Not really an "all-instrumental" album but a "very-instrumental" album nonetheless,
The Rebellion Sessions finds MC
Black Milk acting as orchestrator and producer for
Nat Turner, aka his backing band, who are named after the U.S. slave rebellion leader. Featuring
Malik Hunter on bass,
Zebulun "Z" Horton on guitar, and
Aaron "Ab" Abernathy on keyboards, these four co-conspirators have likely found a time machine, as they perfectly re-create the studio sound of the '70s. Cymbals snap, basslines thump, and guitar lines crackle across a wide sound spectrum, as if the 128 kbps Mp3 never happened. The music falls somewhere between
Miles Davis electric-band albums of the era (think
Big Fun) and the tamer work of
George Duke and such, but oddball touches suggest this is 2016 or so, as the descending, drippy keyboards of "You Need This Light" are post-
A$AP Mob, post-syrup sipping, and post-
Madlib. Speaking of
Madlib, the smoky aesthetic of the
Stones Throw label is all over this LP, although
The Rebellion Sessions also comes with a Detroit punch, some electro, and a
J Dilla influence, best heard on "Traveler," where
Kraftwerk and
ESG jam a bit after listening to a stack of broken beat and
4Hero. The LP runs at almost an EP's length and some cuts are cut short when they should have run longer, but
The Rebellion Sessions can make any day funkier and more flared, so file this next to
Oddisee's equally soulful
The Odd Tape and consider 2016 the best 1974 since 1974 itself. ~ David Jeffries