Racquel Jones joined the party for “Letter to the Editor” from the 2017 release The Temple of I & I. with “Marching the Hate Machines (Into the Sun)” from the 2005 release, Cosmic Games and featured Orrall wearing a contraption of lights radiating from his back and hand. Racquel Jones on stage with Thievery Corporation Additionally, the following musicians were on stage providing vocals for various songs: Racquel Jones, Puma Ptah, Natalia Clavier, Mr. The core band included Garza (synthesizer, producer), Jeff Franca (drums), Rob Myers (sitar, guitar), Frank Orrall (percussion, drums, vocals), Ashish “Hash” Vyas (bass) and two unknown trumpeters. They cycled through a number of musicians throughout the night, and delivered their eclectic mix of electronica, dub, hip-hop, Indian, Brazillian and other genres. Led by co-founder Rob Garza, Thievery Corporation was up next. Thievery Corporation co-founder Rob Garza Their set had plenty of banter from Nikki B, and closed up with “Cocaine Blues” from their 2011 album Funkytown. The lineup also included Jim Orso on drums and singers Daniela Bauer and Layla Dionne. The band was led by singer Nikki B, sporting a long white tiered train, as well as founders Eugene Cho (synthesizer) and JKriv (guitar).
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Nikki B and EscourtĮscourt opened the evening and got the crowd’s blood flowing with their signature disco dance-hall style beats plus synthesizer-driven harmonies. They were joined by Brooklyn-based nu-disco band Escourt. The show featured a number of talented musicians who rotated in and out during the set, as well as two acoustic songs. World music and electronic act Thievery Corporation closed out the Summer Concert Series at the Pier 17 Rooftop on Friday night to a sold out crowd, despite temperatures in the 50’s and high winds.