Your Queen Is A Reptile Sons Of Kemet

Album info

Album-Release:
2018

HRA-Release:
30.03.2018

Label: Impulse!

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Contemporary Jazz

Artist: Sons Of Kemet

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 My Queen Is Ada Eastman 06:41
  • 2 My Queen Is Mamie Phipps Clark 05:31
  • 3 My Queen Is Harriet Tubman 05:40
  • 4 My Queen Is Anna Julia Cooper 05:07
  • 5 My Queen Is Angela Davis 06:35
  • 6 My Queen Is Nanny Of The Maroons 06:44
  • 7 My Queen Is Yaa Asantewaa 07:04
  • 8 My Queen Is Albertina Sisulu 05:19
  • 9 My Queen Is Doreen Lawrence 06:47
  • Total Runtime 55:28

Info for Your Queen Is A Reptile



Sons of Kemet is the iconoclastic mix of tenor sax, tuba and double drums. On this third studio album, they bring a genre defying approach that celebrates the restless exploration of identity within the Caribbean diaspora within the U.K. Your Queen is a Reptile was recorded in London with a host of guests spanning the breadth of the U.K. scene including jungle legend Congo Natty and poet Joshua Idehen.

Sons Of Kemet are born of many vital elements – including a name that nods to ancient Egyptian culture, and a line-up that comprises some of the most progressive 21st-century talents in British jazz and beyond. Band-leader, composer and sax and clarinet don Shabaka Hutchings (himself named after a Nubian pharaoh-philosopher) brings together his fiery vision alongside London-based bandmates Tom Skinner and Max Hallet (forming a dynamo duo on drums here) and Theon Cross on Tuba.

These collaborative players have previously won major praise in celebrated acts such as Polar Bear, Hello Skinny, Melt Yourself Down, Mulatu Astatke and the Heliocentrics, and Sun Ra’s Arkestra. Yet there’s still nothing quite like the ‘supergroup’ sound of Sons Of Kemet: eloquent, fierce, explosively funky – and thrillingly out-there.

Sons of Kemet will be releasing their new record ‘Your Queen Is A Reptile’ in Spring 2018 on Universal’s Verve Imprint – Impulse Records, the first major label release from Shabaka Hutchings.

Your Queen considers herself our better; by right of blood, by way of lineage, by grace of conquest, by the reason of tyranny, by the confidence of tradition. Your Queen asserts this message through her crown, her church, her parliament, her loyal subjects, her wealth, her relationship with the media and the British empire, who celebrate her lifestyle, her fashion, her cuisine and her culture. Your Queen is financed by our taxes, which in turn validate the injustice of class and race discrimination of Great Britain: That some are born superior, and deserve more because of where they’re from, or who they worship, or who their parents are. Your Queen Is Not Our Queen. She does not see us as human.

And we see ourselves as human. We judge our worth, not by Christmas speeches or golden jubilees, but by deeds. Our Queens walked among us. Our Queens led by action, by example, our Queens listened. Our Queens made bright futures out of cruel and unfair pasts. Our Queens cried and laughed with us. Our Queens knew they were just like us from the beginning, not just when it suited them.Our Queens are just like us, and we are human. We need new royalty. Your Queen Is A Reptile.

Sons of kemet is the iconoclastic mix of tenor sax, tuba and double drums. On this third studio album, they bring a genre defying approach which celebrates the restless exploration of identity within the Caribbean diaspora within the U.K. ‘Your Queen is a Reptile’ was recorded in london with a host of guests spanning the breadth of the UK scene including jungle legend Congo Natty and poet Joshua Idehen

Shabaka Hutchings, saxophone
Pete Wareham, saxophone (track 4)
Nubya Garcia, saxophone (track 7)
Theon Cross, tuba
Tom Skinner, drums
Seb Rochford, drums (tracks 1, 2, 4-6, 8, 9)
Moses Boyd, drums (tracks 3, 7, 8)
Eddie Hick, drums (tracks 3, 7)
Maxwell Hallett, drums (track 9)
Josh Idehen, vocals (tracks 1, 9)
Congo Natty, vocals (track 2)



Sons Of Kemet
In the spring of 2011, patrons of Charlie Wright's in East London saw a performance that stopped them in their tracks. It was the unveiling of a group with a unique take on jazz, Caribbean folk music and African Diasporan history. The band was Sons of Kemet, a super-group of sorts led by clarinetist, saxophonist and composer Shabaka Hutchings, featuring Oren Marshall on tuba and both Tom Skinner and Seb Rochford on drums. The combination of these mighty creative forces yields music that is powerful, lyrical and, above all, fiercely original.

In September 2013 the band will release its hotly anticipated debut album Burn having undergone mercurial development by way of numerous gigs, the highlights of which include a session for BBC Radio 3's Jazz On 3, a sensational debut at this year's Cheltenham Jazz Festival and a collaboration with the BBC Concert Orchestra at the Queen Elizabeth Hall as part of the 2012 London Jazz Festival.

The memory of that first performance at Charlie Wright's is still clear in Hutchings' mind, as is the reason why he opted for the relatively unusual twin percussion team that that gives Sons of Kemet their compelling and infectious sound. Hutchings had extensive experience working with each drummer in different settings - Skinner in the acclaimed trio Zed-U [alongside bassist Neil Charles] and Rochford in Mercury Music Prize nominees Polar Bear, where Hutchings frequently depped for saxophonist Pete Wareham. Skinner and Rochford's visceral exchange of rhythmic ideas is an unforgettable, highly danceable experience. Throw into this one of the great wild cards of contemporary British music, Oren Marshall on tuba, and you have a wonderfully unorthodox configuration.

Although born in London, 29 year-old, Hutchings spent most of his childhood in Barbados, where he studied classical clarinet and played in various calypso and reggae bands before moving to Birmingham in 1999. Upon his return to England, he attended the renowned Guildhall School Of Music, joined the Tomorrow's Warriors collective and went on to work with artists such as Jerry Dammers, The Heliocentrics and Courtney Pine. Able to contribute as much to swing as free improvised settings, Hutchings was soon recognized as an exciting new personality in British jazz, and his career received yet another boost when he was named BBC Radio 3's New Generation Jazz Artist for 2010 (a two-year tenure). The consensus was that this was a musician with strong ideas as well as ‘chops' and Sons Of Kemet bears this out in no uncertain terms.

Beyond the impressive credentials of the band members, it is the raison d'être of the group that explains why it has made a sizeable impact in its short life span. There is a meaningful cultural slant to the whole project. "I thought none of the music I'm playing had a Caribbean accent, so I wanted to have that influence," Hutchings says. "I wanted it to be that deeper thing that links into the African Diaspora but isn't clichéd, where you hear it and think this is that nice happy music from the islands."

So it was back to his childhood and to Barbados that Hutchings turned. Seeking guidance from Barbadian ethnomusicologists specializing in early Caribbean music, he was soon furnished with numerous recordings that he studied in depth. Before long, the links between the music of New Orleans and West Africa became clear and the work of two visionary Jamaican artists in particular percolated into Hutchings' mind: Count Ossie and Cedric ‘Im' Brooks, two musicians who would become major influences on the band.

The reprise of The Rivers Of Babylon, which Hutchings describes as a ‘standard' within the Afro-Caribbean tradition and a staple of Rastafarian nyabinghi drumming music, is arguably the clearest indication of the far-reaching history that frames Son Of Kemet. Yet the themes and sources of inspiration for other songs also reveal how far and wide Hutchings has cast his conceptual net. Inner Babylon addresses the issue of the cultural hegemony of America; The Godfather pays tribute to the legendary Ethiopian musician Mulatu Atsatkue, with whom Hutchings and Tom Skinner have played with over the last few years; All Will Surely Burn is a reflection on the pressing subject of global warming while Hutchings' interest in literature is flagged up by two pieces that evoke writers who have inspired him: Song For Galeano is for Uruguayan historian Eduardo Galeano and The Book Of Disquiet is for the Portuguese poet Fernando Pessoa.

While the breadth of these references make it clear that Hutchings is very much engaged with the world around him in the widest possible sense, he has made an entirely personal statement through the name that he chose for the group. Kemet is one of the first recognized names for ancient Egypt and its last Nubian king was called Shabaka. "He wrote all of the ideological principles of the time in Egypt - they were the Kemetic principles," says Shabaka of his namesake, "these things have influenced Greek philosophy and a lot of western thinking." One of the things in Kemetic ideology that particularly interested him was the principle of a universal consciousness "that really struck a chord with what I was trying to do musically with the people I was playing with."

Exceptionally assured for a debut album, Burn surely has to become one of the standout releases for 2013. It's a curiously addictive album that manages to appeal to both heart and mind and there is little to compare it with. Instead it feels like that rare thing, an exciting new sound that somehow worms its way into your brain and won't let go.

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