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Moses Patrou has spent the past twenty-five years in New York, carving out a unique space as a multi-instrumentalist and bandleader. From early days in Madison, Wisconsin playing hand drums in hip hop bands, to immersing himself in Cuban and Brazilian traditions, to gigging across the city in every imaginable context, Patrou has done it all. During the pandemic, he taught himself to play organ—a transformation that has reshaped his sound and his role in the scene.
Here he reflects on the long road behind his new record Confession of a Fool - a soulful and striking record that represents the culmination of a lifetime in music - and what it means to make a defining statement at midlife. Patrou talks about the house fire that nearly took everything, the influence of his father (a piano player who named him after Mose Allison), and the difference between being a sideman and stepping into the spotlight.
"There's a certain point where the music has to come through your experience," he says. "It has to filter through your life."
Today, on the ocassion of the 300th episode of The Third Story, there is no better person to talk to than Moses Patrou.
www.third-story.comwww.leosidran.substack.com www.wbgo.org/podcast/the-third-story
By Leo Sidran4.9
172172 ratings
Moses Patrou has spent the past twenty-five years in New York, carving out a unique space as a multi-instrumentalist and bandleader. From early days in Madison, Wisconsin playing hand drums in hip hop bands, to immersing himself in Cuban and Brazilian traditions, to gigging across the city in every imaginable context, Patrou has done it all. During the pandemic, he taught himself to play organ—a transformation that has reshaped his sound and his role in the scene.
Here he reflects on the long road behind his new record Confession of a Fool - a soulful and striking record that represents the culmination of a lifetime in music - and what it means to make a defining statement at midlife. Patrou talks about the house fire that nearly took everything, the influence of his father (a piano player who named him after Mose Allison), and the difference between being a sideman and stepping into the spotlight.
"There's a certain point where the music has to come through your experience," he says. "It has to filter through your life."
Today, on the ocassion of the 300th episode of The Third Story, there is no better person to talk to than Moses Patrou.
www.third-story.comwww.leosidran.substack.com www.wbgo.org/podcast/the-third-story

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