Coin Coin Chapter Two: Mississippi Moonchile

Coin Coin Chapter Two: Mississippi Moonchile

by Matana Roberts
Coin Coin Chapter Two: Mississippi Moonchile

Coin Coin Chapter Two: Mississippi Moonchile

by Matana Roberts

Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record - 180 Gram Vinyl)

$25.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Mississippi Moonchile is the second chapter in saxophonist and composer Matana Roberts' projected 12-part work, Coin Coin, which examines race, class, gender and personal experience through the prism of American history. The first chapter, Gens de Couleur Libre, was a large-scale offering, combining out jazz with narrated and sung sections that commenced at the dawn of slavery on North America's shores through the Civil War. It was at once moving, arresting, provocative, and militant, combining histories and mythologies personal, actual and spiritual. By contrast, Mississippi Moonchile was composed with her New York sextet in mind. The ensemble -- Roberts (saxophone), Shoko Nagai (piano), Jason Palmer (trumpet), Thomson Kneeland (double bass), Tomas Fujiwara (drums), and Jeremiah Abiah (an operatic tenor) -- delivers a wildly creative, contrasting, and wide-ranging musical theater performance that embodies three folk songs and 15 original compositions, narration, chorus and solo singing, divided into 18 sections yet played as a continuous whole. The music often reflects the origins of blues and jazz from the Delta and New Orleans, but is woven seamlessly with modern sounds (the meld of gospel, blues, and modal music in "Humility Draws Down Blue" is the epitome of "art music" rooted in American folk traditions and Latin sounds), scat singing, post-bop, and Abiah's gorgeous voice anchoring nearly every cut. Roberts' horn more readily reflects her speaking and singing voices here; it is much warmer and calmer. It reflects blues because it comes straight out of them. Palmer's trumpet is informed by bop and hard bop; it closely follows her lines and underscores them. Nagai's piano builds bridges between various musical traditions and players. Check the meld of briefly articulated free playing, blues, and swing in "Twelve Sighed," which moves briefly toward modal jazz. The use of "Frere Jacques" in "River Ruby Dues" comes out of "My Lord What a Morning," with Abiah offering Roberts' own melody wordlessly as she blows a quote from Coltrane's "Meditations." She showcases the legacy of her studies with the AACM at the beginning of "Responsory," as Abiah delivers her words. Roberts and Palmer trade lines on the outer fringes of the melody as the rhythm section walks a tightrope between; a minute and a half in, it erupts into a gorgeous, slow, King Oliver-inspired blues. The music allows Abiah's mellifluous voice and Roberts' singing and speaking, a warm, inviting space. Her flow of personal narration in "Was the Sacred Day" offers Christian prayers, entries from her grandmother's (the muse of the title) diaries, and sung fragments of "Motherless Child"; the effect is riveting. Even in its relative gentleness, Mississippi Moonchile asks more provocative questions than its predecessor--offering a view of family history and the struggles in juxtaposing thwe African American Experience with "freedom" inside the American Dream. Both albums are parts of a coded memorial quilt, that critically examines the racist design of "official" history, even as it reveals attempts to sublimate it in the veneer of the present era. ~ Thom Jurek

Product Details

Release Date: 09/30/2013
Label: Constellation
UPC: 0666561009816
Rank: 84410

Tracks

  1. Invocation
  2. Humility Draws Down Blue
  3. All Nations
  4. Twelve Sighed
  5. Spares of the World
  6. Secret Covens
  7. River Ruby Dues
  8. Confessor Haste
  9. Amma Jerusalem School
  10. For This Is
  11. Responsory
  12. The Labor of Their Lips
  13. Was the Sacred Day
  14. Lesson
  15. Woman Red Racked
  16. Thanks Be You
  17. Humility Draws Down New
  18. Benediction

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Matana Roberts   Primary Artist,Vocals,Conductor,Sax (Alto),Spoken Word,Vocal Conductor
Jason Palmer   Vocals,Trumpet
Tomas Fujiwara   Drums,Vocals
Thomson Kneeland   Vocals,Double Bass
Shoko Nagai   Piano,Vocals
Jeremiah Abiah   Tenor (Vocal)

Technical Credits

Harris Newman   Mastering
Matana Roberts   Artwork,Composer,Vocal Arrangement
Radwan Ghazi Moumneh   Mixing,Engineer
Evan McKnight   Design Assistant
Hooks Brothers   Cover Image
Joseph D. Howard   Composer
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews