Media Condition: Near Mint (NM or M-)
Sleeve Condition: Near Mint (NM or M-)
Location: TWL95R
Notes:
After more than a decade of providing some of the most riveting post-Hendrix guitar arsenals this side of Eddie Hazel, and a multifaceted career that includes working with the likes of Miles Davis, Cassandra Wilson, Muhal Richard Abrams and Lawrence “Butch” Morris, Jean-Paul Bourelly is still roundly ignored in jazz-critic polls.
Nevertheless, not being in the spotlight has its advantages, such as being able to follow one’s creative spirit. Witness Bourelly’s latest album, Boom Bop, where he collaborates with a handful of Senegalese percussionists as well as iconic saxophonists Henry Threadgill and Archie Shepp, resulting in a visceral album of Afro-psychedelia that’s as passionate as it is probing.
Bourelly’s once staccato, Hendrix-inflected vocals give way to more of an elongated Afro-Arabian phrasing on Boom Bop, but Bourelly’s deep delta-blues roots are firmly intact as evidenced by the eerie “New Afro Blu” in which Bourelly sings of a deceitful lover alongside Diop’s fervid, chant-like singing. Other blues-drenched Afro-psychedelic charms include the percussive instrumental “Kinetic Threadness,” which features some fine alto work from Threadgill, the dreamy “Tara” and the thumping “Silent Rain.”
While it’s far-fetched that Boom Bop will make Bourelly a household name in the U.S, it will undoubtedly solidify his credentials as one of the most inventive and under-recognized guitarists of our time.
By John Murph
1. Gumbe 7:26
2. New Afro Blu 9:50
3. Three Chambers Of Diop 10:51
4. Silent Rain 7:35
5. Root One 3:07
6. Invisible Indivisible 7:32
7. Kinetic Threadness 7:01
8. Brother Boom Bap 1:53
9. Tara 6:36
10. Griot Sunset 1:14
Barcode 692287200527