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Moor Mother - The Great Bailout - Import CD

Moor Mother - The Great Bailout - Import CD

CD

Dance & Electronica

Experimental/Avantgarde

March 8, 2024

Album

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Catalog No.: ATI879802

JAN/ISBN: 045778798025

Number of Discs: 1

Country/Region of Manufacture: Import

Credits:

Moor Mother

Description:

Moor Mothers 2024 release The Great Bailout is based on the Philadelphia-based poet and activists research about British colonialism and its aftereffects. She particularly addresses Parliaments Slavery Abolition Acts of 1833 and 1835. For the latter, the British government borrowed GBP20 million (now equivalent to GBP17 billion), one of the largest loans in history, in order to compensate former slave owners, rather than those who were enslaved. The loan was finally paid off in 2015 using taxpayers money, including the descendants of the enslaved, and in 2018, the Treasury posted a self-congratulatory tweet claiming that the taxpayers helped end the slave trade. Camae Ayewas lyrics are visceral reactions to points such as these and the displacement of several generations of Black citizens. A lengthy and stellar list of collaborators help realize Ayewas vision. Opener "Guilty" features ethereal harp from Mary Lattimore and backing harmonies by Raia Was as well as Ayewas arresting, multi-tracked thoughts ("Did you pay off the trauma?"), while the majority of the ten-minute piece is given to Lonnie Holleys spacious and free-associative yet compassionate crooning. The darker, illbient-sounding "All the Money" (produced with Vijay Iyer, featuring operatic vocals by Alyaal Sultani) pointedly namechecks several historical events and asks how they were funded. "God Save the Queen" (with trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire and vocalist Justmadnice) criticizes British societys devotion to the royal family by sardonically asking whose life has more meaning than the Queens. Experimental noise/drone violinist C. Spencer Yeh (Burning Star Core) adds post-industrial textures to the unsettling yet mesmerizing "Compensated Emancipation," one of two tracks featuring the spirited wailing of Mourning [A] BLKstars Kyle Kidd. Maja S. K. Ratkjes disturbing chomps and growls during "Death by Longitude" propel Ayewas aggressive, head-on verses questioning who was actually freed by the bailout. "Liverpool Wins," with disconcerting loops and feedback by noise master Aaron Dilloway, draws connections between British football culture, specifically the rivalries between cities, and the competitions between port cities during the slave trade. Compared to Ayewas other releases, The Great Bailout isnt as accessible as her previous two efforts for Anti-, nor is it as hard or abrasive as debut Fetish Bones or her hardcore punk group Moor Jewelry. However, her concentration on an especially brutal historical subject makes it one of her most bracing works, and it becomes more compelling and powerful with increased intention and awareness. ~ Paul Simpson

Tracklisting:

1.Guilty
2.All the Money
3.God Save the Queen
4.Compensated Emancipation
5.Death by Longitude
6.My Souls Been Anchored
7.Liverpool Wins
8.South Sea
9.Spem in Album

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