Robert Glasper
@ Koko
18 November 2024
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Desert Island Discs
Which 2 albums would you take with you to a
desert island?
Herbie Hancock – Sunlight
Stevie Wonder - The Best Of?
Biography
Robert Glasper has long kept one foot planted firmly
in jazz and the other in hip-hop and R&B. He’s worked
extensively with Q-Tip, playing keyboards on the rapper’s
2008 album The Renaissance and co-writing the album single “Life
Is Better” which featured his label mate Norah Jones. Glasper
also serves as the music director in yasiin bey’s touring
band, and has toured with the multi-platinum R&B singer Maxwell.
The Los Angeles Times once wrote that “it’s
a short list of jazz pianists who have the wherewithal to drop a
J Dilla reference into a Thelonious Monk cover, but not many jazz
pianists are Robert Glasper,” adding that “he’s
equally comfortable in the worlds of hip-hop and jazz,” and
praising the organic way in which he “builds a bridge between
his two musical touchstones.”
Glasper drove that point home with his last album,
2009’s Double-Booked, which was split neatly in half. The
first part featured his acoustic Trio, which had gathered a great
deal of acclaim in the jazz world and beyond over the course of
two previous Blue Note albums (2005’s Canvas and 2007’s
In My Element). The second part featured his electric Experiment
band and hinted at things to come, even earning the keyboardist
his first GRAMMY nomination for “All Matter,” collaboration
with the singer Bilal that was among the contenders in the Best
Urban/Alternative Performance category in 2010.
With Black Radio, the Experiment band has fully
arrived. Featuring Glasper on piano and Fender Rhodes, Casey Benjamin
on vocoder and saxophone, Derrick Hodge on electric bass, and Chris
Dave on drums, the band is plugged in and open source. Each of the
band members is prodigiously talented and lives naturally in multiple
musical worlds, distilling countless influences into a singular
voice. “That’s what makes this band unique,”
says Glasper. “We can go anywhere, literally anywhere, we
want to go. We all have musical ADD and we love it.”
Black Radio also features many of Glasper’s
famous friends from across the spectrum of urban music, seamlessly
incorporating appearances from a jaw-dropping roll call of special
guests including Erykah Badu, Bilal, Lupe Fiasco, Lalah Hathaway,
Shafiq Husayn (Sa-Ra), KING, Ledisi, Chrisette Michele, Musiq Soulchild,
Meshell Ndegeocello, Stokley Williams (Mint Condition), and Yasiin
Bey.
“I wanted to do a record that showcased
the fact that we play with artists in other genres,” explains
Glasper, adding that the album has “more of an urban,
hip-hop, soul kind of vibe, but the spine of it all is still a jazz
spine.”
What may be most remarkable about Black Radio is
how Glasper (who also produced the record) was able to weave all
these different voices into a cohesive album, avoiding the random
patchwork feel that many “special guest” projects suffer
from. “The record doesn’t seem like it’s a
special guest record because of the relationships we all have,”
he says. “These are all friends. All the guests on
the album have musical similarities.”
That common ground and comfort level is what created
the spontaneous spirit of adventure and experimentation that permeated
the recording sessions, which all the band members describe as being
more fun than work. Friends would drop by the studio in Los Angeles
to hang out, listen to the band, get inspired, and jump into the
vocal booth to lay down a track. “These are all people
who are known for being in another genre,” says Glasper,
“but at heart they’re jazz musicians, so they’re
like ‘Let’s hit it. We don’t really know what’s
going to happen but let’s go for it and see what happens.’
We all have that in common, which is why I chose the people I chose.”
“You can’t pigeonhole what we’re
going to do or how we’re going to do it,” Glasper
declares. The Experiment wears its eclecticism on its sleeve throughout
Black Radio, presenting new collaborative originals and surprising
cover songs. They transform the Afro-Cuban standard “Afro
Blue” with Badu, Sade’s “Cherish the Day”
with Hathaway, David Bowie’s “Letter to Hermione”
with Bilal, and Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit”
with Benjamin’s vocoder vocal.
Glasper and Lupe Fiasco (whose recent gig together
at the Blue Note Club in New York became a freestyle jam session
when Kanye West and Yasiin Bey crashed the stage) co-wrote “Always
Shine” which features Fiasco’s lyrical flow as well
as a searing chorus sung by Bilal. On “Gonna Be Alright,”
the R&B singer Ledisi highlights Glasper’s bright melodicism
by writing new lyrics for his instrumental “F.T.B.”
from the In My Element album.
The track “Ah Yeah” (a co-production
with Glasper’s high school friend, the GRAMMY-winning producer
Bryan-Michael Cox) is illustrative of the good fate that hung over
the sessions. Glasper went to Atlanta to record with Musiq Soulchild
at Cox’s studio. At a show the night before the session Glasper
ran into singer Chrisette Michele and asked her to come by the studio
as well the next day. The resulting duet is one of the album’s
highlights.
Reflecting back, Glasper is rightly proud of Black
Radio, but also humbled and grateful for the outpouring of support
and talent that it took to bring the album into being. “Everyone
just said yes, period, we’ll do it. It was smoother than I
ever thought it would be to get all these great, amazing artists
to come together and do this project.
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