Sound

SHABAKA

Der umtriebige Saxophonist ist unter Anderem bekannt durch seine international gefeierten Bands Sons of Kemet und The Comet Is Coming. Shabakas aktuelle Arbeiten konzentrieren sich besonders auf die Flöte.

About

Shabaka, the artist best known for his work as the incendiary sax player and band leader of celebrated groups Sons of Kemet and The Comet Is Coming, announces his new solo album, Perceive its Beauty, Acknowledge its Grace, out April 12th via Impulse!, a work that sees Shabaka primarily focus on flutes, and shares the lead single/video, End of Innocence. The piece features contributions from Jason Moran (piano), Nasheet Waits (drums), and Carlos Niño (percussion), and its Phoebe Boswell-directed video features a languid Shabaka moving fluidly while enveloped in water as the sounds of the piece similarly wash over the listener. Additionally, Shabaka has announced a performance in Brooklyn, NY at National Sawdust on Tuesday, April 23rd. He will also be performing at Big Ears Festival in Knoxville, TN at the end of March. 

Having put the saxophone down and devoting his studies and energies towards the flute, Perceive its Beauty, Acknowledge its Grace is, in a sense, a debut album. And yet, the album also serves as a reintroduction to the artist, a levitating, stunning work chock full of the lessons he’s learned over the course of his life and career. It represents the spirit of exploration that the artist is most tapped into these days. With contributions on the record from André 3000, Esperanza Spalding, Moses Sumney, Brandee Younger, Floating Points, Laraaji, Miguel Atwood-Ferguson, Saul Williams, Elucid, and more, Perceive its Beauty, Acknowledge its Grace is a grand artistic statement from Shabaka, impossible to classify into genre, and bottomless in its exploratory curiosity. 

Watch The Video For Shabaka's End Of Innocence Shabaka's recent musical exploration includes employing a variety of flutes, including the ancient Japanese Shakuhachi, which he started playing in 2020 during the pandemic. “Since then, it has slowly changed the scope of my musical inner landscape and drawn me towards a multitude of other instruments in the flute family,” he explained. “As more flutes have been added to my arsenal including Mayan Teotihuacan drone flutes, Brazilian Pifanos, Native American flutes and South American Quenas, I’ve started to appreciate the underlying principles that cause these instruments to resonate most fully and use this understanding to form a concept allowing me to freely move between instruments.” 

On New Year’s Day 2023, in the wake of the release of his 2022 debut EP, Afrikan Culture (which notably featured the artist primarily on flutes), Shabaka announced that beginning in 2024 he’d take a hiatus from playing the saxophone publicly, with his intention to cease playing with bands in which the saxophone was his primary instrument. 

For the flute-forward album Perceive its Beauty, Acknowledge its Grace, Shabaka tapped into a remarkable cadre of players. “I invited a bunch of musicians I’ve met and admired over the past few years of touring throughout the United States to collaborate and everyone said yes, which I constantly find breathtaking,” he disclosed. His aim was to gather the musicians at Rudy Van Gelder’s historic studios, which he says “informed the sound of so many seminal jazz albums that have shaped my musical aptitude. We played with no headphones or separation in the room so we could capture the atmosphere of simply playing together in the space without a technological intermediary.” 

When asked about the meaning of the song’s titles, he explained that his previous album’s song titles can be read as poems, respectively. “The narrative aspect of my albums is always intentional,” he explained. “Around the release of the Shabaka and the Ancestors album We Are Sent Here by History, I coined the term ‘sonic poems’ to express how I’m intending the listener to relate to the words associated with the sounds contained on the disc. Each title on this disc was extracted from a longer poem written specifically for the album which only achieved its full meaning in the presence of the music.” Perceive its Beauty, Acknowledge its Grace follows in this tradition of titles as symbolizing a narrative which is necessarily subjective and expansive in relation to the listener’s experience with the heard music.”

Programmtext

Diese Musik verspricht Heilung, und sie stiftet Trost. Mit seinem kraftvollen Saxofonspiel hat Shabaka Hutchings den Jazz des letzten Jahrzehnts wesentlich geprägt, in seinen Bands Sons of Komet and The Comet Is Coming verband er Tradition und Moderne, Jazz, Rock, Elektronik und karibische und afrikanische Stile. Auf seinem Solodebüt Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace spielt er nun ausschließlich auf Flöten und Klarinetten und lässt sich auf Harfen und Modularsynthesizern begleiten: eine warme, fließende, ozeanische Musik, inspiriert von Alice Coltrane und vom spirituellen Jazz der Siebzigerjahre.

  • Da JavaScript dekativiert ist, werden einige Inhalte nicht geladen.
  • Da dein Browser nicht supportet wird, werden einige Inhalte nicht geladen.
  • Auf Grund von zu geringer Bandbreite werden einige Inhalte nicht geladen.
  • Auf Grund von zu schwacher Hardware werden einige Inhalte nicht geladen.