Et tu, Brute? — Nubdug Ensemble Reimagines Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar” Tragedy for “Third” Album

Jason Berry. Courtesy photo.

Jason Berry credits Marlon Brando with introducing him to Julius Caesar.

The San Francisco composer, multi-instrumentalist, and sequential artist saw Brando as Mark Antony in the 1953 film based on William Shakespeare’s tragedy and became intrigued.

“I said, ‘This is just amazing,’ especially with all of those fantastic actors in it,” said Berry, who also fronts Nubdug Ensemble, an experimental music collective.

“At one point, I was thinking about adapting Julius Caesar as a comic strip and thought, ‘I can do a little bit each day.’ Once I started plotting it out, I had to draw so many panels a day and realized there was no way I could do that. I kind of abandoned it, but it was always in my head.”

While the comic strip didn’t work out, Berry eventually landed on doing a musical adaptation of Julius Caesar instead.

“I said, ‘Well, I know that because I’ve done all that research already on the comic strip, so why don’t I do that?’” Berry said. “I just started fiddling around with it, seeing how the words would work over the top of it.”

Berry spent the next two years composing, arranging, and recording Third with Nubdug Ensemble. He assembled 17 notable musicians to help him record 11 tracks for the ambitious album, which includes elements of jazz, funk, and prog rock.

“Once I had a structure and the pre-existing characters of Julius Caesar, I said, ‘I can write a song from this person’s perspective and from this person’s perspective,’” Berry said. “They can be different, but they’ll be unified because it’ll be under the overarching themes of the play.”

On Third, Berry explores themes of ambition, power, corruption, and political violence. The album includes compelling instrumentals and vocal tracks to reimagine Julius Caesar as a musical adaptation for the 21st century.

“It’s talking about the end of the republic, and the story is timeless and timely,” Berry said. “It seemed like this would be the time to do it, if ever there were.”

What resulted is an innovative, genre-bending album filled with poetic lyrics and cerebral instrumentation. Third refreshingly chronicles the political assassination of Roman dictator Julius Caesar and his murder by a group of senators led by Cassius and Brutus.

“These are all archetypes, and these are things that keep coming up again and again through history,” Berry said. “Leading up to the [2024] election, I had that sinking feeling and thought, ‘I think I see how it’s gonna go, but I hope it’s not.’ I personally wanted to be able to work through those feelings in a way that could somehow be positive and not just worry myself to death.”

To learn more, I spoke with Berry about writing and recording Third.

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Mission Possible — Amanda Chaudhary Explores Experimental Sounds and Styles on Meow Meow Band’s “January Suborbital Denomination” Album

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Amanda Chaudhary explores a diversity of sounds and styles on her latest Meow Meow Band album.

As a sonic explorer, Amanda Chaudhary ventures into uncharted musical territory.

The San Francisco keyboardist-composer embarks on a genre-bending adventure through experimental sounds and styles on January Suborbital Denomination.

“There are a lot of different styles on this album, and I always want to try new things,” said Chaudhary about her latest Meow Meow Band album.

“I wanted to try the psychedelic ones and the older jazz forms in addition to the funk and experimental electronics that I traditionally do.”

Filled with avant-garde instrumentation and snappy, curious, and playful lyrics, January Suborbital Denomination encompasses big band, jingle, soul, jazz, funk, electronic, experimental, and psychedelic music across nine imaginative tracks.

The album also invites listeners to experience the album’s subject matter—ranging from radio broadcasts to chocolate oak milk to bridges to cats.

“There is a symmetry in the way they are arranged on there. The bygone era ones are at the two ends of [the album] and then it’s big, small, big, small in between there,” said Chaudhary, who also runs CatSynth TV, a YouTube channel that focuses on electronic instruments.

“It became clear once I knew what was going to be on the album and what wasn’t. A sonic adventure is a good way of putting it, and it’s a sonic adventure for me making these songs. I like the fact that it is that way for other people who are listening to it. It’s filled with puzzles.”

I recently spoke with Chaudhary to decode and digest her second Meow Meow Band album.

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