PARDON MY FRENCH NEW CD

Sold Date: March 26, 2022
Start Date: March 26, 2021
Final Price: $29.85 (USD)
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Product Description
Jahari Massamba Unit is the very occasional collaborative recording project between producer/mixologist/multi-instrumentalist Madlib and jazz/hip-hop drummer/producer Karriem Riggins. The duo's first appearance was on the trippy post-bop of "Umoja," from 2004's stellar future jazz outing Yesterdays Universe. They reassembled as JMU for cuts on 2010's High Jazz. Pardon My French is an exploration and statement of Afro-futurist jazz refracted through hip-hop, vanguard, Eastern and Latin influences, and funk. The track titles offer abundant uses of profanity and wine references, deliberately juxtaposing high and low culture; this is a carefully plotted and executed release. Opener "Je Prendrai le Romanée-Conti (Putain de Leroy)" commences with abstracted synths and upright bass -- à la the earliest Weather Report excursions -- stuttering, bleating trumpet, rolling tom-toms, and cymbals; it sets the frame for exploration. As "Les Jardins Esméraldins (Pour Caillard)" emerges, Riggins' kit introduces a theme framed by double bass, modal piano, and a wandering soulful flute (à la Yusef Lateef's Eastern Sounds). The album's centerpiece is "Du Morgon au Moulin-à-Vent (Pour Duke)," a nine-plus-minute jam introduced by the sound of running water, incessantly rolling tom-toms, crystalline vibraphone, and acoustic guitar. Its long intro is anchored by a two-chord piano vamp, and the track eventually weds post-bop, Latin and Brazilian jazz, exotic percussion, and squalling trombone, all before Jackie Earley recites a brief poem. Riggins' drums are key. Check the hypnotic snare patterns at the center of "Trou du Cul (Ode au Sommelier Arrogant)," where electric bass lines, atmospheric samples, and jaw harp swirl around them. The funk formally enters on "Etude Montrachet," as sub-bass effects frame a syncopated, reverbed drum kit shuffle, and organ, electric piano, and synths cascade in sequence around a rubbery bass line. Riggins is the bedrock on "Merde (Basse-cour)," with a zigzagging snare/hi-hat shuffle atop wobbly synth effects, electric piano, and multi-tracked souled-out flutes. The drummer's phase-shifted kit makes up the front half of "Inestimable le Clos," which expands to include didgeridoo, Latin and Brazilian rhythms, multi-tracked piano, fretless bass, reeds, and brass, surrounded by a swelling B-3. It sounds like a cross between an outtake from Santana's Caravanserai and a cop movie soundtrack. That exotic yet meaty jazz-funk vibe persists in "La Closerie (Pour Prévost)," with striated sci-fi synths, punchy soprano sax, and a driving electric bass line. It eases into the head-nodding closer "Hommage à la Vielle Garde (Pour Lafarge et Rinaldi)," which reworks funky grooves from fusion-era Frank Zappa, CTI-period Milt Jackson, and late-'70s Herbie Hancock with punchy trombone and tenor sax. Abstraction is part and parcel of Madlib's complex musical identity; with Riggins' use of modal forms of jazz and funk, they expand their influences to emerge as a band. Pardon My French flows seamlessly from jazz's outer limits to the club on Saturday night, slipping all box-confining definitions. It's difficult to pin down to be sure, but extremely listenable as a mind-blowing experiment to encounter and absorb. The future is now. ~ Thom Jurek

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