Kamasi Washington's maximalist musical statements use jazz as a touchstone before spinning off in multiple directions while remaining inseparable from the massive whole, as evidenced by 2015's
The Epic and 2018's
Heaven and Earth (both triple albums).
Fearless Movement, his first long-player in six years, leaves out the choirs and orchestras but spans nearly 90 minutes over 12 tracks. He used his road band and a host of collaborators to execute this project.
Washington began composing
Fearless Movement during the pandemic while thinking about dance in a larger context, not only as art but as a prime engine for human movement. He also became a father; his daughter Asha (the blur on the cover) was born during the pandemic. The saxophonist became poignantly aware of his own mortality, understanding Asha would witness much after his passing.
"Lesanu" is the opening invocation, in which a cymbal wash finds
Patrice Quinn and others chanting "Sing unto the Lord, a new song," in Ge¿ez (the language of the Ethiopian Orthodox Bible) and English. The band -- trombonist
Ryan Porter, trumpeter
Dontae Winslow, organist/keyboardist
Brandon Coleman, pianist
Cameron Graves, bassist
Miles Mosely, and drummers
Tony Austin and
Ronald Bruner, Jr. -- along with an army of percussionists set a collision of post-bop and syncopated modalism guided by handclaps. "Asha the First" is based around a piano figure by his daughter. A funky wah-wah guitar, rolling drums, and chanted vocals by
Quinn and brothers
Taj and
Ras Austin offer a chorale before
Thundercat rains a harmolodic bass solo, answered by
Washington's blistering tenor solo above cascading jazz-funk. The Austins claim the track's second half, rapping in tandem.
Washington, a student of
Herbie Hancock, threads complex jazz charts through massively funky R&B and bumping hip-hop. Elegiac brass introduces "Computer Love," a spacey, soulful ballad sung by
Quinn with
Coleman on vocoder,
DJ Battlecat's turntables, and
Woody Aplanalp's warm guitar. On the clavinet-and-horn-fueled funk of "Get Lit,"
P-Funk's
George Clinton and rapper
D Smoke share vocals. "Dream State" begins in abstraction with organ, sequenced synth, and
Washington's alto suggesting the influence of
Steve Reich's contrapuntal minimalism.
Andre 3000's flute joins the dialog, as keys, rubbery bass, and breaking snares evoke something like
Grover Washington, Jr.'s "Mister Magic." "Together," an Afrofuturist ballad, features vocal soulman
BJ the Chicago Kid; it segues into the transcendent post-bop-R&B fusion of "The Garden Path," featuring vocalist
Dwight Trible. "Road to Self" is a 13-minute composition that moves fluidly across electronica, progressive jazz, spiritual post-bop, contemporary jazz, and funky fusion.
Astor Piazzolla's "Prologue" closes the album, employing Latin percussion under jazz-rock fusion and post-bop in a buoyant celebration of this band's creative power. Track by track,
Fearless Movement is relentless in exploring new sonic terrains and paying homage to musical forbears. It is
Washington's most cohesive statement. He doesn't merely juxtapose instruments and sounds, he painstakingly combines them, bringing joy, intensity, political, social, and spiritual poignancy in a vision at once focused, restless, and playful. ~ Thom Jurek