Kamis, 28 Juli 2016

Pitchfork's Best New Album -- Elza Soares: A Mulher do Fim do Mundo (The Woman at the End of the World)

Elza Soares: A Mulher do Fim do Mundo (The Woman at the End of the World)

There's a story, often repeated, about Elza Soares' big break. The future samba icon was just a teenager when she went on Rio de Janeiro's "Calouros em Desfile," a talent show whose name translates as something like "Freshmen on Parade." The daughter of a washerwoman and a laborer, she cut a strange figure for a talent show, wearing an ill-fitting dress she had pilfered from her mother's laundry, gathering and pinning its billowing extra fabric. The audience cackled as the show's host, Ary Barroso, incredulously asked her, "What planet are you from?"

Soares didn't bat an eye: "Planet Hunger."

She wasn't kidding. Soares, born in 1937 (by most accounts, anyway) in one of Rio's favelas, grew up poor and desperate. At 12, her father had forced her into an abusive marriage with the neighborhood teen he believed was raping her. She had given birth to her first son at 13; by the time she was widowed at 21, she would have four more children. She gave up one for adoption; another died of malnutrition. It's often said that she appeared on "Calouros em Desfile" in order to win the money she needed to buy medicine for her sick child.

It goes without saying that she won the show. Afterward, Soares would go on to develop one of the most distinctive voices in música popular brasileira, or MBP, adopting elements of scat singing and New Orleans jazz and making the most of her richly expressive rasp. Today she is fêted as a national hero: Her biographer José Louzeiro has declared her contributions to Brazil's folk music analogous to Bessie Smith's and Ella Fitzgerald's to the blues.

Black, working class, and self-taught, Soares is the literal embodiment of the classic rags-to-riches story. But hardship has never loosened its grip upon her. She has endured exile, scandal, and racist opprobrium. She watched the love of her life, the legendary Brazilian soccer star Garrincha, spiral into alcoholism; he was drunk at the wheel in the accident that killed her mother. They split after he beat her, knocking out her teeth shortly before she was scheduled to appear for a television interview. Not long after he died of cirrhosis of the liver, penniless and forgotten, her son from that union died in another car wreck. All in all, she has lost five of her sons and daughters.

Soares is 79 now, and her latest album, A Mulher do Fim do Mundo (The Woman at the End of the World) marks the kind of record few artists ever make, much less iconic figures who could be reasonably expected to live out their remaining years resting comfortably on their laurels. The album is part autobiography, part reinvention, and all provocation, channeling both her life's pain and her incredible resilience into an alloy that is by turns jagged and molten. Written by and recorded with a group of young experimental musicians from São Paulo's "samba sujo" (or "dirty samba") scene, including artistic directors Guilherme Kastrup and Rômulo Fróes and members of the bands Passo Torto and Metá Metá, it is a searing, surging work of fusion that combines Afro-Brazilian styles with wiry, dissonant strands of punk and noise-rock, where the Ex mingles freely with Tom Zé.

This is not morbid music; it is full of life, of spit and grit. This is an album in which a 79-year-old woman barks a snarling ode to the joys of fucking, "Pra Fuder"; it is an album in which a battered woman threatens to douse her abusive husband with boiling water, to parade him before the neighbors, to humiliate him in front of his mother ("Maria da Vila Matilde"). "Get him!" she shouts as the dog tears off after him, her voice ricocheting down a dizzy chain of dub delay. The combination of sounds and textures is nothing short of astonishing: the hardscrabble guitar-and-drum interplay; the horns, betraying the faintest hint of two-tone ska; and above all, her impossibly malleable voice, like a scrap of sandpaper turning into a tsunami. I don't know of any other records that sound quite like this one: by turns wiry, warm, playful, and elegiac, it evokes twisting vines and cracked cement, with guitars that snake like the pichação graffiti of São Paulo and Rio.

The album doubles as a portrait of contemporary Brazil—a country beset by crises, including corruption scandals, the worst recession in over a century, a wave of police brutality, and a rising tide of anti-gay violence. The opening song, "Coração do Mar," is a musical setting of a poem by the modernist writer Oswald de Andrade—a melancholy, imagistic meditation upon loss and slavery that becomes, in her weary recitation, something like an inverse national anthem. In the stirring title track, over bright cavaquinho and swelling strings, she sings a heart-rending ode to samba, carnival, and the lifesaving qualities of music itself. "I go on singing 'til the end," she promises, and you can tell that she means it, her voice bristling like the hair on a dog's back.

Soares has long advocated for the downtrodden ("I'm always singing to remind you that blacks exist," she once said; "gays and prostitutes" too), and in "Benedita," she pays tribute to a crack-addicted transsexual with a slug lodged in her flesh and a silver bullet in her pocket, "to kill the careless cop." But Soares and her co-writers take more abstracted paths, too: The breezy "Firmeza" turns a brief encounter on the street into a wry, dissonant tone poem. "Dança," a song about a dancing corpse, channels Tom Waits' junkyard fantasias. And the cryptic, mournful "O Canal" sings of death and exodus in "the gleam of Alexander the Great's lighthouse." (The album's excellent lyric sheet, including Portuguese and English translations and even footnotes for select cultural cues, goes a long way toward unlocking its intricacies.)

It all adds up to one of the year's most original and exhilarating listens; that is equally true of its raucous, unorthodox fusions and its quietest, contemplative moments. Just as it opens with an a cappella, the better to highlight Soares' inimitable voice—soft as a spring lawn, coarse as ground coffee—it closes with another, "Comigo." The song begins with dark, droning tape loops, swollen as rain clouds, but they abruptly cease, ceding the stage to Soares alone. The song is about her mother; her voice wears the scars of a lifetime of grief. "I carry my mother with me/Even though she's gone," she sings, a hoarse, funereal lament. "I carry my mother with me/Because she gave me her own self." You don't need to understand the Portuguese to feel the weight of her words: It might be the saddest song you ever heard. She sounds exhausted, worn out, run into the ground by sorrow. But in every click in her voice, in every catch in her throat, there is also defiance. All these years later, the girl from Planet Hunger refuses to back down.





July 29, 2016 at 12:00PM
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Pitchfork's Best New Album -- Jamila Woods: HEAVN

Jamila Woods: HEAVN

It's hard to tell if Jamila Woods' solo debut HEAVN could have (or would have) been made without the renewed scrutiny of America's deeply entrenched racism that has crystallized in the aftermath of the August 2014 killing of Mike Brown by Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson. As part of M&O—a duo formed with fellow Chicagoan Owen Hill—Woods released two full-length projects before the phrase "black lives matter" became a national argument, a hash tag, or a movement. The group's pair of self-released albums—The Joy (2012) and Almost Us (2014)—were softly adventurous mixes of acoustic soul, alternative pop, and folksy hip-hop that gamboled around the subjects of love, art, the art of love, and the love of art. A sample hook, from Chance the Rapper went: "Love won't you fall asleep in my arms/While I read you these poems/That I wrote you so long ago."

M&O showcased many things: smart production, masterful arrangements, a willingness to follow melody and tune above and beyond genre or format. The music was all soft and tender, songs of unity with no anger; the type of songs that would feel like escapism at a time when the rhetoric churned from the mini-complexes of presidential candidates, pop stars, and social media micro celebrities alike was ever-sharpening and often unforgiving. But Woods—who in addition to being a vocalist serves as Associate Artistic Director of the non-profit youth organization Young Chicago Authors—has emerged as a proponent of social justice; the kind of voice that doesn't stay silent or shy away from the troubles of the world. And, on HEAVN she delves deep into the calamity of now and emerges with songs of freedom and meaning.

As with her previous work, Woods utilizes what's functional—clapping games, lullabies, Paula Cole, headlines, statistics—to make music that defies categorization but not meaning. The result is unmistakable: HEAVN is protest music that sounds like a children's playground. Every song here is resilient and steadfast without being angry and militant; almost each tune is a jingle. Produced largely by a coterie of ascendant Chicago stars—Peter Cottontale, oddCouple, Kweku Collins, Saba, and more—the tracks come off as if they've been cooked at a high temperature until all of the indignation has evaporated, leaving behind only hope and a rising strong vulnerability.

On "Blk Girl Soldier," Woods champions freedom fighters, feminists, and writers as being "déjà vu of Tubman," noting that even a young black girl "scares the government." There are piercing claims  and lamentations—"We go missing by the hundreds;" "They want us in kitchen/Kill our sons with lynchings/We get loud about it/Oh, now we're the bitches;" "Look at what they did to my sister/Last century, last week/They make her hate her own skin, treat her like a sin"—all presented without rancor or rage. The most defiant thing about the song is Woods' defiance of the baser emotions during such audacious level-headed truth-speaking. The theme is one of defense in the face of oppression, not vengeance. It's a "Black Lives Matter (Too)" treatise, not an "(Only) Black Lives Matter" one.

The messages are made easier by Wood's phrasing and voice—she's light on the heavy points, her vocals sweet even when delivering bitter truths. She presents herself as an introvert who'd wistfully "rather spend my days alone on my pillow" as opposed to someone railing against the injustice of the world. On "LSD" she's dedicated to her hometown in the face of inequity and coldness: "I will never leave you," she sings. "I'm everything you made me/Even when you break me down." Chance the Rapper's characteristically dense verse—with shots at Spike Lee, observations of violence, and notes of gentrification— accounted for, it's all of the sentiments of Kanye West's "Homecoming," but with less bombast and self-mythology.

Even when she's singing about the personal and seemingly romantic, Wood's experience still seems to presented through the filter of her place in larger society. On "Lonely Lonely" she may be talking to potential lover when she sings, "Don't take from me my quiet/Don't take from me my tears/Don't take from me me trials/Don't take from me my fears"—but she embodies her full self as a woman in a world that wants its women to remain silent and its Blacks complacent as to never address the realities of patriarchy and white supremacy. On the title track, she's ready to for undying love, but links it her ancestors lost to the Middle Passage: "They're dancing in the deepest ocean/ See? Not even death could stop them."

Filled with personal memories, affirmations of self, and gazes of society's racial strife, HEAVN is a singular mix of clear-eyed optimism and Black girl magic. On the opener, "Bubbles," Woods sings of shyness, hesitation, and self-care, noting "how many different oils we know/to turn our skins from brown to gold"—making it metaphor about both beauty and protection. This rumination on isolation, journey, and transformation—which pops up throughout the album—comes full circle on the closer, "Way Up" where she sings, "I'm an alien from inner space" as a declaration that simultaneously reads as individual and universal. "Just 'cause I'm born here/Don't mean I'm from here," she asserts because she knows that HEAVN is about a climate in which she doesn't belong. It's a climate in which none of us belong, but it's also the only one that could produce an album filled with this particular tenor of hope in the face of despair.  





July 21, 2016 at 12:00PM
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Jumat, 15 Juli 2016

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Pitchfork's Best New Album -- Schoolboy Q: Blank Face LP

Schoolboy Q: Blank Face LP

"Music-wise right now, I suck."

 In 2014, Schoolboy Q bluntly described his difficulty staying off lean, and what the drug had done to his art and personal life. He told Hot 97's Angie Martinez that he'd managed to keep it at arms'-length while recording his major label debut, Oxymoron, but that as soon as the album was done, he'd had something of a relapse.

Listening to the album though, you suspected that Q may have been dabbling before the record was mixed. Lean leads to bloat, and while Oxymoron featured plenty of memorable moments, it had too much empty material to fully capitalize on the promise of the rapper's snarling sophomore album, Habits & Contradictions. Q's enormous personality had been downsized, his sharp edges smoothed, his straight-talking iconoclasm receding into rote gangsterisms. So while Oxymoron was received positively upon release, enthusiasm soon dwindled for the record and for the rapper once thought by many to be the slyer, less-earnest equal of his TDE labelmate Kendrick Lamar.

Two years later, Quincy Matthew Hanley says he's no longer addicted. He's lost 30 pounds and with his second album for Interscope, Blank Face, he's returned to the trajectory that had him looking like the yin to Kendrick's yang. Q's unpredictable flow, as likely to morph into a bizarrely appealing sing-song melody as it is to shift to sneering double-time, has returned. With it comes a collection of catchy, urgent gangster rap songs that show the South Central native at his charismatic best, gallows humor and tough talk failing to obscure a humane core.

The new record is loaded with features, a warning sign of scattershot focus on most major label albums. But Q's voice holds the center of nearly every track on Blank Face. Anderson .Paak, rap's scene stealer of the year to date, is compelling as ever on the album's title track, but it's Quincy who grounds the narrative, his spoken-word verses painting a past on Hoover Street and a future with the daughter he refers to as both a munchkin and a queen. Kanye West and Vince Staples, two of the biggest personalities in hip-hop, trade bars with Q without overshadowing him, and the songs on which they're featured, "That Part" and "Ride Out," are standouts that nonetheless fit seamlessly into the course of the record as a whole. (Miguel is only the exception to the rule of polite guests: His smooth hook and Q's sandpaper verses repel each other on the late-album misfire, "Overtime.")

We're accustomed to seeing concept albums from TDE, but Blank Face strays from the polemic, reaching instead for portraiture. Q's verses are built from concrete details and raw emotion, and his flexibility is such that he's able to channel two seemingly conflicting emotions into a single verse. His bitterness will be palpable, one moment; in the next, pride shines through. "Guess I'm being a real n**** like I'm 'pposed to be," he raps on "Lord Have Mercy. "But being real never once brought the groceries." Then, in the span of a couple bars: "Hope was all that I needed/dreaming myself to work. The working affair was better than bullet holes in my shirt."

Tracks like the single "Groovy Tony/Eddie Kane," which was produced in part by TDE producer and frequent Q collaborator, Tae Beast, signal a return to the collective's house sound. Blank Face turns away from the ambitious fusion of To Pimp a Butterfly, instead doubling down on a smoked-out atmosphere that points the listener's focus toward rapping. That puts the onus on Q to hold attention for the duration of the record's hour-plus running time, and he does so with a wide array of tricks, lacing his bars with tone and tempo shifts, a melodicism reminiscent of a young 50 Cent, and ad-libs worthy of Jadakiss, whose signature growling delivery and descriptions of Tony Soprano-esque nihilism provide a thrill on "Groovy."

Schoolboy Q's resemblance to those stars—both of whom flamed out to some degree as the commercial and creative center shifted away from gangster rap—is natural. Unlike Drake, or Future and Young Thug, Q's music doesn't represent a definitive break with the past. Instead, he symbolizes something of a road not taken, a gangster rapper with the personality and pop instincts to translate an antiquated genre for younger listeners, something like YG's work with DJ Mustard. Q's early hits, "Hands on the Wheel" and "There He Go," were classic rap songs with pop appeal, and Q continues to ably tread that tightrope on Blank Face, with tracks like the E-40 feature "Dope Dealer" and "Whateva U Want," which somehow makes a trance beat work.

But it's Q's reemergence as a distinctive voice that makes Blank Face so welcome. Quincy isn't the preaching type, but he's a careful observer both of his own tendencies and those of the world he occupies. Bluster and braggadocio is a tradition in rap, but while Q spews plenty of both, he also has a penchant for telling it like it is. In our current political moment, that makes some of the songs on Blank Face particularly unforgettable. "Black Thoughts" features some of the most moving production from TDE familiar Willie B, as Schoolboy Q raps the blues: "Ole gangsta crip, my papa was a bitch/ left me while hope just don't exist." It's one of many points on the record where Q casts something like a documentary eye on his own surroundings.

In the early morning on July 7th, Q tweeted out four bars from "Neva Change," the blistering centerpiece of Blank Face: "You see them lights get behind us/They pull me out for my priors/Won't let me freeze 'fore they fire/You say that footage a liar." The song was most likely recorded months prior. But hours after Philando Castile was fatally shot by a police officer while reaching for his license and the aftermath of the encounter was watched by millions, the rapper's words were more timely than most reporting.





July 14, 2016 at 12:00PM
via Best New Albums - Pitchfork http://ift.tt/29PQaxx

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Senin, 11 Juli 2016

Pitchfork's Best New Album -- Maxwell: blackSUMMERS’night

Maxwell: blackSUMMERS'night

Though consistently excellent, Maxwell has always sailed forward with a quiet confidence and little controversy, and he's never really received the fanfare that fellow neo-soul progenitor D'Angelo probably wishes had skipped him. Their pioneering careers launched simultaneously, but Brown Sugar, D'Angelo's studio debut, was released in July 1995 to immediate success. Maxwell turned in his first album, Urban Hang Suite, around the same time, but it was shelved for almost a year and when it finally did drop in April of 1996, it gathered steam slowly. You want both in your boudoir, but Maxwell is the yin to D'Angelo's yang: While D'Angelo's steamy devotion makes you kick off the covers, Maxwell is the cool side of the pillow.

Twenty years after his masterpiece of a debut, Maxwell proves he's as chill as ever with the elegant blackSUMMERS'night, another collection of shimmering love songs that pushes on the limits of R&B and proudly embraces the "grown and sexy" label. With forever-sophisticated lyrics sung in his still-creamy voice over a band so tight they sound loose, blackSUMMERS'night is probably Maxwell's most cohesive effort since his sublime (critics panned it; they were wrong) sophomore album, Embrya—and the first since then with no skippable tracks, the better to soundtrack sessions of sex so exquisite and transcendental, tantric comes off as boring.

Of course, thematically sound records have always been Maxwell's strength. Urban Hang Suite is a concept album that exalted monogamy; the prequel to the current album, BLACKsummers'night, details another emotionally complex romantic relationship. Seven years later, blackSUMMERS'night picks up where that left off, with Maxwell writing yet another album that explores the full spectrum of love. Curiosity—the desire to dissect and examine a partnership—has always set him apart; Maxwell wants to push far past the surface, almost clinically so, of any easily won emotion. Here, that means he doesn't shy away from vulnerability ("Feel like I'm average, the pressure's so savage," he sings on "The Fall"). His attempts at "happily ever after" continue to serve as musical inspiration, perhaps never as heart-wrenchingly so as in "Lost," where he observes a former lover from a distance and takes note of her growing children and doting husband. Still, he somehow remains miraculously open, or maybe just fated, to falling in love: As he insists on "III," "Cupid keeps targeting me/Arrows are flying, I can't see."

Maxwell's head is usually in the clouds, and his music reflects that. Even "Pretty Wings," a song about a breakup, is as light and airy as any ode written to a new crush. On blackSUMMERS'night, at least half of the album is drenched in sunshine. He juxtaposes sparkling chords with fed-up lyrics on "Gods." His aching on "Of All Kind" contrasts with glittery synths. Through it all, his voice remains effortlessly calm.

In fact, there are moments when you worry that Maxwell might lose listeners because he's so cool. Heat emanates off D'Angelo not just in "Untitled (How Does It Feel)"; Prince turns positively primal by the end of "The Beautiful Ones." Maxwell is more esoteric, however, often appealing to your mind as opposed to your body. As delicate as "Hostage" is, it can skew negative when you really consider lyrics like, "I'm free inside the cage of your heart of gold/The prison of your love, it makes me so."

Which is why a song like "1990x" stands out as necessary. Musically, it brings to mind Embrya, which found the singer diving deep into glistening oceans of sound, undulating bass lines, gurgling synths, with his sweetly effortless tenor floating and glinting atop. "1990x" is similarly submerged, with plops of steady and strong percussion echoing the line, "Lay here closely beside me, feel my heart as it's pounded." Along with lead single "Lake by the Ocean," the perfect song for a summer wedding's first dance, it grounds the whole album. The album may be musing or abstracted, but that's his hallmark, and blackSUMMERS'night is polished to a blinding sheen. "I just want to live and do what I can to be my best/Nevertheless, never settle for less," he sings on album opener "All the Ways Love Can Feel." Mission accomplished.





July 12, 2016 at 12:00PM
via Best New Albums - Pitchfork http://ift.tt/29sHM7U

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