Djesse Vol. 3 Jacob Collier

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2020

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
14.08.2020

Label: Decca (UMO)

Genre: R&B

Subgenre: Soul

Interpret: Jacob Collier

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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  • 1 CLARITY 00:51
  • 2 Count The People 02:47
  • 3 In My Bones 04:09
  • 4 Time Alone With You 04:15
  • 5 All I Need 04:03
  • 6 In Too Deep 03:52
  • 7 Butterflies 02:02
  • 8 Sleeping On My Dreams 04:21
  • 9 Running Outta Love 04:25
  • 10 Light It Up On Me 02:05
  • 11 He Won't Hold You 05:01
  • 12 To Sleep 03:12
  • Total Runtime 41:03

Info zu Djesse Vol. 3

Poppig, verspielt und ziemlich abenteuerlich ist Jacob Colliers dritter "Djesse"-Streich gelungen.

Als Jacob Collier im Oktober 2018 bei einem Live-Stream aus seinem vor Instrumenten überquellenden Heimstudio erstmals sein auf vier Teile angelegtes "Djesse"-Projekt vorstellte, kündigte er bereits an, dass es auf Volume 3 "so richtig zur Sache gehen" würde. "Es wird eine Art verrücktes elektronisches Ding", fügte er geheimnisvoll an. Nun sollte man nicht glauben, dass die beiden ersten Alben der Serie reine Aufwärmübungen waren. Jedes für sich - da waren sich Kritiker und Fans einig - war ein veritabler Kracher. Das erste Album rückte komplexe Songs mit orchestralen Arrangements und Jacobs Zusammenarbeit mit dem Metropole Orkest in den Mittelpunkt. Das zweite zeigte ihn von seiner sanfteren, leiseren Seite, war ziemlich folky, dezent funky und bot intime Kollaborationen mit Lianne La Havas, Becca Stevens, Chris Thile, dodie, Oumou Sangaré, Sam Amidon, JoJo und Steve Vai.

Auch für "Djesse Vol. 3" schart Jacob Collier jetzt wieder ein großes und abwechslungsreiches Aufgebot aus globalen Gästen um sich: darunter Tori Kelly, die Neuseeländerin Kimbra, Tank and The Bangas aus New Orleans, die R&B-Sängerin Kiana Ledé, der Hip-Hop-Star Ty Dolla $ign, die britische Neo-Soul-Sängerin Mahalia, der kanadische Sänger Daniel Caesar, die aus North Carolina stammende Rapperin Rapsody und sogar ein gewisser T-Pain. Der deutsche STERN vergab in einer ausführlichen Story gerade fünf Sterne für das Album und nennt Collier einen "Hochbegabten im Pop".

Was Collier vor zwei Jahren in seiner Vorankündigung meinte, machte er schon im aberwitzigen Intro "Clarity" klar, das bei unbedarften Hörern Schwindelanfälle verursachen könnte. Das ganze abenteuerliche Album gleicht einem Spaziergang durch einen akustischen Vergnügungspark mit Achterbahnen, sich rasant drehenden Karussells und klanglichen Zerrspiegelkabinetten. Die zwölf fantastisch produzierten, vor skurrilen Soundeffekten wimmelnden Songs sind extrem verspielt und gehen trotzdem direkt ins Ohr. Der erst 26-jährige Brite lässt hier keinen Zweifel daran, dass er ein wirklich einzigartiges Talent als cleverer Songwriter und noch raffinierterer Arrangeur besitzt. Und als virtuoser Multiinstrumentalist und chamäleonesker Sänger sowieso.

Jacob Collier




Jacob Collier
series of viral YouTube videos are what first made him a star, and caught the attention of Quincy Jones. On 2016’s In My Room, which won 2 GRAMMYs and a Jazz FM Award, Collier sang, played, and produced everything himself. And he made it all in his childhood bedroom. In My Room led to collaborations with Herbie Hancock and Hans Zimmer, performances with the likes of Pharrell, a TED Talk, a BBC Proms concert and much more. After releasing that astonishing gambit, he decided he wanted to open the process up to the world, to allow the music and musicians that had influenced him to participate in the very songs he wrote.

On January 1, 2018, Jacob woke up in London and began something bold: He sat down and started composing for an orchestra for the first time, giving himself just four weeks to finish an entire album before flying to The Netherlands to record the songs with the Metropole Orkest. That was only the first day and first act of a year of new musical adventures for the British singer, multi-instrumentalist, and production wunderkind—the dawn of a profound period of musical dialogue and discovery that is now poised to dazzle the world.

That morning, Collier started making Djesse, a four-album cycle composed entirely during 2018 and featuring contributions from a global cast of his musical inspirations. It is one of the most audacious recording projects to emerge this decade from someone who has already established himself as one of music’s most brazen and electrifying new minds. Djesse is a universal wonder.

“I never planned to record a four-album project, but it occurred to me that there was so much music I wanted to write at this point that I might as well just write it all,” explains Collier, laughing. “I’ve always been a huge fan of going to the deepest waters of something I don’t truly understand and making something happen. It’s amazing to see how oftentimes when you just jump in and do the thing, something magical will happen.”

Take, for instance, “Everlasting Motion,” the ecstatic rhythmic centerpiece of Djesse’s first volume. For years, the musically omnivorous Collier had studied gnawa, a spiritual and relentlessly percussive ancient sound rooted in Northern Africa. He loved its hypnotic rhythms and the way its vocals seemed to unfurl in endless ribbons. Collier wanted to collaborate with Hamid El Kasri, a modern Moroccan master of the form. He asked around, eventually obtained an email address, and sent a note explaining his backstory and project. Nearly three months passed. Collier had essentially given up on El Kasri, assuming that either the email address he had found was outdated or that one of Morocco’s living legends simply had no interest in such a nebulous project.

But suddenly, an enthusiastic answer arrived: Come to Morocco, and make music. Collier booked a flight to and studio time in Casablanca, where he spent 24 hours recording with El Kasri and asking one of gnawa’s current wellsprings about the history of the genre itself. He left with new information and a radiant piece of polyglot pop, where strings and horns and funky bass dance in jubilation. It is a magnificent moment of ignored borders and a positive affirmation of Collier’s central vision for Djesse.

In one story and one song, this is the spirit of Djesse. (Pronounced “Jesse,” the album’s name is an extrapolation of Collier’s initials, though he’s not the character at the center of this epic.) In these four albums, all written and engineered and produced by Collier, he has taken the singular approach to arrangement and harmony that have earned him acclaim since he was a teenager on YouTube and paired it with the artists he treasures. In the process, he has traveled from Los Angeles to New York, Tokyo to Casablanca, Nashville to Abbey Road with a compact version of his home studio in tow. Documenting a year in Collier’s life and of his musical loves, Djesse is a monumental testament to creative exploration and collaboration.

On the first volume, his key partner is the Metropole Orkest, the 70-year-old Dutch ensemble that programs and performs with the aplomb and energy of youth. Led by conductor Jules Buckley, the Metropole continues to reimagine how modern symphonies can sound and how they should play. Alongside Collier, they animate the voices of El Kasri, stunning a cappella group Take 6, and the rapturous soul singer Laura Mvula. You hear Collier wink awake through a gorgeous vocal aubade, then assert his distinctive voice as an arranger and orchestrator, where the ensemble becomes new limbs with which to create motion and harmony. “Keep in motion/Stay unspoken,” he sings again and again. “If I’m broken/Keep me open.” There are sweeping ballads, classical beauties, electric R&B tunes, and a cover of “All Night Long” that swings from South America to the American South in seven minutes that rush past in an instant.

And that’s just the start. As the volumes are revealed, different textures and themes and sounds will be explored in equally astonishing ways. Jacob imagined Djesse as a grand journey through space and time, and the volumes follow his path. In addition, across the quartiles nearly two-dozen collaborators will be featured, from pop stars and folk songwriters to guitar wizards and soul singers. Collier stands bravely at the center of it all, the writer, producer, arranger, and singer putting himself in conversation with the musical world at large.

“I’m treating it as this great big puzzle. Piece by piece, it comes together,” he says. “An idea like this can’t come without obsession on every single plane ride, every single day, every single night, staying up to think about how it all fits together. Rather than being my four walls, this time my room is the Planet Earth. I have been able to call many rooms my room.”

In times of political turmoil, the assumption is that the artistic response should be one of bile and vitriol, the raised fist of barbed punk or plaintive folk or urgent hip-hop instructing us how best to broadcast our anger and how best to organize it. Djesse isn’t a disavowal of that idea so much as an alternative that stares into a darkness with an irrepressible light, a universal ecstasy. During these four volumes, Jacob Collier doesn’t merely embrace globalism or give it the deference of lip service. He lives it, sings it, arranges for it through songs that fight for something—music and its power to remind us of the connections we all share, the joy, and pain and humanity of being alive at all.



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