On March 13, Shabaka & The Ancestors will make their
Impulse! debut with the band's sophomore album We Are Sent Here By History.
Their breakout 2016 album, Wisdom of Elders, established Shabaka & The
Ancestors as a sudden force in spiritual jazz. But where that record warned of
impending societal collapse, this one unfolds within it.
Shabaka refers to the album as a "meditation on the
fact of our coming extinction as a species. It is a reflection from the ruins,
from the burning." On the lead single "Go My Heart, Go To
Heaven," Siyabonga pays homage to his father's favorite church song. The
word "hamba" (or "go") is repeated, and within the context
of this track, it's "about the point where one gives in and wants out of
this world," Siyabonga says. "But in times of darkness is a call to
the light and the heart."
Shabaka & The Ancestors was formed in 2016; Shabaka had
been flying to Johannesburg to play with trumpeter/bandleader Mandla Mlangeni,
who connected him to a group of South African jazz musicians that Hutchings
admired. After several sessions, their first album Wisdom of Elders was made.
This follow-up record reunites the group, who recorded again in Johannesburg
and Cape Town last year (2019). This album is more urgent, more unrelenting,
darker and energetic and presents a major social commentary in the context of
ancient traditions. Shabaka explains this is "what happens after that
point when life as we know it can't continue."
We Are Sent Here By History mixes African and Afro-Caribbean
traditions. The album takes the concept of the griot – the living archive of a
historical narrative, the storyteller and contextualizer - and presents the album as the modern day
griot. Therefore, a really important aspect to this is the accompanying text to
this album: South African performance artist Siyabonga Mthembu chants and sings
on this record and composed lyrics for the album. Shabaka then chose song
titles from the lyrics and composed poems around each title, based on
Siyabonga's lyrics. On the aptly titled "We Will Work (On Redefining
Manhood)," Siyabonga sings a poem in Zulu that, when translated to
English, shuns the archaic pillars of virility. From childhood, young boys are
trained to suppress their emotions and suffer in silence. "This song sings
from the point of the toxic masculine," Siyabonga says. "It repeats
the sentences they tell to their boys-to not cry, to not grieve and to not
hurt."
Tracklist:
They Who Must Die
You’ve Been Called
Go My Heart, Go To Heaven
Behold, The Deceiver
Run, The Darkness Will Pass
The Coming Of The Strange Ones
Beasts Too Spoke of Suffering
We Will Work (On Redefining Manhood)
‘Til The Freedom Comes Home
Finally, The Man Cried
Teach me How To Be Vulnerable
Lineup:
Shabaka Hutchings - Tenor Sax and clarinet
Mthunzi Mvubu - Alto Sax
Siyabonga Mthembu - Vocals
Ariel Zamonsky – Double bass
Gontse Makhene - Percussion
Tumi Mogorosi – Drums
Nduduzo Makhathini (Fender Rhodes), Thandi Ntuli (piano),
Mandla Mlangeni (trumpet) on select tracks
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