Madlib – Unsung Sundays https://unsungsundays.com What you should be listening to. Sun, 13 Mar 2016 16:17:46 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.2.1 Madlib: Shades Of Blue: Madlib Invades Blue Note https://unsungsundays.com/album-reviews/madlib-shades-of-blue-madlib-invades-blue-note/ Sun, 21 Feb 2016 13:03:22 +0000 http://unsungsundays.com/?post_type=album_reviews&p=349 Madlib’s remixing of Blue Note Record’s archives is a glorious success, and a statement not solely about Madlib’s production skills, but also about the states and futures of the hip hop and jazz genres.

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About a third of the way through Shades Of Blue, Madlib explains succinctly explains the story and importance of Blue Note records: “Alfred Lion and Francis Wolff: two German immigrants who founded a jazz record company in 1939 that became very famous in its genre. Unlike any other jazz label, Blue Note Records influenced the evolution of music in sound, style, and technical standards. Each of the Blue Note recording sessions was documented by the photographs of Francis Wolff. Alfred Lion’s vision of music and Francis Wolff’s clear view of the recording sessions are a legacy of a unique creative achievement that continues to this very day.” To this day, Blue Note is one of the most important record labels in the music industry, setting and defying trends with apparent ease.

In 2003, Madlib was granted the rare privilege of access to their entire catalogue for a collection of remixes to be re-released on Blue Note Record’s catalogue. Each song is named after the track it remixes, and only one includes a rapped verse (Please Set Me At Ease, featuring Medaphoar). What results from this focus on the original tracks is a collection of hip hop beats that morphs into something entirely different — and completely unexpected.

The jazz Madlib is remixing, like all great jazz, lied on the fringe’s of music’s sensibilities (at one point in time). And while Madlib wasn’t the first star to gain access to Madlib’s catalogue, he is the one who seems most fit for the project. His hip hop production work and his ability as an emcee isn’t far removed from Blue Note’s jazziest origins: it’s eccentric, unpredictable, and far from the status quo of commercialism in the genre.

That makes for a unique pairing and an interesting listen — one that is at once superficial and intricate, in the sense that it makes for great background music and also rewards deeper listening.

Throughout the interludes in the album, Madlib takes the time to explain the story behind Blue Note and its success — but you also get the impression that he’s talking, at least metaphorically, about his dreams for his own career as a producer. Talking about Alfred Lion, he explains that Alfred never made a mistake, and that out of the over–1,000 records that Alfred produced, 950 of them are classics. There’s a sense that Madlib hopes the same for himself.

Madlib is also making a statement about hip hop, as a genre: by taking jazz classics from the world’s most pre-eminent jazz label and mixing them for a new future, he’s asserting that hip hop — in form and texture — is as varied and unique as jazz was, and perhaps is its natural successor. Shades Of Blue makes a strong case.

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Jazz Fusion’s Comeback https://unsungsundays.com/features/jazz-fusions-comeback/ Sun, 21 Feb 2016 13:02:12 +0000 http://unsungsundays.com/?post_type=features&p=364 Perhaps by accident, Kendrick Lamar and David Bowie have both had milestone records in the past year that would herald a long-thought-dead genre's sudden resurgence. Is this a trend or a legitimate revival?

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As a genre, jazz fusion was the crowning example of jazz’s odds with pop culture. While the simplest way to explain jazz’s decline was that it was usurped by the rock music of its day, the truth — as often — is a little more complicated. In actuality, the genre dissipated because it left the dance floor to experiment more, and its experimentation was at odds with its commercial success.

From there, we saw the birth of jazz fusion: jazz and rock primarily, but occasionally with funk or R&B instead. Jazz-rock became a big thing in the ’70s, with groups like Chicago or Frank Zappa being largely responsible for its uprising. Cream and the Grateful Dead were largely responsible for its popularity as well. In particular, The Grateful Dead’s jam-based performances were largely responsible for jazz-rock’s growing acceptance, since improv as an art form was so jazz-like to begin with.

But since the ’80s, it seemed like a lot of crossover jazz was fading away as the industry moved towards smooth jazz and its contemporaries on the radio stations. And, as far as I can figure, jazz hasn’t been a popular mainstay on the radio since then.

But it feels like there’s something changing in music. It’s hard to notice it, but once you do, you’ll start hearing it everywhere. Jazz — and jazz fusion — just might be making a comeback.

Jazz and Hip Hop

Jazz’s biggest return came in the form of last year’s To Pimp A Butterfly, Kendrick Lamar’s newest record. Stylistically, it’s very different from his earlier work, and the list of producers on the record — aside from familiar names like Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg — were puzzling to hip hop fans. But TPAB was undoubtedly the best record of the year, and certainly its most important — perhaps the most important of the decade. And it’s jazz fusion through and through.

If modern jazz fusion has a hero, that hero is Kendrick Lamar.

Billboard has a fantastic interview with jazz legends and newcomers Terrace Martin, Robert Glasper, Ambrose Akinmusire, and Kamasi Washington — all of whom played on To Pimp A Butterfly. In the long and short, it’s an interview in praise of hip hop, but also in praise of Kendrick — more than once, the article refers to Kendrick as the John Coltrane of hip hop.

To Pimp A Butterfly is this new version of jazz fusion that’s a lot like the old one: there’s no need for jazz fusion to be restricted to its rock leanings anymore; now, the world’s most popular genre and its most important progenitor has harnessed it to make the genre more soulful again. If modern jazz fusion has a hero, that hero is Kendrick Lamar.

But hip hop has always had its roots in jazz music. A Tribe Called Quest felt like it picked up right where ’70s jazz left off, particularly with The Low End Theory. The mentality, the rhythms, they’re all similar. The feeling of improvisation is there, the experimentation, the braveness, and perhaps even the lack of brevity are all in that record — and many others in hip hop.

Hip hop’s association with jazz has always been a known quantity too — maybe not amongst popular rappers’ fan bases, but certainly to the core followers of the genre. Pioneering producer Madlib’s 2003 record, Shades Of Blue, is a collection of jazz remixes using records from the legendary Blue Note Records collection. (Perhaps fittingly, Blue Note released Shades of Blue as well). Shades of Blue was dubbed an experiment, but at the same time, that’s not necessarily the case for most instrumental hip hop. Groups like 40 Winks or The Land Of The Loops owe everything to jazz.

So while jazz bands are making a comeback now in hip hop music, particularly thanks to Kendrick, there might be something bigger going on beneath the surface.

Rock’n’Jazz

Even before David Bowie passed away, Blackstar was a revelation: a rock album that largely avoided rock and roll, the record is jazz fusion at its finest (read our review). The title track and Lazarus both reveal an innate understanding that Bowie had about jazz music. And generally speaking, Bowie’s had a history of leading the way in rock music. Blackstar imitators are no doubt on their way.

But the jazz thing’s already making a comeback in rock records. It was noticeable before Bowie’s newest record came out, but it wasn’t something that could be tangibly stated as a comeback. For example, Guy Carvey’s (of Elbow fame) debut record as a solo artist, Courting The Squall, is loaded with jazzy moments.

And progressive rockers have been keeping up the jazz tradition for decades. Progressive death metal band Opeth has been experimenting with this style for nearly half a decade now, with their record Heritage being an obvious candidate for a jazz comeback retrospective. And that came out in 2011, although it’s undoubtedly aging well; it’s perhaps a better album now than it was when it was released.

Indie rock is also beginning to develop an understanding of jazz. There are jazz notes throughout Harriet’s debut record, not to mention Nickel Creek’s unusual jazz-inspired arrangements on their comeback record A Dotted Line.

Jazz is the live band at its most untamed and its most natural, a cacophony of high-flying instrumentation all in the name of making popular music feel more organic again.

It seems like every ten years, we’re talking about jazz music making a comeback. Did it ever leave? I’m not sure. Is it coming back? I don’t know. I don’t want to look like a fool ten years from now, but I’d be surprised if this is the last we hear about a jazz fusion comeback in the next couple years.

In today’s musical environment — one which feels predicated on electronic synths and R&B-inspired chill pop — jazz feels ripe for a comeback. When more people like Kendrick Lamar start relishing in the live band again, jazz becomes a natural result: jazz is the live band at its most untamed and its most natural, a cacophony of high-flying instrumentation all in the name of making popular music feel more organic again.

And if it takes jazz to bring back a sense of invention to modern pop, I’m all for it.

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