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Tom Skinner

Voice of Bishara

180g LP - £19.99 | Buy
CD - £11.99 | Buy
Drummer and producer Tom Skinner (The Smile, Sons of Kemet) announces this lean and beautiful album, in which he edited a starry recording session into a sonoro...

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black lp in gatefold sleeve - £25.99 | Buy

cd - £12.99
Giving most generously with not one but two new albums in just ten months, both these volumes further their effortless, slinky-jazz musings as a now clearly def...
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Following up the jaw-dropping ‘Your Queen Is A Reptile’ (our No 2 album of 2018) was always going to be a momentous task.
Voices of Bishara - Live at "mu"
  1. Bishara
  2. Red 2
  3. The Journey
  4. The Day After Tomorrow
  5. Oasis
  6. Camille
  7. Happiness

Tom Skinner

Voices of Bishara - Live at "mu"

INTERNATIONAL ANTHEM
  • super limited deluxe cd - 1 per customer

    Released: 7th Jun 2024

    £19.99
    Buy

Hearing Skinner’s compositions - flexed and stretched with extended improvisation, and in context with works by Wadud and Williams - both places them and this band firmly in the creative music continuum they honour, and provides us with an unobstructed view of where that continuum is leading us.

In January 2023, Tom Skinner and his ensemble performed material from his recently released album 'Voices of Bishara' at London club, “mu”— a venue founded by the curators at Brilliant Corners and named after the seminal Don Cherry live album. The set was augmented by a rendition of Tony Williams’ “Red” and three pieces by Abdul Wadud, whose 1977 self-released solo cello album, By Myself, was a primary inspiration for 'Voices of Bishara'. The soloists featured on the album — Shabaka Hutchings and Nubya Garcia— are replaced in Skinner's live ensemble with saxophonist Robert Stillman (who also plays with Skinner in The Smile) and saxophonist / flutist Chelsea Carmichael.

The extended rhythm section of Tom Herbert (double bass) and Kareem Dayes (cello) round out the lineup, with Skinner on drums. It’s clear from the jump that this band’s aim is to excavate the deep corners of this material, kicking the set off with a 15-minute rendition of Skinner’s own composition “Bishara” that employs the same relationship to rhythmic and tonal freedom found in the Abdul Wadud cello work that inspired it. That aesthetic connection is even more clear by the time the group moves into their 20-minute exploration of Waded’s “Oasis,” the stunning centerpiece of the set.