Few
contemporary albums bare as particular a narrative as The Lagos Music Salon.
The new album by the superb chanteuse Somi, finds her breaking new ground with
a hybrid style of music that organically integrates the essence of jazz and
soul with the musical depth of her African heritage. "It's the first time
ever that I put all other pursuits on hold to focus solely on the creative
process," says Somi, who decided to move to Lagos, Nigeria from her New
York home base without a game plan but with a passionate desire to find a new
direction for her vision and voice.
The
Lagos Music Salon marks Somi's major label debut for Sony's OKeh Records and
features a range of originals that are sublimely melodic, percussively
textured. A socially informed and
adventurous vocalist, Somi sings with a soulful beauty about her experiences in
Lagos. While there, she kept a journal of her observations and collaborated
with a community of musicians, writers and artists who helped her to envision
what would become The Lagos Music Salon.
The
album covers a broad swath of styles and features a number of carefully matched
guest performances. These include a fast-paced groove with Afro-pop
sensibilities on the Fela Kuti-inspired "Lady Revisited" with
Angelique Kidjo, and a rap-inflected cinematic reflection on Africa's
pollution, "When Rivers Cry," that features Common.
Also in
the mix are field recording snippets, including an exchange at the Lagos
airport with an immigration officer, heated rally cries from the Occupy Nigeria
protests, and a parabolic story of an over-skilled monkey.
"I'm
excited about this album," Somi says. "I allowed myself to abandon
the boundaries of my comfort zone, but that gave me the room to explore and
play with new ideas and inspiration. Some people see me as an African artist
and not jazz, while others see me as a jazz artist influenced by Africa. But
I'm not focused on genre. My intent is to be honest with the songs and where
they take me."
Born in
Illinois, the daughter of immigrants from Uganda and Rwanda, Somi's dramatic
Salon story started ironically and sadly on the release date of her 2009 album,
If the Rains Come First, when her beloved father passed away.
"I
had to weather the storm of his passing," Somi says. "The loss was so
sobering that I began to question my own life's legacy and path. My dearest
mentor Hugh Masekela knew about my personal loss and subsequent desire for
change. He also knew that, more than ever, I wished I could move 'home' to Africa.
Something about the idea seemed like it might be a way to get closer to my
father's spirit and my own heart. It was Uncle Hugh that reminded me that to be
a musician is to be a global citizen and that I should always listen to my
heart should it long to travel. 'Stop thinking about it as a move,' he said,
'Think of it as an opportunity to spend time with another part of your global
audience.' That's when I decided to make the bold choice of moving to Lagos. A
true Africanist, I believe my father is proud of that choice."
While
she spent part of her youth in Africa with her parents, Somi hadn't lived there
since her first year out of college when she landed a medical anthropology
research fellowship in Kenya and Tanzania. After frequent holiday visits and touring
extensively on the continent (visiting over 12 countries with her band), Somi
fell in love with Lagos, "where there's a huge volume of cultural
production, including literature, film and fashion - let alone music," she
says. "For an artist, it is a very exciting place. There's an energy there
that reminds me of New York. Twenty million people live there-it's
cosmopolitan, fast, hard and yet so inspiring."
While
Somi's goal was to live in Lagos for 15 months she ended up being there for 18
months. She began her journey with an international teaching artist residency
at a university in Ilorin, Nigeria while also doing occasional European shows
to keep her career visible. After six months, Somi began to realize the impact
of her choice to be in Lagos. "Initially I was a little panicked,"
she says. "Was I going to disappear? Would people forget about me? But
after months of writing in my journal, I discovered a body of work was
emerging."
Somi set
out to work on her new material, but Lagos doesn't have the cultural
infrastructure of small clubs like New York. "I needed to develop my work
and test it on Nigerian audiences," says Somi. "So I started
producing intimate salons at art galleries and other nontraditional venues in
Lagos where I would perform my new music. It grew into a series where I'd
invite local artists to perform as well. That work greatly enriched my
experience, challenged me to think more about African notions of cultural intimacy,
and gave birth to The Lagos Music Salon concept."
Somi
accumulated a collection of music steeped in the culture of Lagos and
collaborated with two colleagues who share co-producer credit with her on The
Lagos Music Salon: Lagos musician Cobhams Asuquo (who happens to be blind and
is impressively self-taught) and New York's Keith Witty. "Cobhams has a
deep understanding of traditional African music as well as strong pop
sensibilities," Somi says. "And Keith, the modern jazz head on the
project, made sure the artful sense of the music was always privileged amidst
the African pop influences."
In New
York, they assembled Somi's core band: drummer Otis Brown III, pianist Toru
Dodo, guitarist Liberty Ellman, background vocalist Alicia Olatuja, and bassist
Michael Olatuja. Guests to the ensemble include acclaimed Nigerian-American
trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire who blows a moving, melancholic solo through
"Brown Round Things," an original lamenting the prostitutes Somi
observed in Lagos; and rising-star trumpeter, Etienne Charles, who arranged the
horn section for the celebratory, pop-tinged "Akobi: First Born
S(u)n."
Somi
weaves through the collection of captivating songs with a socio/cultural
poignancy. The R&B-vibed "Two Dollar Day" tells the story of a
domestic worker Somi met during the 2012 Occupy Nigeria protests and who
struggles because of the oil-rich government's decision to hike fuel prices 200
percent. While the provocative "Four. One. Nine." takes its name from
the police criminal code for the Nigerian email swindles, Somi likens the scam
to fraudulent love affairs, while a friend offers her a tongue-in-cheek
reprimand about unsavory men. The most dynamic piece is the bass line-driven
"Four African Women," inspired by a Nina Simone original. It's a
sketch of four African women who each experienced a different
hardship-genocide, skin bleaching, circumcision, prostitution.
Other
highlights include the percussive, string quartet-colored tune "Ankara
Sundays," the sobering "Last Song" and the gently swinging love
song "Ginger Me Slowly" about playfully telling forthright men how to
romantically treat their woman. There are also two versions of the upbeat
original "Love Juju."
"Juju
is African magic," Somi explains. "Throughout the album, I'm singing
about the magic of Lagos and the spell it cast on my heart."
A TED
Global Fellow and also founder of the New Africa Live nonprofit that champions
African artists, Somi has for the last decade carved out a career of singing
and being an activist. On The Lagos Music Salon, the best album of her young
career, she magically combines the two facets of her life. As for her adopted
city, she says, "It was a euphoric new place for me, an important journey.
I wanted to tell honest stories in the spirit of gratitude."
Upcoming Appearances:
September
16 / Blue Whale / Los Angeles, CA
September
17 / UCLA Center for Art of Performance/ Los Angeles, CA
September
18 / L.A.N.D. Salon / Los Angeles, CA
September
19 & 20 / Red Poppy Art House / San Francisco, CA
September
21 / Lucid Lounge / Seattle, WA
September
27 / University of Chicago Arts Incubator Panel / Chicago, IL
September
27 / The Listening House / Chicago, IL
October
4 / Southwest Arts Center / Atlanta, GA
October
12 / Bowery Arts & Science / New York, NY
October
16 / Brooklyn Public Library / Brooklyn, NY