Wally Badarou's The
Unnamed Trilogy Vol.1; a collection of recent solo work presented for the first
time as a limited edition vinyl and select digital release. Wally Badarou is a
visionary musician who over the years has forged a history that is immensely
storied, diverse and creatively rich. He has not only released timeless solo
material such as the incredible Echoes LP in 1984 (part of which reached a new
generation of music fans when the track Mambo was sampled for Massive Attack's
Daydreaming), but has also recorded on classic albums with luminaries such as
Grace Jones, Sly & Robbie, Mick Jagger, Fela Kuti, Robert Palmer, Jimmy
Cliff, Black Uhuru and Talking Heads to name just a few. Both co-founders of
Diskotopia have been huge fans of Mr. Badarou's work since before the label's
inception and are elated to present The Unnamed Trilogy Vol.1 to the world at
large.
Opening
track Fisherman (I - Theme) rolls out with an assured strut that pulls you
straight into a surging overflow of digi-funk bubble and laser-precise glide
tactics. Infectious as it is fluid in its arrangements, Fisherman (I - Theme)
is an excellent example of Wally Badarou's ubiquitous sound; highlighted here
through the multi-timbral interlocking grooves that balance both the natural
and synthetic elements seamlessly like the flow of ocean tides.
Daiquiri
Diaries (Vintage Extended) enters with a striking metallic riff before a poetic
electric piano takes the lead over insistent drums, soaring strings and warm
pad swells. Only a synthesizer specialist such as Badarou would be able to
create comparable transcendental magic from such simplicity, transfixing the
listener whilst giving a masterclass in restraint. Make no mistake however,
this is late night celestial soul music for Balearic excursions into the outer
mind's eye.
The nautical
beginnings of Awa develop effortlessly into convivial carnival vibes which
could easily soundtrack any number of global gatherings. Combining field
recordings of lapping waves, a fluid digital kalimba lead, expertly layered
polyrhythmic percussion and sun-soaked flourishes throughout, Awa becomes near
meditative in its effortless ebbs and flows.
As The
Unnamed Trilogy Vol. 1 comes to its close Higher Still … takes an introspective
step to the side giving us a cinematically beautiful allegory for the modern
age. Equal moments of reflection coincide with transformative key changes as we
can equate our own journeys in life to the arrangement here: At once entered
into existence in such a distinct manner to have then gone through irrevocable
changes and thusly transformed into a new state of consciousness altogether, we
remain Higher Still …
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