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Jamael Dean - Primordial Waters (2021) Hi Res

Jamael Dean - Primordial Waters (2021) Hi Res

BAND/ARTIST: Jamael Dean

  • Title: Primordial Waters
  • Year Of Release: 2021
  • Label: Stones Throw
  • Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz, World
  • Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks) | 24Bit/44 kHz FLAC
  • Total Time: 01:39:01
  • Total Size: 234 mb | 612 mb | 1.1 gb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Jamael Dean - Èṣù
02. Jamael Dean - Odù Tó Dá Ìwà
03. Jamael Dean - Orí Apẹrẹ
04. Jamael Dean - Ifá
05. Jamael Dean - Akoda
06. Jamael Dean - Overstood
07. Jamael Dean - Ṣàngó
08. Jamael Dean - Ọranmiyan
09. Jamael Dean - Galaxy In Leimert
10. Jamael Dean - Ọṣun
11. Jamael Dean, Mickey, Sharada Shashidhar, Jasik, Jira >< - Ba'Ra'Ka
12. Jamael Dean, Jasik, Jira >< - Orí Inu
13. Jamael Dean, Jasik, Jira >< - Oye
14. Jamael Dean, Jasik, Jira >< - Abyss
15. Jamael Dean, Jasik, Jesse Justice - Galaxy 4 Leimert
16. Jamael Dean, Jasik, Jira >< - Ọya
17. Jamael Dean, Jasik, Jesse Justice - Time
18. Jamael Dean, Sharada Shashidhar, Jasik, Jira >< - Thicket
19. Jamael Dean, Jasik, Jira >< - Aiku
20. Jamael Dean, Jasik, Jira >< - Lake Corcoran

Jamael Dean’s first album, Black Space Tapes, was a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it blast of hip-hop/jazz fusion, breathless and restless and brilliantly immersive: in just six tracks and 37 minutes, the LA piano prodigy appeared all over his hometown’s musical map, lacing ecstatic vocal runs with splashes of rap and sampladelic juxtaposition, before snapping you out of it like waking from a daydream, stunned at the audacity of it all.

Following it up was always going to be a tall order, and granted, sometimes the most admirable reaction to making a masterpiece is to do something entirely different next. Even so, it’s disappointing that Dean has decided to reject quite so much of his debut’s character on his second album, which is nearly three times as long and contains virtually none of the verve or bravura approach of before. In its place, we get essentially two records in one: the first ten tracks are West African-inspired boilerplate cosmic jazz, perfectly serviceable and technically impressive in small doses but infuriatingly samey at length, with scant variation in tone, timbre, pace or volume, to the extent that when the first moment of interest arrives, 55 minutes in, ‘Galaxy In Leimert’’s rather gorgeous swinging lament is nearly lost in the soup. The second ten, of woozy experimental boom-bap hip-hop, is far more encouraging. Raps recalling the edgy claustrophobia of Odd Future are spun between Dilla-esque beats that refuse to do what’s expected of them, and the set has an oddball, syrupy cohesion to it.

Flickers of Dean’s early genius bubble up here, most clearly on the languorous, rhythmically addictive ‘Thicket’, but when he asks on the penultimate song, “Was it worth it in the long run, when it’s over will you like the way the song’s sung?”, you’re forced to conclude that on balance, after sitting through nearly 100 minutes of wildly variable fare, probably not.


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