Thursday, May 7, 2015

Kamasi Washington- The Epic Review #CantMissIt


Kamasi Washington
The Epic
Brainfeeder


It seems like every year there is one or two Jazz albums that break through its niche fan base into mainstream appeal. In 2015, that album will be remembered as Kamasi Washington’s “The Epic.” There’s ambition and then there is three hour ambition. A length filmmakers and even Michael Gira try to avoid yet here comes young Los Angeles musician Kamasi Washington, known primarily for his collaborations with Flying Lotus. The tenor saxophone player has finally come into his own on this massive three hour record. This album is hardly a typical jazz record and contains the unique electronic experimentation that comes with just about every Brainfeeder Records project. The record also contains an orchestra, choir, solo vocal performance, and the trademark funk of Thundercat’s bass lines. These traits are all typically omitted from a traditional jazz album but when creating a three hour piece of work (that is broken into three parts) something original needs to be done to prevent redundancy. Whether you’re a hardcore jazz fan, casual jazz fan, or have never listened to a jazz album before I would discourage the listener from trying to listen to all three hours of this recording in one sitting the first time through. Listen to this album part by part and enjoy them individually before trying to put it all together as a cohesive unit. Whether broken into the three parts or listened to in one sitting Kamasi Washington puts together a sublimely lush jazz album that oozes creativity and hard work. 

“The Epic” seems to challenge the conventional as well as the classic. Obvious in the album’s auspicious title but also in the first track named “Changing of the Guard.” Washington makes a grandiose claim that he is in fact the next big thing in jazz music and in the compositions that follow he makes a convincing argument. “Changing of the Guard” acts as a preview for what is to come on this three hour journey. Washington exposes the listener to the choir whose booming vocals sound otherworldly, the sharp and talented ten piece orchestra, jarring and uplifting keyboard solos, and Washington’s own solo style which can range from John Coltrane smoothness to Kaoru Abe abrasiveness. Although the pieces do typically find themselves twelve minutes in length, Washington always reverts to the more melodic style rather than stay in the avant-garde tone Abe and more famously Albert Ayler exist within. All of these elements are used extensively and is some combination throughout “The Epic”, but the style rarely gets repetitive or familiar. Every instrument seems to have its moment to shine on some point in this album with Kamasi Washington’s saxophone getting the most of that three hours. 

What ascends these numerous key and sax solos to greater heights is the divine quality the choir brings to this album. In some instances its sounds as though this choir is trying to create the theme for the next Halo game while other portions of this album sound like the backdrop to a track off Janelle Monae’s “The ArchAndroid” with Washington’s saxophone being the seraph leading this great instrumental odyssey through space. “The Rhythm Changes” is a great closer to Part 1 of this album and could act as an ambassador for the album. On this track we get the debut of Patrice Quinn who offers some great solo vocal performances to this record. She laments, “Our mind, our bodies, our feelings, they change they alter, they leave us. Somehow no matter what happens I’m here. The time, the seasons, the weather, the song, the music, the rhythm, it sings no matter what happens I’m here.” This song contains some of the few lyrics on “The Epic” but does a sufficient job summarizing the feelings experienced while listening to this record: isolation, inescapability, and an inexplicable feeling of unwavering content within these profoundly vast and extensive soundscapes.
Parts 2 and 3 warrant similar praise. The drumming in particular is noteworthy. As the hi hat is pummeled at half beat speeds Washington’s sax soars to great heights reminiscent of the tunes accompanying Spike Spiegel as he rushes through the Cowboy Bebop universe. Thundercat’s funky bass adds groove and soul to the lush orchestral instrumentation and angelic choir that supports Washington’s continually flittering and schizophrenic solos. Disc 3 offers a reservoir of peace in “Cherokee” that for our three hour listeners will be the first since “Isabelle” all the way back on disc one. The track that follows entitled “Clair de Lune” could be seen as the apex of the album. Featuring a groove driven by a tight upright bass the track features crescendos that implement every instrument Kamasi Washington seemed to have available in the studio. 

Portions of this album will remind the listener of Miles Davis’ “Bitches Brew”, Herbie Hancock’s “Head Hunters”, Sun Ra’s “Space is the Place”, and a variety of releases from Albert Ayler and John Coltrane. Given the nostalgia and favor of history “The Epic” will eventually be ranked among these albums, not as an imitator but as an innovator. Kamasi Washington implements many different ideas that are at times not necessarily unique but have never been blended this seamlessly. The only critique remains obvious in its three hours in length. The album’s many different paces can give off an air of recent familiarity. This critique remains small and should not impede on enjoyment as long as a new jazz listener does not try to digest this monstrosity all at once. Kamasi Washington created an unignorably huge album for jazz fans with “The Epic” that should have a lot of cross-genre appeal. Jazz, funk, and soul are blended in ways reminiscent of Gil Scott-Heron, but with the emphasis on jazz rather than soul. Do not let the enormous length intimidate you. This record is a fun intergalactic journey that makes the separate listens well worth the time invested. 

9/10
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Tom K. 
05/07/2015

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