Airto Moreira - Life After That
(Narada
70876-18077-2-1, 2003)
Babatunde Olatunji - Healing Session
(Narada
70876-18132-2-7, 2003)
Airto
Moreira and Babatunde Olatunji both have solidified reputations as master
percussionists, trailblazers in the percussion realm and pioneers of global
music. They teamed up from time to time as well, on each other's projects and on
such milestones as Mickey Hart's Planet Drum album. Olatunji's death earlier
this year marked the passing of a true legend. I'm betting it's more than a
coincidence that his first posthumous album is emerging at the same time as a
new release from Airto (on the same label, no less), but speculation on that
point is far secondary to the fact that we have two stunningly good
percussion-based discs here.
There's nothing Airto Moreira can't do with percussion. In decades of solo and
group work with jazz fusionists, experimental musicians, rock and rollers,
traditionalists and beyond, he's been able to take even the most deceptively
simple-seeming gadgets and make magic with them. And no wonder. He grew up in
Brazil, land of imported African beats and a place where the rules of percussion
have been rewritten repeatedly. Nonetheless, Life After That
is a surprising
stunner even for Airto. Some of his work has been more about creating moods and
environments centered around percussion and vocal sounds than conventional
drumming pieces, but this latest is the best of all worlds. It's a near-perfect
balance of feverish drum jams, rhythmic soundscapes, brilliant symbiosis of
melody and beat and lots of just plain fun.
Smack dab in the middle is ten
minutes of Airto soloing on the Brazilian tambourine known as the pandeiro, and
before and after that such guests as fellow percussionists Giovanni Hidalgo and
Michito Sanchez, vocalist Flora Purim (Airto's wife) and didgeridoo specialist
Stephen Kent add to the festivities. A smattering of guitars, bass, piano and
winds sometimes adds refinement, but this is a percussionist's utopia through
and through. Still, global music listeners across the board are likely to groove
to what's here, be it the Olatunji tribute, the sprawling "Ritmo Do Mundo" or
the human beatbox-with-Jamaican-accents track "Let It Out Let It In," which my
kids have lately been singing around the house quite a bit.
The words "healing session" could be applicable to just about everything
Olatunji did in his life, given the shamanic quality of a performing, recording
and teaching career that began with the unprecedented success of his Drums of Passion album more than 40 years ago. Some of his discs were pure percussion,
some added other instruments for a more fusion-geared sound, and he too
collaborated with many notable music makers in his day. Longtime fans may be
taken aback with the relatively low-key Healing Session, especially if it's the
hard, fast, intensely polyrhythmic Olatunji they're used to.
The intricacies of
layered African percussion are present, although the slower, unfolding nature of
the tracks show an intimacy and meditative aura not often associated with
Olatunji's sort of drumming. But it works, wonderfully. Steady, hypnotic beats
are embellished with further rhythms that both comply and contrast, taking their
time to build to blissful convergences of percussion and chants that seem to
sway in and out of some misty, otherworldly place. If that description sounds
like new age blather, forgive me. The track-by-track specifics in the liner
notes (written by Olatunji himself) state the case much better. Suffice to say
that this cd has the same sort of depth as the mystical music created by, for
example, similarly inclined indigenous peoples and Gregorian monks- longing,
hopeful, reassuring, ultimately striving to make this world a more beautiful
place. Immerse yourself.
World Music Central
http://worldmusiccentral.org/article.php/2003120321485845