iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store.If iTunes doesn't open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop.Progress Indicator
iTunes

iTunes is the world's easiest way to organize and add to your digital media collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from Cicada by Hazmat Modine, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes for Mac + PC

Cicada

Hazmat Modine

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download music.

Album Review

Hazmat Modine's first album, 2006's Bahamut, earned a placing in the Billboard blues chart. Five years later, the band's second, Cicada, might be more appropriately slotted in the magazine's traditional jazz chart. Truthfully, however, Hazmat Modine present an eclectic mixture of roots styles that is nearly beyond category. Bandleader Wade Schuman sings in an expressive adenoidal tenor and fronts a group dominated by both familiar and less frequently employed horns (Joe Daley plays sousaphone and tuba) in what might be called a "Ry Cooder meets the Dirty Dozen Brass Band" manner. But that's only the core of the sound, which also includes other unusual instruments and found sounds. The instrumental "In Two Years," for example, combines a haunting trumpet refrain, odd percussion, and the sounds of fireworks. Schuman can turn to traditional blues, as he does on "Buddy," which has a "St. James Infirmary" feel to it, and to conventional old-school R&B, on "I've Been Lonely for So Long." But even on such tracks, he changes things up, letting the horns weave in and out as he sings in a mannered, slightly tongue-in-cheek style, like Tom Waits in a higher key. The danger with such self-consciously mixed-up revivalist music is of course that it can come off as something of a joke, but Schuman and company are too accomplished as players for that; they are having a lot of fun, not just being funny. No wonder they have attracted prominent guests like Natalie Merchant, who blends into the group vocals on "Child of a Blind Man," and the Kronos Quartet, who make of the closing track, "Dead Crow," a hybrid of country hoedown and contemporary chamber music.

Customer Reviews

Waited too too LONG for this disk ... UNclassifiably BRILLIANT. BLUES? ROOTS? World?

Hazmat MODINE has been delighting audiences around the world . Based in NYC and composed of prime talent , this unusual band has only had one recording available for the longest time . They are a GREAT GROUP of ensemble players doing great material with a Blues, R n B, Old Timey, World Music Feel . They easily play with HUUN HUUR TUU and other ethnic ensembles because their brand of FUNKY GOOD TIME MUSIC is UNIversal . Buy and SMILE !!!

Might Be Even Better Than The First Album

Hazmat Modine's first album, Bahamut, grabbed me instantly. There was a newness to their old manners. There was a vintageness to their new sound. I swear I've heard this sensational mix of blues, brass, and throat singing before. But I couldn't have. There's no such thing. I can only liken it to hearing Paul Simon's "Graceland" for the first time: recognizable but exciting in its newness.

Cicada is infectious, fun, delightful, and extraordinary. Following up something as remarkable as Bahamut could not have been possible. It certainly took awhile but they absolutely succeeded.

Hazmat Modine uses vintage blues as their base but they also manage to completely mix motifs to a great effect. "Walking Stick" (very bluesy) and "Dead Crow" (somewhat reminiscent of Crosby, Stills, & Nash, kind of), are my two favorite tracks. The two hardly sound like the same band, but they share enough to be cohesive and convincing that they must be. The rest of the album pulls similarly from deeply vintage musical resources but make for something quite new, beautifully listenable, and thoroughly complete.

Both Bahamut and Cicada fit into a very short list of my favorite albums of the last 10 years.

Biography

Genre: Blues

Years Active: '00s

New York-based folk group/ethnomusicology experiment Hazmat Modine draw from a wide array of influences and time periods. Performing music from the '20s through the early '60s, including genres such as swing, klezmer, hokum jug band, blues, rocksteady, and more, the dual harmonica-fronted band has earned a reputation as fearless world music alchemists. Founder Wade Schuman was brought up in Ann Arbor, MI, a city known for its music scene, before relocating to New York. His mastery of early blues...
Full Bio

Become a fan of the iTunes and App Store pages on Facebook for exclusive offers, the inside scoop on new apps and more.