This Fall, Burnt Sugar The Arkestra Chamber debuts Angels Over Oakanda, a four-song suite which is the groupโs first new studio-generated album of original material since 2017โs All You Zombies Dig The Luminosity. The album is being released on CD and as a digital download by Avant Groidd Musica September 23, with a 12โ vinyl release to follow in 2022.
Founded by Village Voice icon Greg “Ionman” Tate and co-led with Dayton, Ohio monster groove bassist Jared Michael Nickerson, Burnt Sugar the Arkestra Chamber is a forum for New York City’s improvisational musicians to compose, record, and perform an eclectic range of music.
Nickerson and his bass have toured with Bernie Worrell, Katel Keineg, The The, Wadada Leo Smith, Catie Curtis, Marshall Crenshaw and Melvin Van Peebles with a recording portfolio that includes Grammy-nominated Charlie Musselwhiteโs โSanctuaryโ, Freedy Johnstonโs 1992 Robert Christgau dubbed โa perfect albumโ โCan You Flyโ and Gary Lucasโ first Gods & Monsters release.
Angels Over Oakanda is a unique body of compositions that draws upon the high bar of creativity and musicianship within the ensemble in unprecedented ways.
The opening track, which gives the album its name, was recorded in Brooklyn with a full complement of the current gigging and touring Burnt Sugar instrumental band.
Activating a 140 bpm groove-loop by Tate for its rhythmic and โill-bientโ foundation, the group launches on a dizzying 18-minute journey of extemporaneous conjuration โ one directed and disciplined under Tateโs baton by their seasoned deployment of their late sensei Lawrence Butch Morrisโ Conduction System for Ensemble, practicing what Ornette Coleman called โThe Art of the Improvisors.โ
The players in the room on that audacious day were Lewis Flip Barnes TRUMPET; Avram Fefer ALTO SAX; V. Jeffrey Smith TENOR SAX; Moist Paula BARITONE SAX; Ben Tyree & Andrรฉ Lassalle ELECTRIC GUITARS; Leon Gruenbaum FENDER RHODES; Jared Michael Nickerson ELECTRIC BASS & PERCUSSION; Greg Gonzalez DRUMS & PERCUSSION; Shelley Nicole PERCUSSION.
Supplemental compositional material was later developed in the home studios of V. Jeffrey Smith TENOR & SOPRANO SAX; and Satch Hoyt FLUTE and worked into the final mix.
Next on this EP is a 12-minute Beat-and-Bass remix variation of the Oakanda suite entitled โRepatriation of the Midnight Moorsโ, produced, composed and arranged by longtime Burnt Sugar guest drummer and arrangement collaborator, Marque Gilmore thaโ InnaโขMost. โRepatriationโ is remix #2 extracted from a 5-track, 41-minute ReMiX MiXTaPe Suite of its own.
Gilmore has a relationship with several Burnt Sugar members that goes back to the formative years as a founder-member of the Black Rock Coalition in 80s and 90s Gotham. Brother Gilmore drew on discrete musical elements and thematic impulses of Angelโs long-form version to create a wholly original work โ one which distills the artistโs deep history in Cambridge, as a teen in his father Marvin Gilmoreโs reggae-centric club The Western Front, then later in New York with the BRC-massive, his 14-year stint in London being a pioneering member of its Black Poetic and DrumโnโBass communities from the mid- 90s (alongside such now well-known UK literary pillars as Roger Robinson and Malaika B), along with his journeyman tenure with Joe Zawinul in the post-millennial oughts, through to his decade of contributions to the touring ensemble and Grammy nominations for his production work with Cuban pianist Omar Sosa.
About โRepatriationsโ Gilmore has this to say:
I am truly humbled and honored each and every time I am invited as a guest artist with Burnt Sugar, and even with my Acousti-Lectric drum-arrangement infusions, I have YET to hold that Dang-Blessed BATON! So, I created a full-length remix suite entitled: โThe Reconstru-Ducted Repatriation Road-Rage ReMiXeSโ โ Based on my Live-Remix production style (preserving an artistโs live performances and ensemble instrumentation), I basically re-conducted the entire Oakanda affair digitally and created the beat-structures and harmonic production utilizing the combined sciences of Archeo-Astronomy and ancient Sumerian time-keeping (hence, the 12-minute remix of โMidnight Moorsโ) connected to Vibez on the long road ahead in The Struggle with contemporary BLM-based activist thought in the titles and text. Thank You, BSAC!
The suiteโs third iteration, โOakanda Overdriveโ is the free-bopping, chamber-ensemble-approached, sonic-groidd child of Jared Michael Nickerson. This composition features Jaredโs supernatural bass virtuosity, chopped & screwed reed-section scribe and โBlack Mosesโ arrangement savvy, along with the solo horn prowess of V. Jeffrey Smith in whose โlabโ, Jamcarver Studios, the composition was inculcated.
Smith, a co-founder of The Family Stand, is also a co-composer of their international hit โGhetto Heavenโ; and is known for his tenor playing on all of Billy Oceanโs Eighties hits including the Grammy-award-winning-number-one-Billboard-charting-classic โCaribbean Queenโ, which also shows up frequently on lists giving love to the greatest sax solos in pop music history.
The suiteโs finalรฉ, โLisala Over inna-Oakandaโ is a collaboration between longtime Burnt Sugar vocalist Lisala Beatty, (described by V. Jeffrey Smith as โโthe last of the real red hot soul singersโโ) and Greg Tate, who generated the lyrics. Lisala was given the bulk of the Oakanda recordings and rough mixes to vibe with and chose to snag the first 3-minutes of Gilmoreโs โRepatriationโ to flex Tateโs lyrics over. Subsequently, Gilmore adapted the instrumental arrangement to support Lisalaโs heavenly vocal flow while also, at Tateโs most-welcomed rhythmic request, created an alternate version with additional Drumz that comprises the advance-release single.
About his lyrics Tate says, โโThe verses pay an abstract homage to the ghost-lineage of American born Black radical artists and activists โ from those of the transatlantic trafficked who sustained their humanity and mind, body soul throughout that 90-day โโAuschwitz on the waterโโ (per Arthur Jafa) horror-show, to the Maroon communities of Black and Indigenous freedom fighters of Florida who created free nation-states in fugitivity, fighting off the US Army for 30 years (at the height of chattel slavery, and beyond), to the 60โs modern warrior formations of the Freedom Riders, The Black Panther Party, Black Liberation Army, The Black Arts Movement (led by Amiri Baraka), and the Republic of New Africa who helped free Assata Shakur.
