Gil Scott-Heron: I’m New Here (XL)
An iconic poet/musician whose soulful spoken-word style helped give rise to rapping, Gil Scott-Heron has been proclaimed a major influence in hip hop, neo-soul, and acid jazz. His political activism has been at the forefront of his noted career, which includes the acclaimed poem/song “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised.”
Now, marking another landmark moment in his career, Scott-Heron has released I’m New Here, his first full-length since the 1994 album Spirits, which too was something of a “comeback” — his first studio album since 1982.
Produced by XL label owner Richard Russell, who convinced Scott-Heron to go back into the studio, I’m New Here is an atmospheric, down-tempo disc of diversity.
Acoustic pseudo-ballads are accented by electronics, dramatic strings, and piano in a combination of new poems, covers, and interludes. It’s a release that feels extremely personal, whether from the lyrical content or Scott-Heron’s familiar voice.
Gil Scott-Heron: “Where Did the Night Go”
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Pillars and Tongues: Lay of Pilgrim Park LP + download (Endless Nest)
With just three members, Pillars and Tongues manages to craft powerful folk abstractions and interwoven, trance-inducing vocal dynamics. Both composed and improvisational, these shifting forms evoke spiritual vibes in their soulful essence, heavenly harmonies, and repeated patterns.
Violin, upright bass, and drums and other percussive elements slowly build and fall. Each member contributes to the layered vocal harmonics, often trading rounds of the same melody or balancing pitches as a low or intermediate voice begins a wordless refrain. Fans of Huun Huur Tu, Charming Hostess / Jewlia Eisenberg, and other vocally driven experimentalists will love this.
Pillars and Tongues: “The Center of”
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Arsis: Starve for the Devil (Nuclear Blast)
A major force in metal just six years after its debut, Arsis is a Virginia quartet that boasts tireless harmonized shredding. Thrash and black metal, gently crossing into death metal, form the basis of a sound that leans on flawless technical proficiency in accessible time signatures.
Starve for the Devil trends towards the melodic end of the band’s material, but there’s no shortage of full-speed aggression. Riff lovers will get their money’s worth with this one.
Hot Chip: One Life Stand (Astralwerks)
Hot Chip’s brand of synthesized dance pop has allowed the keyboarded quintet to climb the UK charts and garner heaps of attention in the United States.
One Life Stand is another disc chock full of dance-floor albums, albeit a bit more restrained than on albums past. The gentle vocals of Alexis Taylor and Joe Goddard will continue receiving much of the attention from casual listeners, but One Life Stand really shines with its diversity of synth sounds and instrumental complements (such as the touches from Trinidadian steel-pan player Fimber Bravo).
Massive Attack: Heligoland (Virgin)
Seven years after its last studio offering, commercially thriving electronic producers Massive Attack — closely tied to the trip-hop explosion of the early 1990s — have finally released their long-awaited fifth album, Heligoland.
With Grantley Evan Marshall, a.k.a. Daddy G, back on board in the studio, the group attains a multitude of electronic styles on Heligoland, thanks to its divergence of tastes as well as the usual assortment of guests.
This time, Massive Attack collaborates with Tunde Adebimpe (TV on the Radio), Damon Albarn (Blur), Hope Sandoval (Mazzy Star), Martina Topley-Bird, Adrian Utley (Portishead), and Billy Fuller (Beak). The result is a minimalist electro dreamscape, one that should appeal to a sizable cross-section of music fans.
Honorable Mentions
Bluebrain: Soft Power (Lujo)
Galactic: Ya-Ka-May (Anti-)
Georgia Anne Muldrow: Kings Ballad (Ubiquity)
Shining (Sweden): VI / Klagopsalmer (Indie Recordings)
This Moment in Black History: Public Square (Smog Veil)
Tags: Anti, Arsis, Astralwerks, Beak, Bluebrain, Blur, Endless Nest, Galactic, Georgia Anne Muldrow, Gil Scott-Heron, Hot Chip, Huun Huur Tu, Indie Recordings, Lujo, Martina Topley-Bird, Massive Attack, Mazzy Star, Nuclear Blast, Pillars and Tongues, Portishead, Shining (Sweden), Smog Veil, This Moment in Black History, TV on the Radio, Ubiquity, XL
Thanks for giving This Moment In Black History a special menation. Hope we’ll see more of them in ALARM.