Is this the future sound of black American jazz - an
inclusive yet rhythmically complex groove based
music that owes as a much to black urban culture
- predominantly hip hop and trap music rhythms -
as it does to jazz improv techniques and rhythms?
It's certainly interesting that similar elements
swim through the music of Robert Glasper and
Kamasi Washington, who along with Scott are
currently big box office, pulling-in substantial new
audiences for their music.
Ruler Rebel is the first album of a trilogy
celebrating 100 years of recorded jazz, and will be
followed by Diaspora and Emancipation
Procrastination later.
At the heart of this music are polyrhythmic
grooves that might come from jazz, New Orleans
black Indian music, trap, Malian rhythm Kassa
Soro and the interplay between an SPD drum
machine and live drumming.
Largely featuring Scott's trumpet, the record
introduces his articulate and frequently eloquent
voice as the narrator of Ruler Rebel, much like the
Persian Princess Scheherazade narrating her tales
of the mysterious east to Sultan Shahriar over one
thousand and one nights.
A key track is `Encryption', a summation of Scott's
direction of travel on the album. Here the running
rhythm is derived from the New Orleansian AfroIndian culture married with Malian Kassa Soro.
This is in turn is layered with SPD-SX electronic
drum machine and sampling machine played by
Joe Dyson and Cory Fonsville that introduce
rhythmic elements from trap and hip hop. Sounds
complex? Well it is, but it works.
Other highlights include `New Orleansian Love
Song' and `New Orleansian Love Song II' and a
celebration of Afro-Indian culture on `The
Coronation of K. Atunde Adjuah'.