - is on this record.\ And that's a lot. Across 2002, Sex Mob presented entire programs of old waltzes (including \The Blue Danube,\ which shows up as a hidden room in the Palace), John Barry's James Bond scores (documented on Sex Mob's last Ropeadope recording, Sex Mob Does Bond), George Harrison tunes, original songs, and nights with special guests like Rudd. The responsibility for sonically summarizing what Bernstein calls \a year in the life of Sex Mob\ fell to Bernstein and longtime producer Scott Harding (Medeski Martin and Wood, Wu-tang Clan). And though a grand time in the studio doesn't always equate to a grand time on wax, the pair seem to have discovered the necessary alchemy: a mix of live excitement and sliced, diced, and echoed studioisms. Like Miles Davis's counterpart in producer Teo Macero, Harding is able to translate Bernstein's work onto a spaciously evocative studio canvas. An underground hip-hop star in his own right, his four elegant \Translation\ mixes spread across Dime Grind Palace put Harding's architextural prowess at center-stage, just as much as a player as the instrumentalists. From the boozily braying New Orleans pop of \Baby Let Me Hold Your Hand\ to the coyly cubist blowing of \Artie Shaw\ to the irreducible self-description of \Blue and Sentimental,\ it was a busy year for Bernstein and the band, which found them earning well-deserved praise from unlikely quarters and new audiences. Though Sex Mob are undoubtedly a jazz band at heart, their sheer flexibility as musicians has allowed each of them fruitful jobs as working musicians, equally adept in the rock, pop, and commercial worlds (all of which find their way back into Sex Mob's sound). For Bernstein, that includes session work (Lou Reed, They Might Be Giants, Linda Ronstadt), film scoring (Robert Altman's Kansas City), and even gigging with a wedding band. And that's not to mention his work on Diaspora Blues (a recent Tzadik release focusing on the Jewish cantorial music of Moshe Koussevitsky), or a weekly gig with the Millennial Territory Orchestra (a loose knit all-star mini-big band), Scherr's fine solo rock album released on Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley's Smells Like Records label, his contributions with Wollesen and others to Norah Jones' Grammy-winning Come Away With Me, and on and on. If Bernstein's a man happily in demand, then he's in pure bliss when leading Sex Mob. His avuncular directorial style was transferred full-on to the three-day session, which concluded with all of the musicians performing together on material they hadn't rehearsed, let alone seen beforehand. \That's what I'm trying to deal with: musicians communicating with each other when they play. They don't know the songs, so they're listening, and someone plays something that affects the next person, so they're just using their ears and they're reacting and using their reactions to make the performance,\ Bernstein says. Whether it's an arrival or departure for Sex Mob, Dime Grind Palace surely stands shining as a gemmed milestone in an already storied career, a lustrous home where all are welcome.

STEVEN BERNSTEIN – slide trumpet, trumpet BRIGGAN KRAUSS – sax TONY SCHERR – double bass KENNY WOLLESEN – drums

Before Sex Mob’s concert the Grencsó Kollektíva Plussz plays from their album “7 songs for the last mohicans”.

GRENCSÓ István – sax BENKŐ Róbert – double bass JESZENSZKI György – drums DJ MANGÓ– turntables HAJNÓCZY Csaba – guitar, sampler KENDERESI Gabi – violon, vocal MIZSEI Zsolt – vocal, percussion Gyulai Csaba – vocal, percussion

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