Esperanza Spalding – Emily’s D+Evolution {Deluxe Edition} (2016) [PonoMusic FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

Esperanza Spalding – Emily’s D+Evolution (2016) [Deluxe Edition]
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time – 59:22 minutes | 1,35 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: Pono Music | Artwork: Front cover | @ Concord Records

Esperanza Spalding presents her latest project Emily’s D+Evolution a rekindling of her childhood interest in theater, poetry and movement, which delves into a broader concept of performance. Taking a new approach to her on-stage persona, the remarkable Spalding taps into new creative energy, delivering musical vignettes inspired during a “sleepless night of full moon inspiration”. As she puts it, “Emily is my middle name, and I’m using this fresh persona as my inner navigator. This project is about going back and reclaiming un-cultivated curiosity, and using it as a compass to move forward and expand. My hope for this group is to create a world around each song, there are a lot of juicy themes and stories in the music. We will be staging the songs as much as we play them, using characters, video, and the movement of our bodies”.

On previous albums, Grammy-winning bassist and vocalist Esperanza Spalding dived into jazz standards, Brazilian rhythms, and sophisticated, harmonically nuanced R&B. But with her 2016 album, Emily’s D+Evolution, she takes an entirely different approach. A concept album revolving around a central character named Emily (Spalding’s middle name), Emily’s D+Evolution is not a jazz album – though jazz does inform much of the music here. Instead, Spalding – who also co-produced the album alongside legendary producer Tony Visconti (David Bowie) – builds the release largely around angular, electric guitar-rich prog rock, kinetic, rhythmically rich jazz fusion, and lyrically poetic pop. Of course, Spalding’s version of pop is never predictable, always harmonically inventive, and frequently imbued with as many improvisational moments as possible within the boundaries of a given song. But relative to her previous releases, this is still a significant shift. Helping to bring Emily’s D+Evolution to life is a band Spalding put together specifically for this project, including guitarist Matthew Stevens, drummer Karriem Riggins, keyboardist Corey King, and others. Conceptually, the character of Emily represents Spalding as a young girl, and works as a conduit through which she explores and unpacks complex ideas about life, love, sex, race, education, and the creative process. While it would be reductive to call Emily’s D+Evolution a retro album, Spalding’s harmonic and melodic content and production aesthetics definitely have a ’70s quality. Cuts like “Earth to Heaven” and “Noble Nobles” bring to mind the forward-thinking sound of singer/songwriter Joni Mitchell’s work with jazz artists like Wayne Shorter and Jaco Pastorius, whose liquid bass style is an obvious antecedent to Spalding’s approach here. While Spalding never sounds anything less than original on the album, part of the beauty here is in recognizing her inspirations and reveling in how she has made them her own. “Elevate or Operate” sounds like a serpentine Steely Dan melody, sung with Valkyrian agility over a strident, Dr. Dre-friendly militaristic beat. Similarly, “One” brings to mind Mitchell’s soaring vocal style, set against a Greek chorus of harmonized backing vocals and accented by Stevens’ cascading guitar lines, like something John McLaughlin would do with Mahavishnu Orchestra. Elsewhere, tracks like “Good Lava” and “Funk the Fear” reveal Spalding’s swaggering, inner rock goddess and sound like a fantasy collaboration between Frank Zappa and Jimi Hendrix. While Spalding has long been a virtuoso bassist and commanding, lithe vocalist, she’s developed into a gifted songwriter with a poet’s sense for imagistic, emotionally resonant lyrics. It’s a formidable combination best represented here by the epic “Ebony and Ivy.” Bookended with a machine-gun-fire spoken word poem, the song allows Spalding as Emily to explore a mythic childhood netherworld in which she ambitiously juxtaposes the joys of learning from the natural world and the desire for a formal education against historical notions of how science was, ironically, used to justify slavery. She sings, “It’s been hard to grow outside/Growin’ good and act happy/And pretend that the ivy vines/Didn’t weigh our branches down.”

Tracklist:
01 – Good Lava
02 – Unconditional Love
03 – Judas
04 – Earth To Heaven
05 – One
06 – Rest In Pleasure
07 – Ebony And Ivy
08 – Noble Nobles
09 – Farewell Dolly
10 – Elevate Or Operate
11 – Funk The Fear
12 – I Want It Now
13 – Change Us
14 – Unconditional Love (Alternate Version)

Download:

mqs.link_EsperanzaSpaldingEmilysDEvlutinDeluxeEditin2016Pn2496.part1.rar
mqs.link_EsperanzaSpaldingEmilysDEvlutinDeluxeEditin2016Pn2496.part2.rar

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