Black Pumas grab Grammy attention with fusion of rock, soul
Black Pumas went from a studio project between strangers to earning four Grammy nominations in a few short years

When Eric Burton and Adrian Quesada first started playing together in an Austin studio in 2017, they had just met each other and werenāt even entertaining the idea that one day theyād be performing live.
āWe werenāt really a band We were a studio project,ā said Quesada, a Grammy Award-winning guitarist-producer who had been honing his craft for years in about a half dozen bands.
āI just knew that it was going to be something enchanting and very beautiful just between the both of us,ā said Burton, who sings, writes and plays guitar. āI donāt think that we could ever have guessed that weād end up playing the inauguration and being nominated for four Grammys.ā
But creativity sparked in Quesadaās analog studio and this cross-cultural fusion of retro and modern, psychedelic rock and soul became Black Pumas going from under the radar to breakout band in just a few short years.
After releasing their self-titled album in 2019, Black Pumas earned their first nomination for best new artist at last yearās Grammy Awards, but they lost when Billie Eilish swept the awards show last February. They are back again with three nominations for album of the year, record of the year and best American roots performance.
Quesada, 43, is used to getting the question about the āovernightā success of their band, but back-to-back nominations in the top Grammy categories makes him think of all the hard work they both had put in before they met each other.
āItās definitely humbling. And then sometimes I have to remind myself of how many ups and downs I have been through, how many ups and downs Eric has been through,ā said Quesada, who has two decades of experience in music. There were times when he had to take a job delivering pizzas to make money for his family while also working as a musician.
Burton, 30, was raised in the San Fernando Valley and grew up singing in church, then moved on to musical theater. He busked at the Santa Monica pier to raise a little money before making his way to Austin where he sang at the corner of 6th Street and Congress.
Quesada is a man of multitudes: he was part of the Grammy-winning Latin funk band Grupo Fantasma who also had gigs as a backing band for Prince and later played in bands such as Brownout and Echocentrics. Before Black Pumas, Quesada produced an album in 2019 of Chicano-Texas soul music that brought new light on the contributions of Latino artists and music.
āItās like this perfect intersection of Black, brown, white, all kinds of different people,ā he said of soul music. āWhat I love about it is itās actually the most inclusive.ā
They were playing in Europe when the pandemic hit and shut down touring, so they did what came natural to them. They went back into the studio and recorded new songs and live versions for a 2020 deluxe edition of their debut record, that includes fantastic covers of the Beatlesā āEleanor Rigbyā and āFast Carā by Tracy Chapman.
Their song āColorsā has been a No. 1 hit on Triple A stations and got some love from Top 40 and rock radio as well, but they are an underdog in the record of the year category alongside platinum hits by DaBaby, Doja Cat, Billie Eilish and Post Malone.
But the momentum of the band earned them a chance to perform the uplifting anthem as a part of President Joe Bidenās inauguration night TV special.
The duo doesnāt easily fit into genre lines with songs inspired by gospel, funk and ā60s era rock, but anchored by a tight percussive and modern beat. The pair, who won emerging act of the year at the 2020 Americana Honors and Awards show, said they let their label decide what genre categories to nominate them in.
āOne thing we have in common is we also didnāt want to be just a soul band,ā said Quesada, who said they both are heavily influenced by hip-hop rhythms as well. āWe like it kinda being rock ānā roll.ā
Burton said their first album together felt like a handshake and now they really know each otherās musical tastes as they go back in the studio to start on their second album, which he promises will be different than the first.
āMy favorite thing about what we do is that we have successfully made something that feels very familiar yet relevant and new and fresh,ā said Burton.
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Online: https://www.theblackpumas.com/
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Follow Kristin M. Hall at https://twitter.com/kmhall