IN THE HOUSE OF THE RISING SUN

Now and again, you come across an album so good that you just can't get it off repeat. From the opening to closing notes, I was spellbound in between. The opening track, “Awakening,” is peaceful and reminds me of the first time I heard Lonnie Liston Smith's Garden Of Peace. My mind and heart had been kidnapped - thrown into a trunk and I was going wherever this band steered me for the next hour or so.
“Awakening” is what you hear and feel in those groggy moments before your eyes pop open. It captures the sounds of wherever we go in Dreamland and is the reveille that beckons us back to reality. That last held note is like the morning stretch that says, “You're up and you're ready to go!” which leads you to...
The Souljazz Orchestra: Agbara
From Rising Sun (Strut, 2010)
this shot of musical caffeine. Skip the morning coffee and throw this into your music player of choice. If you aren't able to get through the drudgery of the morning with this playing in the background, then don't even bother with the rest or your day. Musically, it hearkens to the Latin classic
“Tiger of San Pedro” as performed by Bill Watrous. It bounces with verve with its marimba-laden background, and those horns... MY GOD!
The rest of the album follows along the same lineage, closing out with a two-part cover of Pharoah Sanders' “Rejoice” suite with first part being more meditative and the second part being more rhytmic and lively.
You can check more out clips over at the official release page. With roots in Ethio-jazz, Afrobeat, Latin, and soul, the band shows they are capable of astounding range, which is no small task. More importantly, though, they accomplish it with a fortitude and semblance of musicality that allows them to be original while still honoring those who inspired them.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the first must-have release of 2010, and it comes your way February 16th.

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