This is an excerpt of a review I wrote for Brixton Blog - originally posted here.
Human Nature is the fifth studio album by Soothsayers and
largely emphasises the reggae elements of their proclivities. Although the
album is such a musical collage, that’s barely a signpost for you. In fact, if
all the musical elements were signposted they would be surrounding you, facing
inwards, while you pirouette on a roundabout made of roots, jazz and afrobeat.
To get you in the mood (and because there aren't many tunes available from their new album yet) here's a track from their dubby 2009 album One More Reason (right).
The lilting, powerful trumpet and saxophone of
founder-members Robin Hopcraft and Idris Rahman, respectively, form the central
thread weaving through Human Nature. In One Day the driving
brass hooks provide a cohesion to the other signature theme of the album: the
beautiful triple harmonies of Julia Biele, Hopcraft and Rahman. There is a
fragility in their voices which is overcome through their heartfelt
harmonisation and soaring melodies. And at its peaks these vocals are even
faintly reminiscent of roots reggae maestros The Congos (and believe
me I don’t make that comparison lightly – one of my greatest roots reggae
albums of all time was Heart of the Congos!).
But it is a distinctively modern recasting of dub, reggae
and roots and there are brilliantly experimental moments, with cacophonous
finales overlayed with guitar, keys, horns and delayed vocals.
The lyrics punctuate the album with social, political and
environmental themes – including war, personal strife and climate change.
Indeed the intro track Human Nature (Intro) provides a clarion
call for action: “can we find ourselves a way to save our mother earth / can we
reach beyond / we know we must / stop fighting wars while fires burn and waters
rise / don’t close your eyes”.
The title track continues on these themes but instead takes
a self-assured and up-tempo form – replete with driving beats and delicious
guitar licks. We are also returned to the vocal hook which was stripped bare in
the album’s introduction: this time in full force and heralding a sprawling
jazz- and afrobeat-infused exploration of the themes of the album (musically
and lyrically).
It is rare to see a band so comfortable in shifting gear
within and between songs. And the way in which Human Nature drops
from buoyant reggae into thoughtful dub and then off into a meandering jazz
mash-up, is perhaps the magic of the album: a crystallisation of the wonderful,
genre-sprawling chaos of Soothsayers.
You can sample and buy the album from here.
-L
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