January 8, 2017

Juçara Marçal - Encarnado [2014]


How one takes to the most jarring and immediately apparent feature of Encarnado, the solo debut of Juçara Marçal, will likely be the single most determinative factor in whether the listener enjoys it or not. This is of course, the complete lack of a rhythm section throughout the entire LP - 41 minutes with no drums or bass. This is an aspect of this record that, on it's own, is quite odd, but when you factor in that this is an album coming out of Brazil - a country that is known for it's danceable samba and breezy bossa nova rhythms, it makes the absence of a rhythm section even more glaringly apparent. Despite the fact that at times, the minimalism can give the album quite a skeletal feel, Marçal and the band she has enlisted to accompany her beautiful singing can do so much - sound so grand - with so little, that the listener could be forgiven for forgetting that at it's core, Encarnado is a brilliant and experimental conversation between, in most cases two or three - at times four, instrumentalists on each track and one vocalist. Although there are things like the bleeps and bloops on "E o Quico?" and Marçal herself playing kalimba on the sweet "Canção pra ninar Oxum", more than anything, a large bulk of the album's sound consists of two guitars.

December 29, 2016

Run The Jewels - Run The Jewels 3 [2016]


Hip-Hop is funny isn't it? Honestly, who would've thought that one of the best recent hip-hop groups would be formed from El-P, of abstract hip-hop Def Jux fame and Killer Mike, who earned his stripes working in an Atlanta hip-hop scene that couldn't sound any more different than that? Even more surprising is that the fruits of this combination have given both rappers, who could have definitely been described as veterans before Run The Jewels was even an idea, an unprecedented level of attention. In a way, RTJ operates as a modern day M.O.P. - although they sound radically different and (unlike M.O.P.) get blatantly political, there are two things that you are guaranteed on every RTJ album that you would be guaranteed in M.O.P's hey-day (Firing Squad, First Family For Life, Warriorz): aggressive lyrics filled with braggadocio accompanied by extremely banging beats.

October 6, 2016

Solange - A Seat At The Table [2016]


In recent years D'Angelo's Black Messiah and Kendrick Lamar's To Pimp A Butterfly, albums that undeniably pull from the rich past of black music, genres like funk, soul and jazz, but at the same time feel fresh and contain socio-political commentary ("The Charade", "Alright"), have been released to wide mainstream and critical success. Each album performed extremely well on the charts, with D'Angelo and Kendrick Lamar reaching number five and number one on the billboard charts respectively. If these albums are continuing any relatively recent musical lineage, it is that of the Soulquarians, an eclectic collective of instrumentalists, singers and rappers of which D'Angelo himself was apart of. The Soulquarians, which consisted of Erykah Badu, Bilal, Common, D'Angelo, Talib Kweli, Mos Def, Pino Palladino, James Poyser, Roy Hargrove, Q-Tip, Questlove, J Dilla and Raphael Saadiq, created a number of beautiful albums during the late 90s and early 2000s, that were full of soul (be it the expression or the actual genre), jazzy, funky and at times contained socio-political - pro-black - commentary (e.g: Common - Like Water For Chocolate). 2014 gave us Black Messiah, 2015 To Pimp A Butterfly and 2016's gift is Solange's A Seat at the Table, the latest, Soulquarian-descendent to take the charts by storm.  

September 8, 2016

Noname - Telefone [2016]


In a by-gone era, when visiting the ridiculously big (and now non-existent) Virgin record store in Manhattan was one of the highlights of my life as a young music enthusiast, the first thing that would have drawn me to Telefone would have been the cover. Like many great album covers, the art that accompanies the mixtape makes a statement without words, a statement that, more or less, lets the observer know what the content of this project will be. It's a simple, but powerful image: a young black girl, with flowers in her hand and a skull on her head. She is young, innocent, but weighed down by death - mourning. Telefone is a mixtape that deals with innocence, youth and growth. However, the most interesting - and at times heartbreaking - aspect about Noname's debut is how she juxtaposes the innocence, sonically and lyrically, with the harsh reality, which comes in the form of racism, police brutality and loss.

May 15, 2016

Radiohead - A Moon Shaped Pool [2016]


Radiohead knocked it out of the park when choosing the two singles, "Burn The Witch" and "Daydreaming". Outside of the context of this album, they are both quite stellar, and in the case of "Daydreaming", hypnotically beautiful. Aside from that, a listen to this record reveals that these two songs were probably the two most effective, in terms of being a near-perfect teaser trailer for this album. The songs that introduced the public to A Moon Shaped Pool didn't give away too little or too much - they revealed just enough.