Say what you will about bassist, songwriter, singer, bandleader, and arranger Meshell Ndegeocello, any box you attempt to put her into is not possibly big enough to hold her creativity and restless, unwieldy aesthetic vision. On "The Sloganeer: Paradise," a tune in which she equates the bland, complicit nature of blindly living modern life with committing suicide, she sings: "To know me is to know I love with/My imagination." It's a summation of her entire career thus far, and this album furthers that notion exponentially. The World Has Made Me the Man of My Dreams is Ndegeocello's debut for Decca; it is wilder than Cookie: An Anthropological Mixtape, or her last recording, The Spirit Music Jamia: Dance of the Infidel. The latter set was a project that indulged her love of postmodern jazz and engaged in improvisation. She directed an ensemble that included Oliver Lake, Don Byron, Jack DeJohnette, Kenny Garrett, Ron Blake, Brandon Ross, Lalah Hathaway, Cassandra Wilson, and others. It walked a line between tight song-oriented material and longer jam-based tunes, and she didn't really sing on it. That's remedied here, and her sultry, smoky voice is heard on virtually every cut. Musically, this albums walks through walls. There are funky soul tunes whose backdrops are full of psychedelic music that would make the latter-day Jimi Hendrix smile in delight (think the material from Cry of Love). There are jazz-oriented tunes that slip toward pop, folk, and whole-tone folk songs. The lyrical content engages spiritual concerns and carnal love more often than not in the same song. And while she once more employs a wildly diverse collection of collaborators that include everyone from Ross and Lake to Pat Metheny, Oumou Sangare, Robert Glasper, Mike Severson, Daniel Jones, Doyle Bramhall, David Gilmore (not the one from Pink Floyd), James Newton, and Graham Haynes, she also cut two songs ("Evolution" and the bonus cut "Soul Spaceship"), playing all the instruments herself. So what does it sound like? The future arriving fully formed on the doorstep. It opens provocatively enough with noted American Muslim teacher and Islamic scholar Shiek Hamza Yusuf reciting the predictions of Mohammed to a backwash of Ross' guitar and ambient sounds. (Yusuf was the man who appeared with George W. Bush after 9/11 and denounced the attacks and all religious violence, and is working for a return to Islamic sciences as well as assisting Western governments in understanding Islamic culture and Muslims.) It moves into a rock & roll dreamscape called "Sloganeering: Paradise" awash in keyboards, a drummer playing drum and bass breaks that would make Prince jealous. "Evolution" is a spaced-out psychedelic dirge with few lyrics and a sound field worthy of Hendrix (and indeed her guitar playing is influenced in that direction). The sci-fi jazz of "Virgo," with Lake, Newton, and trombonist George McMullen, hovers and floats in vanguard space before turning into a dreamy pop song with acoustic guitars, synth washes, and samples but is held together with a gorgeous melody and vocal performance (and contains a funky little solo by Lake on alto saxophone). "Shirk" is a gorgeous spiritual duet between Sangare and Ndegeocello with Hervé Sambe and Metheny on acoustic guitars. Metheny also appears on "Article," the following cut with a guest appearance by Thandiswa Mazwai singing with Ndegéocello, but this time out she pops that bass of hers in response. It's a dizzying cut with shifting rhythms and textures, and call-and-response vocals that feel more like counterpoint as different sonic and textural motifs move across the front of the tune. All this and the record is just over halfway. The deep spirituality at work here has been present in Ndegeocello's work arguably since the beginning, but it has become more pronounced in recent years. That said, the beautiful and poetic expressions of desire as it encounters both flesh and the divine are soulful, without pretension or artifice. "Michelle Johnson" is a freewheeling exploration of electronic outer realms, tough guitar, and bass-heavy funk, with killer drum kit work by Deantoni Parks and hand percussion by Gilmar Gomes. The sonic treatments by Scott Mann and Chad Royce are all structure to fill the space around the artist's basslines and expressive belly-deep voice -- and you can be the judge as to which Michelle Johnson she's speaking of here. "Solomon" is among the most beautiful songs this woman has ever written. It is presented in a painterly way, illustrated and framed inside a warm bubbly electronic backdrop that gives way to languid melody, a spine-moving bassline that grooves low and slow on this futuristic soul lullaby. The official album closes with the completely out-to-lunch "Relief: A Stripper Classic," which is the true missing link between urban soul, heavy metal, and slow, downtempo funk -- all of it with a pronounced hook and refrain. "Soul Spaceship" is the place where Sly Stone, Amp Fiddler, and Millie Jackson meet in a big bass sci-fi wonderland presided over by Rick James and Teena Marie! The basslines and synth lines are huge, drum machines abound and skitter, and all the while Ndegéocello and Sy Smith make a beautifully grooving mess with the vocals. Ultimately, The World Has Made Me the Man of My Dreams, with its irony, sincerity, seeming contradiction, and elliptical paradox, is the most expansive, complex record yet released by this always provocative artist. It will take more than a single listen to warm up to, but once you actually take it in, it will be one of her recordings you go back to over and again because while it gives up its secrets slowly, it gives the listener something new each time too. Wild, visionary, and marvelously tough, this is a groover that will turn you inside out.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa' <-
Tracklist :
1 Haditha 1:31
Engineer – Erik Dyba
Guitar – Brandon Ross
Mixed By – Fran Cathcart
Programmed By [Additional] – Neil McLellan
Voice – Hamza Yusuf
2 The Sloganeer: Paradise 5:05
Drums – Deantoni Parks
Engineer – Stephen Joseph
Guitar – Mike Severson
Mixed By – Neil McLellan
Producer [Additional] – Chad Royce, Scott Mann
3 Evolution 3:45
Engineer – Erik Dyba
Mixed By – Bob Power
Vocals [Additional] – Daniel Jones
4 Virgo 2:52
Engineer – Erik Dyba
Flute – James Newton
Guitar [Additional] – Scott Mann
Keyboards [Additional] – Scott Mann
Mixed By – Chad Royce, Scott Mann
Percussion [Additional] – Chad Royce
Saxophone – Oliver Lake
Trombone – George McMullen
5 Lovely Lovely 3:28
Engineer – Erik Dyba
Flute – James Newton
Guitar – Hervé Sambe, Rhamis Kent
Percussion – Gilmar Gomes
6 Elliptical 5:35
Cornet – Graham Haynes
Engineer – Erik Dyba
Guitar – Brandon Ross
Mixed By – Erik Dyba
Percussion – Davi Vieira
Programmed By – Amatus-Sami
Vocals – Sy Smith
7 Shirk 2:53
Engineer – Erik Dyba
Guitar – Hervé Sambe, Pat Metheny
Mixed By – Eric Elterman
Vocals – Oumou Sangare
8 Article 3 3:33
Drums – Deantoni Parks
Engineer – Erik Dyba
Guitar – Pat Metheny
Mixed By – Fran Cathcart
Percussion – Davi Vieira
Vocals – Thandiswa Mazwai
9 Michelle Johnson 5:03
Drums – Deantoni Parks
Engineer – Erik Dyba
Guitar – David Gilmore, Doyle Bramhall, Hervé Sambe
Keyboards – Daniel Jones
Keyboards [Additional] – Chad Royce, Scott Mann
Mixed By – Bob Power
Mixed By [Additional] – Chad Royce, Scott Mann
Percussion – Gilmar Gomes
Vocals – Sy Smith
10 Headline 1:53
Drums – Deantoni Parks
Engineer – Erik Dyba
Keyboards – Jason Lindner
Mixed By [Additional] – Fran Cathcart
Producer [Additional] – Fran Cathcart
11 Solomon 4:04
Drum Programming [Additional] – Chad Royce
Drums – Rhamis Kent
Engineer – Eric Elterman, Erik Dyba
Mixed By – Chad Royce, Scott Mann
Voice – Jack Bean
12 Relief: A Stripper Classic 4:28
Bass – Mark Kelley
Drum Programming [Additional] – Chad Royce
Engineer – Stephen Joseph
Guitar – Mike Severson
Keyboards [Additional] – Chad Royce, Scott Mann
Mixed By – Chad Royce, Scott Mann
Piano – Robert Glasper
Synthesizer – Daniel Jones
Vocals – Sy Smith
– BONUS TRACKS –
13 Soul Spaceship 4:35
Credits :
Bass – Meshell Ndegeocello
Drums – Meshell Ndegeocello
Guitar – Meshell Ndegeocello
Keyboards – Meshell Ndegeocello
Producer – Chad Royce, Erik Dyba, Meshell Ndegeocello, Scott Mann
Vocals – Meshell Ndegeocello
17.3.25
MESHELL NDEGEOCELLO — The World Has Made Me The Man Of My Dreams (2003) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
14.9.24
World Saxophone Quartet — The Complete Remastered Recordings on Black Saint and Soul Note (2012) RM | 6CD BOX-SET | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Probably the first of several saxophone-only ensembles that proliferated in jazz after 1975, the WSQ was unquestionably the most commercially (and, arguably, the most creatively) successful. Of course, commercial success is a relative thing in jazz, especially when one is speaking of an avant-garde group. But unlike most free jazz artists, the WSQ managed to attract an audience of significant size, large enough to have garnered a major-label record deal in the '80s, an almost unheard-of occurrence in that retro-jazz decade. The band did it on merit, too, with only a hint of compromise (manifested mainly by albums of R&B and Duke Ellington covers). By the time their first record on Elektra/Musician came out in 1986, the band had evolved from its fire-breathing, free-improvising, ad-hoc beginnings into a smooth-playing, compositionally minded, well-rehearsed band. At its creative peak, the group melded jazz-based, harmonically adventurous improvisation with sophisticated composition. All of the group's original members (Julius Hemphill, alto; Oliver Lake, alto; David Murray, tenor; and Hamiet Bluiett, baritone) were estimable composers as well as improvisers. Each complemented the whole, making them even greater than the considerable sum of their parts. As a composer, Hemphill drew on European techniques (though his tunes were not without an unalloyed jazz component), while Bluiett was steeped in blues and funk. Lake and Murray fell somewhere in between. As soloists and writers, the early WSQ covered all the bases. Chris Kelsey
Tracklist :
World Saxophone Quartet - Steppin' With The World Saxophone Quartet
World Saxophone Quartet - W.S.Q.
World Saxophone Quartet - Revue
World Saxophone Quartet - Live In Zurich
World Saxophone Quartet - Live At Brooklyn Academy Of Music
World Saxophone Quartet - Moving Right Along
All Credits :
+ last month
CHARLES-VALENTIN ALKAN : Alkan Edition (2017) 13CD BOX-SET | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
Charles-Valentin Alkan (1813-1888) All Tracks & Credits
