Considered by many to be the finest and busiest band to arrive on the New York Swing scene, The Yalloppin' Hounds derive their name from a running gag among the musicians of the Illinois Jacquet Big Band. One day at a French concert, Jacquet poked fun at another well-known Swing band from New York by referring to them as a bunch of "yallopping hounds", so when the founding members, all Jacquet alumnus, got together to think up a name for their new swing band, the choice was obvious. "We knew enough about each other already to hear a sound in our heads...and the sound was that of a bunch of barking dogs...." explains bandleader and saxophonist Joey "G-Clef" Cavaseno. 

Cavaseno was trained under the strict tutelage of some of the last living masters of Jazz Music, such as Doc Cheatham, Illinois Jacquet, Panama Francis, and Arvell Shaw. He stayed in these bands for over a twelve year period, studying, performing, observing, and paying dues, so that one day, he too might lead a great band. While many of his peers scrambled to acquire record contracts before even having played professionally as a sideman for any length of time, Joey followed the great example of so many reedmen in the orchestra of his idol, Duke Ellington, and stayed as long as he could, soaking up the experience and learning the craft first-hand, in a time where such experiences were all but gone away. In all three of these bands, his talent blossomed and he was given heavy responsibilities oftentimes as a featured soloist, lead alto, straw boss, and musical co-director; often called upon to write musical arrangements. Jazz Music brought him to over thirty countries before reaching the age of thirty. 

During the same time period, a revolution in music was happening all around G-Clef's New York, circa 1986-88: Hip-Hop. It was the dawning of a new age in this brazen Black artform, known as the new skool. The huge beats coming out of car systems were becoming more musical and at the same time revolutionary in tonality and timbre. G-Clef heard something in it that attracted his heart, and he followed it, humbling himself 100% to a new type of training: the unlearning of music as he had come to know it!  G-Clef did the unthinkable for any accomplished jazz musician of his day, he achieved total submersion into the culture and artform that was Hip-Hop. He joined up with several rap crews in the Bronx area known as Gun Hill, where he trained and mastered all the musical elements of this ground-breaking revolution, experimenting with various drum machines, samplers, 4-track recorders, eventually rhyming as well.  He sought to unite this new technology and sonority with his jazz training and eventually scored a deal on Tuff City Records in 1992 with what was beyond a doubt the first Jazz-Rap fusion group, Ghetto Philharmonic. He did not stop there, as he ventured further into the rap music game, he eventually led an aggressive cutting edge group which was, for a time, under the Wu-Tang umbrella, the Soul Kid Klik.  All the while, and for a period of about twelve years, this musical Gemini led a true double life, nicknamed G-Clef in Hip-Hop, while still referred to as Joey Cavaseno in Jazz.

then it all came together.

In 1998, several members of the Illinois Jacquet band, past and present, began jamming on their own to create a smaller group. Tapes were sent out, and the Yalloppin' Hounds were born.  In 1998, the new band he formed was performing at the same series at Lincoln Center as was the Jacquet band, with himself at the Lead Alto chair, and it was then that he realized the time had come to break free. Doors swung open like mad for the Hounds, as it was the height of the modern swing craze and young people were rediscovering Swing culture. Gigs were abundant, and in no time, G-Clef found himself working six shows per week, with little or no time for his straight jazz or hip-hop careers. He was now a musical pioneer in a strange new idiom: Modern Swing. G-Clef knew what his contribution had to be, and he began, for the first time, combining his talents as a rap lyricist/producer and  jazz composer/arranger,  writing complete songs in a style he called "ghetto swing".  He said, "The term Ghetto Swing in our mind refers to the rich history of African American folk music. Whether one calls the style swing, jazz, new jack swing, funk, hip-hop or rhythm and blues, if there is a 'swinging' feel to it, it can be Ghetto Swing."

The Yalloppin Hounds have since possessed the distinction of being the first band in the world to combine the elements of traditional Swing with Hip-Hop stylings, creating a unique and excitingly fresh hybrid. The band, currently weighing in at seven pieces, sounds like a much bigger group, due to the tight section riffing by the horns, and the constant driving beat. Contrary to many early misconceptions, the Hounds are neither neo-craze jump band nor a rap crew; they are a group of musicians and vocalists of the highest caliber who swing and/or groove hard with relaxed precision. Since their first incarnation in 1998, the Hounds have grown from a vibrantly authentic swing/jazz band to producing some of the most universal original music of the new millennium.

A key factor, and perhaps the most important of all, is the wealth of original material brought forth by the Hounds. With a focus on material with decidedly less trite subject matter than one would come to expect from today's  Modern Swing, Composer, Lyricist, and Arranger G-Clef chooses to portray real-life scenarios more-so than a retro tone. Strong, catchy melodies, as well as a hard-driving rhythm are the vibe, sparked by the raw abandon of the Hounds. G-Clef has penned songs that will instantly impress as sure-fire hits; In New York, and now in other places, music fans of all ages can be found regularly humming and singing the tunes! Subject matter ranges from the sexual to the spiritual, and everything in between.  This groundbreaking yet palatable music has been unleashed on the mass public in the band's three CD releases: Ghetto Swing Extreme, New Yalloppin’ City, and their Lincoln Center debut, Dirty, Raw & Swingin' , all available on Yalloppin Entertainment, and distributed nationally in stores by City Hall Records.

 

MAJOR ACHEIVEMENTS:

 

Hounds Leader, Joey “G-Clef” Cavaseno

1989

Featured soloist on Grammy Award Nominated album "Jacquet's Got It" by Tenor Sax Legend, Illinois Jacquet

1992

Played with Tony Bennett and Illinois Jacquet at the Clinton Inaugural Ball

2000

Featured in The Encyclopedia of Jazz by Leonard Feather and Ira Gitler

 

The Yalloppin' Hounds

1998-2000

Official Band for Komen Race for the Cure for Breast Cancer Research

1998-2000

Played regularly at "swing nights" at the famous Supper Club, NYC

1998-2001

Played regularly as featured Saturday Night band at Windows on the World, NYC

1999-2000

Played World Financial Center summer outdoor music festival

1999-2002

Featured annually since 1999 at "Pops is Tops" concerts for children Louis Armstrong's house lawn.

2000-2001

Played two years in a row for a ten day stint at Half Note, Athens, Greece's top Jazz Club.

2000-2002

Songs: You Ain't Shit, Nobody Knows, and Hot Dog featured in syndication on "E! Fashion" on E! channel

1998

Played Midsummer Night Swing at Lincoln Center, NYC

1999

Heavily featured in definitive book on the swing resurgence, The Swing Book by Degen Penner

1999

Played every Thursday Night as "Swing" House Band at Webster Hall, NYC

2000

Played Mayor Giuliani's Mayoral Christmas Party, NYC

2000   

Song "Hot Dog" is official song for Planned Parenthood's new line of free condoms.

2000   

Song "Oops, My Bad" won 2000 Swing Award for Best Song, swingawards.com website.

2000

Played as part of the Montague Street Fair, Brooklyn, NYC

2001

Selected as only band to perform, and played at American Lindy Hop Championships, Stamford, CT

2001

Played World Trade Center summer outdoor music festival

2001

Played "The Kitchen" anniversary street fair, NYC

2001

Played 2 years in a row as featured band for "JAMS" Jamaica Queens, NY outdoor summer Music series.

2001   

Song "Oops, My Bad" was featured in indie comedy film Dead Pet, distributed by Hollywood Video

2001

Song "Sun Ray" was selected as part of mp3.com's "swing" compilation "Zoot Suits and Hepcats".

2002

Songs "Daddy, Make It Feel Good" and "Romantic Thugs" included on "Vegas, Scotland" CD compilation

2002

Selected to play as featured artist at CBGB's "The Last Word" Hip-Hop/Spoken Word showcase

2003

Song " Flat Foot Floogie" released as part of " Best Of Modern Swing" compliation on Heptown Records

2004

Song " Keep it Tight" released as part of " CD Compilation Combinado II" by DJ Kocktail in Argentina

2004

Hounds tapped to play July 4th NYC Fireworks display party on Roosevelt Island

* The Hounds have appeared at the following New York City venues: Midsummer Night Swing at Lincoln Center, Race For The Cure @ Central Park, 10-50 Swing Street, Swing 46, The Supper Club, Windows on the World, China Club, Irving Plaza, S.O.B., Webster Hall, Rodeo Bar, Tatou, XIT, Louisiana Bar and Grill, No Moore, Lansky Lounge, El Flamingo, Jack’s Joint, Don Hill's, CBGB, Life, as well as having played for various Swing Societies and Colleges throughout the United States, as well as Europe.