Album Review: Moor Mother- Jazz Codes

On “Easyjet,” a brief skit placed in the middle of 700 Bliss’s 2022 album Nothing to Declare, DJ Haram and Moor Mother mock the spoken word artist’s vitriolic persona: “who wants to hear that sh*t?… Moor Mother’s all like ‘blah blah blah blah blah blah’… is this even music?”

The bit is hilarious in part because Moor Mother is susceptible to accusations of being noisy for the sake of noise.  And her rage has occasionally lacked focus.  Yet she’s completely on point on the melodic new album Jazz Codes.  In reclaiming the notion of jazz as a revolutionary sound of freedom, Moor Mother crafted a vital work of art.  Rejecting polite supper club sounds and the associated cultural appropriation of the form, she insists jazz belongs on riot-torn streets.

Two of the best tracks celebrate the religious faith of Mary Lou Williams and memorialize the ill-fated trumpeter Woody Shaw.  Yet Jazz Codes isn’t nostalgic.  Homages to the likes of John Coltrane, Billie Holiday and Amina Claudine Myers are peppered with references to D’Angelo, Tupac Shakur and Kanye West.  Jazz Codes affirms that Moor Mother has grown into an invaluable component of that musical continuum.

Jazz scholar Thomas Stanley makes a statement of purpose on the last selection: “ultimately, perhaps it is good that the people abandoned jazz- replaced it with musical products better suited for capitalism’s designs. Now jazz jumps up like Lazarus if we allow it, to rediscover itself as a living music.”  Jazz Codes is capable of accelerating this welcome resurrection.  

My enthusiasm comes with a caveat.  I made a 300-mile round trip to see Moor Mother perform with Irreversible Entanglements in the midst of the pandemic.  The band’s Open the Gates was my second-favorite album of 2021.  And I featured Moor Mother’s Black Encyclopedia of the Air in the seventh episode of my In My Headache podcast.  Jazz Codes is my presumptive top album of 2022, but less adventurous listeners might wonder if it’s “even music.”

June 2022 Recap: A Monthly Exercise in Critical Transparency

Screenshot of Craig Colclough in the trailer of the Metropolitan Opera’s 2022 production of Rigoletto by There Stands the Glass.

Top Ten Albums (Released in June)

1. Carolin Widmann- L’Aurore

A new day for old music.

2. Tim Bernardes- Mil Coisas Invisíveis

Brazilian beauty.

3. Elizabeth King- I Got a Love

How I got over.

4. Chris Brown- Breezy

Bad man. Good R&B.

5. Bennie Maupin and Adam Rudolph- Symphonic Tone Poem for Brother Yusef

My review.

6. Matthew Shipp Trio- World Construct

Sturdy foundation.

7. Ensemble Intercontemporain- Reich/Richter

A minimalist marvel.

8. Lisa Moore- Frederic Rzewski: No Place to Go But Around

A loving tribute to the late composer.

9. Drake- Honestly, Nevermind

Gloriously ridiculous.

10. Lívia Nestrovski and Henrique Eisenmann- Nação

My review.


Top Ten Songs (Released in June)

1. Jimetta Rose & The Voices of Creation- "Let the Sunshine In"

Glowing.

2. Twïns- "Something about Alice Coltrane"

Spiritual eternal.

3. Katalyst, Adrian Younge and Ali Shaheed Muhammed- "Juneteenth"

Deep groove.

4. Sudan Archives and Neneh Cherry- "Heart"

Analog remix.

5. Jungle- "Good Times"

Aptly titled.

6. DJ Snake- "Disco Maghreb"

The sound of young Hamtramck.

7. Cazzu- "Nena Trampa"

Cheat sheet.

8. Beyoncé- "Break My Soul"

“Release your wiggle!”

9. Pharrell Williams, 21 Savage and Tyler, The Creator- "Cash In Cash Out"

Paid in full.

10. SleazyWorld Go featuring Offset- "Step 1"

Kansas City star.


Top Ten Performances of June

1. Nduduzo Makhathini at the Blue Room

My review.

2. Angela Winbush at the Juneteenth KC festival

My review.

3. Bill Summers and Forward Back at Dunbar Park

My review.

4. John Waite at Ranch Mart Shopping Center

My Instagram clip.

5. Blind Mississippi Morris at the Gladstone Summertime Bluesfest

My Instagram clip.

6. Tre Mutava at Overland Park’s Clock Tower Plaza

My Instagram clip.

7. The Kansas City Symphony’s Mobile Music Box at Meadowbrook Park

My Instagram clip.

8. Jason Vivone and the Billy Bats at Theis Park

My Instagram clip.

9. Brian Scarborough Quintet at Sar-Ko-Par Park

My Instagram clip.

10. Mark Farina at Westwood Park

My Instagram clip.


Last month’s survey is here.

Album Reviews: Anteloper’s Pink Dolphins, I Am’s Beyond and Bennie Maupin and Adam Nussbaum’s Symphonic Tone Poem for Brother Yusef

Three sets of improvisational duos go out… way out, on new albums.  Jaime Branch has injected vital punk energy into the improvised music scene during the past several years.  The trumpeter puts her healthy irreverence to good use in Anteloper, a collaboration with percussionist Jason Nazary.  Thanks to the deft production of Jeff Parker, the wavy Pink Dolphins might even appeal to fans of Animal Collective.

Reading Tony Whyton’s Beyond a Love Supreme: John Coltrane and the Legacy of an Album last week put me in the proper headspace for I Am’s Beyond.  Saxophonist Isaiah Collier and drummer Michael Shekwoaga Ode channel the polarizing 1967 album Interstellar Space with uncompromising ferocity.

Skronky but slightly less confrontational, Symphonic Tone Poem for Brother Yusef features the veteran innovators Bennie Maupin and Adam Nussbaum.  Mixing electronics with organic sounds, the saxophonist and percussionist pay tribute to the late Yusef Lateef.  Pink Dolphins and Beyond are very good, but the old guys show the kids how it’s done in their exceptional ancient-to-the-future collaboration.

The Top Kansas City Albums of 2022 (So Far)

Little of the music made by artists from Kansas City receives substantial attention from outsiders. The ongoing disintegration of the area’s traditional media outlets exacerbates the negligence. Consequently, waiting until the end of the year to recognize the recordings on this list didn’t seem right. Yet this site has never been mistaken for a popularity contest. A few of the most notable new releases- including a fine album by Kansas City’s most popular band- didn’t make the cut. People baffled by the snub of a notable group will find my monthly surveys reveal an allergy to fizzy indie-pop. While I’m displeased by the gender disparity, I didn’t adjust the rankings for representational purposes.


1. Joyce DiDonato- Eden

Straight outta Prairie Village.

2. Arnold Young and the Roughtet- Fear Is the Mind Killer

My review.

3. The Adam Larson Trio- With Love From Chicago

My review.

4. Making Movies- Xopa

The band’s best since 2014’s A la Deriva.

5. LeVelle- My Journey Continues

My review.

6. Kevin Morby- This Is a Photograph

Bob’s New Morning meets Van’s Veedon Fleece.

7. Huerco S.- Plonk

Ambient ear candy.

8. Flora- ​​Emerald City

Over the rainbow.

9. Stik Figa and August Fanon- Heresy

“Posdnuos mixed with Pac.”

10. The Creepy Jingles- Take Me at My Wordplay

The best garage (rock) in town.

11. Dutch Newman- This Too Shall Pass, Pt. 2

Triumphant sobriety.

12. Rich the Factor- NFT Scritch

KC’s whale.

13. Seth Andrew Davis, Kyle Hutchins, Aaron Osborne and Evan Verploegh- Quartet, Vol. 1

My review.

14. Addison Frei- Time and Again

My review.

15. Belle & The Vertigo Waves- Lorelai

Let’s live together.

16. Marty Bush- The Long Way Home

The year’s best reboot.

17. Stephen Martin- High Plains

My review.

18. Seth Andrew Davis- Highways Jammed with Broken Heroes

My review.

19. Kevin “Church” Johnson- Brown Liquor Music

Potent.

20. Ben Baker, Seth Andrew Davis, Krista Kopper and Evan Verploegh- EMS

My review.

21. Norman Brown- Let's Get Away

My review.

22. Josh Nelson Bob Bowman Collective- Tomorrow Is Not Promised

My review.

23. Seth Andrew Davis and Evan Verploegh- Hunter

My review.

24. Thumbs- Trunk Wired Shut

Rock-and-roll lifers.

25. Jeff Shirley- Blue Gold

My review.

Concert Review: Angela Winbush at Juneteenth KC

Original image by There Stands the Glass.

My 40-year appreciation of Angela Winbush came full circle at the Juneteenth KC festival on Saturday, June 18. Hits including "I'll Be Good" and "Angel" were among my favorite songs of the ‘80s. I was reminded of my abiding affection for the R&B of that era when the sound was regularly repurposed by rap artists two decades later. While I had reservations about going to the Jazz District on Saturday- would it be appropriate for me to join thousands of people at the free celebration?- my endorsement of the federal holiday and my love of the music won out. I’m so glad. Winbush’s outing was the first oldies concert I’ve attended at which I didn’t feel the slightest bit of ironic detachment. The 67-year-old cancer survivor executed low squats and high kicks. And she still sings circles around musical heirs like Mariah Carey. Nostalgia was a secondary factor in the joy I felt on Saturday.

Stellar Regions

Original image by There Stands the Glass.

I recently attended a free, outdoor jazz concert at which solos were traded in a conventional post-bop style.  The musicians were superb, and while I enjoyed their low-stakes performance, I’m mystified by the dominance of a format that seems exceedingly stale in 2022.  

The unhealthy and unnecessary status quo is repeatedly denounced in Beyond a Love Supreme: John Coltrane and the Legacy of an Album, a 2013 study by Tony Whyton.  The debate about what jazz is and what it should be rages 58 years after the release of A Love Supreme.  The academic jargon employed by the author makes me want to gouge my eyes out, but his subject and the correspondingly fascinating ideas he explores are magnificent.

What is the true significance of the 1964 recording A Love Supreme?  And what’s to be made of the subsequent albums Ascension, Interstellar Space and The Olatunji Concert?  And why, in spite of the vital innovations documented on these late-career Coltrane works, does the jazz establishment continue to promote tiresome- and yes, boring- forms of the music?

Whyton addresses each of these questions thoroughly.  My unfairly simplistic summation of his answers: most fans and scholars are uncomfortable with the notion(s) of God, black nationalism, experimental sound, complicated narratives and democratic approaches to art.

A pal loaned me his copy of Whyton’s 160-page book knowing I’d be triggered by the contents.  As the tone of this screed suggests, the shameful dismissal of Coltrane’s post-A Love Supreme work makes me livid.  Yet I’m eager to discuss one of the most esoteric of the book’s topics with my friend.

Did, as McCoy Tyner once suggested, God speak to us through Charlie Parker and John Coltrane?  And did a divine power, as my friend insisted that night, reach out to us during a performance by the spiritual jazz practitioner Nduduzo Makhathini at the Blue Room two weeks ago? As Coltrane wrote in his liner notes for A Love Supreme, “all praise to God.”

Never Would Have Made It

Early in the pandemic my life partner and I swapped church attendance with livestreams of worship services.  Unfaithful servants, we quickly found ourselves shopping around for inspirational music and astute preachers with shameless promiscuity. During the pre-times, our ideal Sunday morning church experience lasted less than 60 minutes.  That’s one reason we may never visit the Chosen Vessel Cathedral in Fort Worth.  The June 5 service is more than two hours long.  Oh, but what music! Marvin Sapp is the most prominent member of the church’s outstanding array of vocalists and instrumentalists.  Sapp’s comparitively anemic new album Substance contains nothing as memorable as his signature song"You Kept Me" and "All In Your Hands" are among the few selections approximating the holy fervor heard at Chosen Vessel.

Album Review: Nancy Mounir- Nozhet El Nofous

I won’t visit Egypt as long as el-Sisi and any like-minded successors remain in power. The situation pains me enormously, but I’m able to take solace in books, films and now, also in Nancy Mounir’s transportive new album Nozhet El Nofous. The Egyptian musician and producer recontextualizes scratchy recordings from the 1920s in her highly unusual remix endeavor. The occasional difficulty in discerning Mounir’s subtle contributions from the sounds on the original vinyl is part of the substantial charm. Not unlike a recurring dream, Nozhet El Nofous is appealingly unreal. The pyramids can wait.

Album Review: Lívia Nestrovski and Henrique Eisenmann- Nação

I was exasperated upon discovering no album existed to accompany a so-called “album release concert” by vocalist Lívia Nestrovski and pianist Henrique Eisenmann in the Kansas City area four months ago. Even though the Brazilian duo’s characterization of their appearance in the heart of the Midwest in that fashion was patently nonsensical, I was desperate to confirm my unqualified enthusiasm for their recital at the 1900 Building. Nação is finally here. Sort of. The album streams at Spotify and YouTube, but it doesn’t seem to be available at Amazon, Apple, Bandcamp or Tidal. Nação’s unadorned romantic and playful art songs replicate what the duo sounded like in Mission Woods, Kansas.

Album Review: Wilco- Cruel Country

I've had more or less the same conversation with innumerable Deadheads during the past 40 years. Deadhead: “Do you like the Dead?” Me: “No, not really.” Deadhead: “You obviously never went to a concert.” Me: “Yes, I did.” Deadhead: “But… but…” Me: “I’ll grant you this- I love American Beauty.” The Grateful Dead’s 1970 album is loaded with smart, concise folk-rock shuffles. So is Cruel Country. Wilco’s twelfth studio album sounds like a loving tribute to American Beauty. The sound, atmosphere and intent of the two albums are strikingly similar. A handful of Cruel Country songs may one day become as universally beloved as American Beauty classics like “Friend of the Devil,” “Ripple” and “Truckin’.” Cruel Country is the miracle Deadheads didn’t know they needed.