The Herbaliser

The Herbaliser is an English jazz hip hop group formed by Jake Wherry and Ollie Teeba (Born Oliver Lawrence Trattles) in London, England during the early 1990s.[2][3][4][5][6] Although currently releasing on their own label and having previously been signed to !K7 Records, they were one of the best-known acts from the Ninja Tune independent record label. They have released 12 albums, including two DJ mixes: one for Ninja Tune's Solid Steel series and the other for Fabric's Live Mix series. The Herbaliser's album Same As It Never Was was their first release on !K7 Records. Their latest album Bring Out The Sound was released in 2018, on the BBE label.

The Herbaliser
Background information
Also known asThe Herbaliser Band
OriginLondon, England
GenresHip hop, jazz, funk[1]
Years active1995–present
LabelsNinja Tune, !K7
Associated actsSoundsci, the Process, Roots Manuva, Jean Grae, More Or Les
Websiteherbaliser.com
Members
  • Ollie Teeba
  • Jake Wherry

Jake Wherry has also recorded solo tracks as The Meateaters, released on the Parisian Big Cheese label, and has worked with The Propheteers.

Ollie Teeba is also part of Soundsci with Jonny Cuba of Dynamic Syncopation, Audessey ex-Mass Influence, U-George The Hemisphere and Oxygen Sputnick Brown

History

Jake Wherry grew up in South West London and played guitar and bass in a number of jazz, funk and rock bands in his teenage years. During this time, he met Patrick Carpenter aka PC, later one of the DJs behind DJ Food, and through him became aware of the Ninja Tune label. Ollie Teeba, (real name Ollie Trattles) began DJing at 15 and played his first live sets to London audiences a year later.

Wherry and Teeba met years later at Wherry's Traintrax studio, and began recording together, collaborating with DJ Malachi, Kaidi Tatham of Bugz in the Attic and Ralph Lamb of Easy Access Orchestra. They developed a jazzy instrumental style of hip hop, due to an absence of available rappers. They passed their recordings on to Ninja Tune bosses Matt Black and Jonathan More of Coldcut and were signed shortly thereafter.

Inspired by the funk bands of previous decades, rather than performing simply with turntables, Jake Wherry decided to take a seven piece band on tour, which included Tatham, Lamb, Andrew Ross, Micah Moody Jnr and percussionist Patrick Dawes. The band performed in Toronto, Ontario om 1999.[7]

As they progressed, they gained access to guest vocalists for appearances on their records, including What? What? (aka Jean Grae), Roots Manuva, MF Doom, Seaming To, Rakaa Iriscience of Dilated Peoples, Blade, Phi Life Cypher, Bahamadia Dream Warriors and Insight .

The pair were subsequently employed to produce music for the likes of Motorola, the soundtracks to Guy Ritchie's Snatch and the PlayStation 2 game Tony Hawk's Underground. They were also commissioned to write the theme for ESPN's primetime NFL show Sunday Night Football.[8]

The group have also provided production for artists including T Love, Princess Superstar and remixes for artists including DJ Food, Raw Stylus, Push Button Objects, Jaffa and label-mates Coldcut's "Atomic Moog", which reached number one on the UK singles chart.[9]

In 2009, the band released its second live band album, Session Two. This was recorded at The Easy Access Orchestra's studio and mixed at Jake's Train Trax Studio.

Discography

Albums

As The Herbaliser:

As The Herbaliser Band:

DJ mix albums:

Compilations

EPs

  • The Real Killer/Blow It EP (1995)
  • Repetitive Loop/Scratchy Noise EP (1995)
  • The Flawed Hip-Hop EP (1996)
  • New & Improved/Control Centre (1997)
  • The Blend EP (1997)
  • Wall Crawling Giant Insect Breaks EP (1998)
  • Road of Many Signs/Moon Sequence EP (1999)
  • Missing Suitcase EP (1999)
  • 8 Point Agenda/Who's Really The Reallest? EP (1999)
  • Good Girl Gone Bad EP (1999)
  • Time 2 Build EP (1999)

References

  1. Cooper, Sean. "The Herbaliser: Biography by Sean Cooper". AllMusic. Retrieved 13 January 2020.
  2. Roullier, Ian (2012). "Music – Review of The Herbaliser – There Were Seven". BBC Music. Retrieved 12 January 2014.
  3. Haywood, Brad (13 June 2002). "The Herbaliser: Something Wicked This Way Comes – Album Review". Retrieved 12 January 2014.
  4. Naylor, Tony (22 February 2002). "Album Reviews – Herbaliser: Something Wicked This Way Comes". NME. Retrieved 12 January 2014.
  5. Blower, Kate (12 October 2012). "The Herbaliser – There Were Seven – Reviews". Clash. Retrieved 12 January 2014.
  6. Thill, Scott (31 May 2008). "Never Say Never to Mac-Based Electro-Funk: An Interview With The Herbaliser". Wired. Retrieved 12 January 2014.
  7. "Live Reviews: The Herbaliser September 8, 1999 The Phoenix, Toronto". Chart Attack, review by Mike Doherty, September 8, 1999
  8. "The Herbaliser". Biography. NinjaTune.net. Retrieved 1 August 2008.
  9. "The Herbaliser". Biography. AllMusic. Retrieved 5 August 2008.
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