The Paper Moon Jazz Band Swings Into Action

Providence-based band counts Basie, Ellington as musical influences

Share
The Paper Moon Jazz Band Swings Into Action
Copy

The Paper Moon Jazz Band is dedicated to the jazz standards of the Swing Era and the music of guitarist Django Reinhardt.

The Providence-based band’s inspiration comes from the big bands of Duke Ellington and Count Basie, along with musical styles played in the cafes of Paris and the brassy sound of New Orleans.

Members include Dylan Harley on rhythm guitar/vocals, John Birt on lead guitar, Albert Behar on accordion, and Casey Belisle on drums.

Here is a conversation with Belisle. The full interview can be found here.

Casey Belisle says that musical timing is based on fours. Rock ‘n’ roll and gospel music are generally in the 4/4 signature or common time, while waltzes are mostly written in 3/4 time.

“Like Dave Brubeck had this song called “Blue Rondo à la Turk” that was in this grouping of three that came out to nine and it was 9/8,” Belisle says. “It just blew my mind like that a rhythm could be like this.”

Belisle said he discovered a genre of music from the late 1990s and early 2000s called Math Rock.

“It is like punk rock with all these, you know, numbers thrown around like, let’s play in four, but then let’s go to five and let’s go to like three,” he says. “And then maybe like a couple stops polyrhythms of just trying to think of something in like seven. Right? So Crazy. It was just nuts to me that all this music existed.”

In 2022, Belisle met Harley, who invited him to sit in with the Paper Moon Jazz Band. At the time it was a duo with Harley and Birt.

“They took me under their little jazz wing and we went for a ride and it was really, really fun,” Belisle says. “And as I started to play this style of stuff, like I found myself channeling all of my musical roots to help in ... curating the style, always trying to serve the song.

“And it’s, yeah, I just, I can’t help but be a sponge to a lot of the music I’ve been influenced by.”

Plastic products cost us, even after we’re done with them — That’s because municipal recycling is paid with taxpayer money. But could the companies that made these products be responsible for paying for them?
Keepers at Roger Williams Park Zoo slept on-site and adjusted routines to ensure animals stayed warm, fed and secure during Rhode Island’s latest storm
The longtime Valley Breeze editor discusses the stories that mattered most and why he decided it was time to step away
Reimbursement rate set by state law in 1979 woefully inadequate to cover car repairs, motorists and auto repair experts say
Scientists discovered the song while digitizing old recordings preserved on a disc made with a Gray Audograph, a dictation machine used in the 1940s
Fewer buses and lost night and weekend service have disrupted riders’ routines across Rhode Island, while saving the state about $4.4 million, according to RIPTA