SOUND PROJECTIONS
ISAIAH COLLIER
(November 26-December 2)
SAVANNAH HARRIS
(December 3-9)
JOSH EVANS
(December 10-16)
ORRIN EVANS
(December 17-23)
NASHEET WAITS
December 24-30)
GEORGIA ANNE MULDROW
(December 31-January 6)
MARCUS SHELBY
(January 7-13)
https://www.allmusic.com/artist/georgia-anne-muldrow-mn0000699610/biography
Georgia Anne Muldrow
(b. September 30, 1983)
Biography by Andy Kellman
Potent and assured enough for political protests and filled with enough bright energy to soundtrack double-dutch competitions, the music of Georgia Anne Muldrow erases the boundaries between progressive soul, organic hip-hop, and avant-garde jazz. Part of a richly musical bloodline, Muldrow made her recorded debut in 2004 and became the first woman signed to the revered Stones Throw label, releasing her expansive first album, Olesi: Fragments of an Earth, two years later. By then, she was an integral player in Los Angeles' thriving underground scene of beatmakers, instrumentalists, singers, rappers, songwriters, and label operators. She has filled all of those roles with varied solo albums such as Umsindo (2009), Seeds (2012), and the Grammy-nominated Overload (2018), as well as the Vweto series (2011 to 2021). A keen collaborator, Muldrow has recorded a large volume of output with husband Dudley Perkins, including releases on their independent outlet SomeOthaShip, and has been featured on recordings by the likes of Sa-Ra, Erykah Badu, and Robert Glasper.
Born and raised in Los Angeles, California, Georgia Anne Muldrow grew up immersed in music, most prominently avant-garde jazz. Her mother, vocalist and spiritual teacher Rickie Byars-Beckwith, has performed with musicians such as Pharoah Sanders and Roland Hanna, and co-founded the long-running Sound of Agape. Father Ronald Muldrow was a guitarist and composer who worked closely with Eddie Harris and released a handful of his own albums, including two for the Enja label. After high school, Georgia studied music at The New School in New York, where she crossed paths with the likes of Robert Glasper and Bilal, though she returned to the West Coast after the September 11, 2001 attacks during which she was riding the N.Y.C. subway beneath the World Trade Center.
Muldrow was barely out of her teens when she became an integral player in L.A.'s thriving underground scene of beatmakers, instrumentalists, singers, rappers, songwriters, and label operators. Within a few years, she was filling each one of those roles. Muldrow made herself known in 2004, the year she self-produced and self-released her debut, the Worthnothings EP, and co-wrote and fronted Platinum Pied Pipers' "Your Day Is Done." Her first of many productions for other artists came through Dwight Trible & the Life Force Trio's "Rise," a 2005 track she also wrote. Soon thereafter, she became the first woman signed to Peanut Butter Wolf's Stones Throw label. In April 2006, the label reissued Worthnothings and featured Muldrow on Expressions (2012 A.U.) by Dudley Perkins, with whom their new signee formed a lasting artistic and personal bond. This was also the same month Muldrow appeared on Sa-Ra's version of Radiohead's "In Limbo." Four months later, Muldrow made her proper Stones Throw debut with her first full-length, Olesi: Fragments of an Earth, an off-center fusion of hip-hop, soul, funk, and jazz with very few of its 21 tracks traditionally structured. Another recording featuring Muldrow and Perkins that year was an EP by Eric Lau.
Due to a prolific rate of output and a multitude of outlets, tracking Muldrow's moves since then has not been easy. In 2007, Muldrow was behind Pattie Blingh & the Akebulan 5's Sagala (Ramp Recordings), which featured Perkins and another close associate, Eagle Nebula. Billed as Dudley & Georgia, she and Perkins split duties for the mixtape Beautiful Mindz (Eclectic Breaks), and as G&D released The Message Uni Versa (Look Records). Featured appearances across 2007 and 2008 were made on her mother's Supreme Inspiration and Erykah Badu's landmark New Amerykah, Pt. 1: 4th World War. The latter contained "Master Teacher," co-written and co-produced by Muldrow and Sa-Ra's Shafiq Husayn with both also featured as vocalists. The song helped popularize the African-American Vernacular English phrase "Stay woke." Muldrow and Perkins closed out the decade by producing and releasing Eagle Nebula's Cosmic Headphones and establishing another independent label, SomeOthaShip, introduced with the Connect Game compilation EP with help from Mello Music Group and a contribution by Flying Lotus. Muldrow handled the entirety of the production on three of SomeOthaShip's first albums, all released in 2009: the compilation Ms. One (a showcase for the likes of Perkins, Eagle Nebula, Jimetta Rose, Stacy Epps, and Black Milk), second proper solo album Umsindo, and Perkins' Holy Smokes. Featuring a solo version of "Roses," heard first on Mos Def's The Ecstatic, Umsindo presented an indivisible mix of progressive soul, experimental jazz, and organic hip-hop. At the tail end of the year, Animated Cartunes assembled some previously unreleased Muldrow material for Early.
Muldrow started 2010 with an album for Ubiquity, Kings Ballad, a relatively direct set with the title track a tribute to Michael Jackson. Within weeks, an album-length version of the SomeOthaShip compilation was out on Mello Music Group. A few months later, Muldrow debuted her electronic avant-jazz alias Jyoti -- a name given to her by family friend Alice Coltrane -- with Ocotea, via SomeOthaShip. In 2011, she released the instrumental set Vweto on Mello and the Bilal-enhanced Owed to Mama Rickie on Animated Cartunes, and with Perkins worked on Suzi Analogue's "The Program." The tables turned briefly with Muldrow's 2012 album Seeds, its high-viscosity beats provided exclusively by former Stones Throw labelmate Madlib. Muldrow also connected in 2012 with the Lootpack's DJ Romes for a self-titled old-school/electro hybrid session as the Blackhouse, and remixed Robert Glasper's "The Consequences of Jealousy" for the Black Radio Recovered EP. A second Jyoti album, Denderah, and another Muldrow/Perkins collaboration, Lighthouse, arrived in 2013. After the SomeOthaShip beat tape Oligarchy Sucks and a Tall Black Guy/Black Opera summit in 2014, Muldrow returned to Mello Music Group with the 2015 LP A Thoughtiverse Unmarred, classified by the artist as her first rap LP, produced by Chris Keys.
Between full-length solo projects, Muldrow appeared on recordings by the likes Glasper, Nosizwe, Blood Orange, and Dabrye, and continued to co-pilot SomeOthaShip all the while. Overload, recorded for Flying Lotus' Brainfeeder label, landed in 2018 with a varied and generous set of R&B songs promoting gratitude, divine love, and self-defense. The next year, Muldrow issued Vweto II (another instrumentals set for Mello Music Group), teamed with Perkins for Black Love & War (the third G&D LP), and earned a Grammy nomination for Overload, which was up for Best Urban Contemporary Album. Muldrow remained prolific in 2020 and 2021. Third Jyoti LP Mama, You Can Bet! was trailed by the predominantly instrumental Vweto III, issued through her Epistrophik Peach label and Foreseen Entertainment. Among the many artists who benefited from Muldrow's featured appearances during the late 2010s and early 2020s were Adrian Younge, Joe Armon-Jones, and Sons of the James.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgia_Anne_Muldrow
Georgia Anne Muldrow
Georgia Anne Muldrow | |
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Also known as | |
Born | September 30, 1983 |
Origin | Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
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Years active | 2005–present |
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Georgia Anne Muldrow (born 1983)[3] is an American musician from Los Angeles, California.[4] In 2008, she co-founded the SomeOthaShip Connect record label with fellow artist and former husband Dudley Perkins.[5]
Life and career
Georgia Anne Muldrow grew up in a musical environment of her session musician parents, the jazz guitarist Ronald Muldrow and a singer, now Rickie Byars-Beckwith.[6][7][8]
In 2006, Muldrow released the debut EP, Worthnothings, on Stones Throw Records.[9] Her first album, Olesi: Fragments of an Earth, was released on the label in that year.[10][11]
In 2012, she released Seeds, an album entirely produced by Madlib, on SomeOthaShip Connect.[12]
In 2018, she released Overload on Brainfeeder.[13]
Style and influences
In The New York Times article in 2009, rapper Mos Def compared Muldrow's music to Roberta Flack, Nina Simone, and Ella Fitzgerald.[14] AllMusic described her as "one of the most daring and important (albeit underappreciated) artists of her time".[15]
Discography
Studio albums
- Olesi: Fragments of an Earth (2006)
- Sagala (2007) (as Pattie Blingh and the Akebulan Five)
- The Message Uni Versa (2007) (with Dudley Perkins)
- Umsindo (2009)
- Early (2009)
- SomeOthaShip (2010) (with Dudley Perkins)
- Ocotea (2010) (as Jyoti)
- Kings Ballad (2010)
- Vweto (2011)
- Owed to Mama Rickie (2011)
- The Blackhouse (2012) (with DJ Romes, as The Blackhouse)
- Seeds (2012)
- Denderah (2013) (as Jyoti)
- The Lighthouse (2013) (with Dudley Perkins)
- Oligarchy Sucks! (2014)
- A Thoughtiverse Unmarred (2015)
- Overload (2018)
- Vweto II (2019)
- Black Love & War (2019) (with Dudley Perkins)
- Mama, You Can Bet! (2020) (as Jyoti)
- VWETO III (2021)
Mixtapes
- Beautiful Mindz (2008) (with Dudley Perkins)
EPs
- Worthnothings (2006)
- Heaven or Hell (2010) (with Dudley Perkins)
- Ms. One (2014)
Singles
- "A Requiem for Leroy" (2006)
- "Seeds" (2012)
- "Tell Em (Remix)" (2012) (with Riff Raff McGriff)
- "Popstopper" (2013) (with Dudley Perkins)
- "Akosua" (2013)
Guest appearances
- Platinum Pied Pipers - "Your Day Is Done", "Lights Out", and "One Minute More" from Triple P (2005)
- Eric Lau - "Yet & Still" from Eric Lau Presents Dudley and Friends (2006)
- Oh No - "T. Biggums" from Exodus into Unheard Rhythms (2006)
- Sa-Ra Creative Partners - "Fly Away" from The Hollywood Recordings (2007)
- Erykah Badu - "Master Teacher" from New Amerykah Part One (2008)
- Mos Def - "Roses" from The Ecstatic (2009)
- Electric Wire Hustle - "This World" from Electric Wire Hustle (2009)
- Erykah Badu - "Out My Mind, Just In Time" from New Amerykah Part Two (2010)
- Oh No - "Improvement" from Disrupted Ads (2013)
- The Black Opera - "Beginning of the End" from The Great Year (2014)
- Akua Naru - "Mr. Brownskin" from The Miner's Canary (2015)
- Declaime - "The Message 2014", "Concentration", and "Flys Eye" from Southside Story (2015)
- J-Zen - "God Music" from Managua (2015)
- Miles Davis and Robert Glasper - "Milestones" from Everything's Beautiful (2016)
- Nosizwe - "The Best Drug" from In Fragments (2016)
- Them That Do - "Trying to Say" from Them That Do (2016)
- Eun - "Fox" from Darkness Must Be Beautiful (2018)
- Blood Orange - "Runnin'" from Negro Swan (2018)
- Clever Austin - "You Are All You Need" from Pareidolia (2019)
- Kidd Mojo - "Pearls" from Dionysia (2020)
- Sons Of The James - "Things I Should Have Said" from Everlasting (2020)
- Seba Kaapstad - "Free" from Konke (2020)[16]
- Denzel Curry and Kenny Beats - "Track07 (Georgia Anne Muldrow Version)" (with Arlo Parks) from Unlocked 1.5 (2021)
- Brittany Howard - "History Repeats" (Geemix) from Jaime (Reimagined) (2021)
External links
- Georgia Anne Muldrow discography at Discogs
https://www.mmmusicagency.com/georgia-anne-muldrow.html
GEORGIA ANNE MULDROW
The newest Jyoti music arrives after many monumental years for Muldrow. Her most recent solo album Overload - released on Flying Lotus’ label Brainfeeder - earned her a 2020 Grammy nomination and landed on year-end lists for Pitchfork, Bandcamp, and The A.V. Club. 2019 saw Georgia perform at numerous Jazz Festivals around the globe: Nublu Jazz Festival (Brazil), Portland Jazz Festival (Portland, US), Bric Festival (Brooklyn, US), Blue Note Tokyo (Japan), New York Winter Jazz Festival and the DC Jazz Festival to name a few.
Georgia Anne Muldrow on Mixing Beats
Georgia Anne Muldrow: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert
April 16, 2019Georgia Anne Muldrow Doesn’t Want You to Burn Out | Receiver
The Critics Speak:
“No one sings a heavy love song like Georgia Anne Muldrow” - Pitchfork
“Over the years, this gifted Los Angeles singer-producer-multi-instrumentalist has collaborated with Erykah Badu, Sa-Ra Creative Partners and Madlib, so it’s no surprise that her latest full-length is packed full of unflappable funk.” - Rolling Stone
“After years of being near the spotlight, it seems the world is finally ready for Muldrow’s music.” - The FADER
Concert Formats:
-In The Moment Quartet
-Georgia Anne Muldrow presents JYOTI
Select Discography:
JYOTI: Mama You Can Bet
(2020)
Overload
(2019)
Oligarchy Sucks!
(2014)
Kings Ballad
(2010)
Olesi: Fragments of an Earth
(2006)
For additional information contact: Maurice Montoya/M M Music Agency
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/19/arts/music/georgia-anne-muldrow-vweto-III.html
Georgia Anne Muldrow Builds a Musical World of Her Own
The prolific and proudly woke musician has made 21 albums in 15 years. Her latest, “Vweto III,” is a largely instrumental LP that Muldrow composed, performed, recorded, produced and mixed.
by Jon Pareles
Georgia Anne Muldrow still had her mask on when she sat down at Blackout Studios in Los Angeles for a video interview this month. It was a black cloth mask covered in glittery studs: protection with flair. “That’s kind of my way since I was a kid,” Muldrow said, settling in and unmasking behind the studio’s professional vocal mic. “Whatever difficulty there is, to try to bring something sparkly to it.”
As a songwriter, singer, rapper, musician and producer, Muldrow has addressed serious ideas with drive, hooks and sonic creativity throughout an extraordinarily prolific career. Her music encompasses R&B, jazz, hip-hop, funk, rock and a broader Pan-African diaspora; it can be lean and earthy, harmonically labyrinthine or richly disorienting, swirling with reverb. Like Prince, Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney, she makes many of her tracks entirely on her own, using instruments and computers to turn herself into a one-woman studio band.
Muldrow has released a torrent of full-length albums since her 2006 debut, “Olesi: Fragments of an Earth.” Titles like “Umsindo” (Zulu for “noise” or “rage”) from 2009, “Oligarchy Sucks!” from 2014 and “Black Love & War” from 2019 make clear her career-long concerns: Black and African diaspora culture, justice, strength, liberation, exploration. Her 21st studio album, “Vweto III” — vweto means “gravity” in the Congolese language Kikongo — is due on Friday.
In 2021, Muldrow enjoys seeing right-wing figures treating “woke” as a toxic epithet. “It makes me have faith that I’m doing something correctly if these little two-bit politicians have even got anything I’ve said in their mouth,” she said. “I want to be a thorn in their side. I want to keep them up at night.”
Badu offered powerful praise for her collaborator. “She’s the truth,” she said by phone. “It’s as if she’s from another time somewhere, an ancient future where it meets and warps together, and she walked out of it looking like the female Jimi Hendrix, the young Marcus Garvey, swinging music like Stevie Wonder.”
Badu added, “Her main focus is on freeing the African mind. It makes us want to be like her, to be as strong and have as solid a message as she does in everything. It’s Georgia’s bravery and sincerity, because she does this thing as fearlessly as she does. She’s not afraid of confrontation when it comes to what she believes.”
Muldrow, 37, grew up in a family of jazz musicians in Los Angeles. Her father, Ronald Muldrow, was a guitarist who worked for decades with the soul-jazz saxophonist Eddie Harris. Her mother, Rickie Byars-Beckwith, sang with the saxophonist Pharoah Sanders and the pianist Roland Hanna.
Alice Coltrane, a family friend, gave Muldrow the spiritual name Jyoti, which can mean “light” or “celestial flame”; Muldrow has billed herself as Jyoti for her most jazz-influenced albums, including last year’s widely praised “Mama, You Can Bet!,” which included daring remakes of Charles Mingus compositions alongside her own songs.
In the early 2000s, Muldrow came to New York City to study jazz at the New School, majoring in voice. But she dropped out, she said, because, “I didn’t like the boxes they have for people. I feel as though we go out of the box just to survive emotionally as Black folk. We’re doing this for our emotional upliftment. The searching for one’s inner power and one’s inner ownership and one’s language — that’s what brings this music forward.”
The teenage Muldrow delved into electronic music, building beats and devising abstract sounds on drum machines, synthesizers and computers. “The allure of technology and sound design and sound creation with computers was my experience as a composer of being listened to,” she said. “Regardless of how I look, regardless of my gender, regardless of my race, the computer listened to me.”
One of her mentors and collaborators was Don Preston, who had played keyboards for Frank Zappa’s Mothers of Invention in the 1960s and ’70s and was Meredith Monk’s musical director. He encouraged her to work with the experimental synthesis that she now considers a “cornerstone” of her music. On “Fifth Shield,” a manifesto from her 2015 album “A Thoughtiverse Unmarred,” she rapped, “I know I’m abstract — it ain’t for everybody.”
For Muldrow, the parameters that control synthesizer tones — attack, decay, sustain and release — offer lessons beyond the recording studio. “I’ll make everything a metaphor,” she said with a laugh. “The way we attack things shapes our lives, the way we hold on to things shapes our lives, the way we let go of things shapes our lives. That’s what makes me dig deeper every time I make music.”
In Muldrow’s tracks, it’s often impossible to tell what was recorded on live instruments and what was sampled, looped or programmed. Her first electronics were drum machines, but from the start, she wanted to defy the quantization — built into much music software and hardware — that regularizes pitches and rhythms.
“I wanted to find a way to get off the grid,” she said. “I didn’t like that I was playing something a certain way, and then it’s telling it back to me in a ‘corrected’ way. Time doesn’t work that way. When you talk about grief or healing or heartache, it doesn’t happen on a grid. It’s an upward spiral, it’s a roller coaster — it’s all these different things.”
She added, “If everything is perfectly done, then where is the undifferentiated chaos that made everything? Where is the creativity?”
Credit: Erik Carter for The New York Times
Muldrow was the first woman signed to the hip-hop label Stones Throw Records, for her debut album. Brainfeeder, the label founded by the producer Flying Lotus, released her aptly titled 2018 album “Overload,” which was nominated for a Grammy as best urban contemporary album. Most of her other output has been released on her own labels: SomeOthaShip Connect, which she started with her husband, Dudley Perkins (they are now separated); and her own Epistrophik Peach Sound.
“It’s a lot of music,” Muldrow said. “I never expect anyone, even if they’re my dearest friends, to know all my work. That comes with a downside, though. I’ve faced burnout, I’ve worked through it, I’ve beat it. Workaholism is a very real thing. But the expectation for someone that looks like me is so high, even from the people in my own community and beyond, that I have got to be a six-armed goddess in order to make a proper living. And I thank God that I have morphed into the six-armed goddess.”
“Vweto III” is a largely instrumental album. Muldrow composed, performed, recorded, arranged, produced, mixed and mastered it with just two brief guest vocal appearances. It’s a producer’s showcase: 17 tracks that wander from lurching funk (“Old Jack Swing”) to foreboding ballad (“Unforgettable”) to neo-psychedelia (“Mufaro’s Garden”) to drone and noise-rock (“Grungepiece”) to blipping electronica (“Afro AF”), with Muldrow only singing an occasional refrain.
After making “Mama, You Can Bet!,” Muldrow said, “I was at this place where I’m like, ‘I have literally said it all.’ This allows me the space to just feel and simply speak my piece and be off of it.”
She intends the album as an open invitation. “I can have fun on hooks,” she said, “and then they’re like D.I.Y. songs that people can have for themselves. I want to see the sisters rapping up a storm.”
The album’s cover art — an illustration by the South African artist Breeze Yoko with a mountain lion and a leopard peering from Muldrow’s shoulders — will be auctioned as a nonfungible token; half of the proceeds will go to Critical Resistance, an organization seeking to abolish what it calls the prison industrial complex.
“I want to promote consciousness — I’m not trying to promote myself per se,” Muldrow said. “Music gives me a world to walk through. And I hope for other people, that I can help them to do this — to remember that their minds are powerful. There’s a lot that you can do in there.”
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Jon Pareles has been The Times’s chief pop music critic since 1988. A musician, he has played in rock bands, jazz groups and classical ensembles. He majored in music at Yale University. @JonPareles
https://www.kennedy-center.org/whats-on/explore-by-genre/jazz/2021-2022/georgia-anne-muldrow/
Georgia Anne Muldrow
Studio K
Often sought as musical collaborator and producer by the likes of Dev Hynes, Erykah Badu, Bilal, and Mos Def, a singular descriptive word does not fit for vocalist, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Georgia Anne Muldrow. Last seen at Kennedy Center in spring 2017 with Jason Moran in “Muldrow Meets Mingus,” the Grammy nominee returns to perform her multi-genre blend of jazz, R&B, Hip Hop, electronica, rock, and funk in the intimate setting of the Club at Studio K.
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Thu. Mar. 17, 2022 7:30p.m.
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Thu. Mar. 17, 2022 9:30p.m.
Program
Often sought as musical collaborator and producer by the likes of Dev Hynes, Erykah Badu, Bilal, and Mos Def, a singular descriptive word does not fit for vocalist, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Georgia Anne Muldrow. Last seen at Kennedy Center in spring 2017 with Jason Moran in “Muldrow Meets Mingus,” the Grammy nominee returns to perform her multi-genre blend of jazz, R&B, Hip Hop, electronica, rock, and funk in the intimate setting of the Club at Studio K.
NOTE: While concessions will be open in the REACH for your enjoyment, food and beverage will not be allowed in Studio K.
Support the Arts in America
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https://www.popmatters.com/georgia-anne-muldrow-vweto-iii
The Ever-Evolving Georgia Anne Muldrow’s ‘VWETO III’
The latest iteration of Georgia Anne Muldrow’s VWETO series (meaning “gravity” in Kikongo) builds on the success of the previous two with a 17-track clinic on creating rhythmic frameworks that wow you with their complexity and propel you into movement.
As a producer, Muldrow has worked with a range of industry titans including Mos Def, J Dilla, Erykah Badu, and Robert Glasper; her own catalog of recordings––more than 20 full-length albums since her first in 2006––showcases an even wider range of musical styles. You can find her rapping over ’90s old school beats on A Thoughtiverse Unmarred; you can dig into Mama, You Can Bet! (named on The New York Times’ Top 20 Albums of 2020) and get in touch with her jazz roots––her father, Ronald Muldrow, was saxophonist Eddie Harris’ sideman on guitar for decades.
Discussing the conception and evolution of VWETO III, Muldrow expresses a desire to build music that creates its own environment: one of her influences was “an Isaac Hayes LP where even the reverb had grain and texture”. These tracks are “intended for movement” and should “be played when you birth yourself back outside after a long introspective period to get the things you need.” The long introspective period of the past year is proof that Muldrow didn’t start baking bread in her downtime off tour, but rather an intricately varied beat tape that elevates itself into the status of a proper album by creating its own atmosphere.
Jean-Michel Basquiat said, “Art is how we decorate space. Music is how we decorate time.” He didn’t say this about VWETO III, but the album is a ringing endorsement of this notion. “Slow Drag” immediately throws you in between a steady piano groove and a shimmering organ, then gets you nodding your head with its wailing guitar. “Unforgettable” jets across a lush landscape built from several different layers of synth. The variety of instrumentation on “Passin Ooout!” will astonish you when you realize there’s only one musician behind it. Outside of a couple of guest appearances on vocals, VWETO III is entirely Muldrow’s own: composed, recorded, mixed, and mastered by Muldrow herself.
On Overload, her 2018 Grammy-nominated release, “Vital Transformation” offers this declaration: “If you know me well / you know that I ain’t the kinda girl who likes to waste her time.” That statement is irrefutable when you consider both the quality and quantity of her work. VWETO III makes 2021 the fourth consecutive year with at least one new album from Muldrow.
Her collaborators have compared her to Nina Simone, Roberta Flack, and Ella Fitzgerald; that’s high praise, for certain, though Muldrow possesses the sort of roving, genre-bending creativity that defies comparison. In 2009, Early became her third full-length album, but it was recorded seven years earlier when Muldrow was only 17––further proof of the fact that she’s never been one to waste time. Her latest album solidifies her status as an artist to watch closely for decades to come.
Georgia Anne Muldrow’s Beats for Returning Outside
The Los Angeles-based artist Georgia Anne Muldrow is constantly warping the familiar until it resembles something new. The singer, songwriter, rapper, producer, and multi-instrumentalist is a prolific creator who dabbles in jazz, R. & B., hip-hop, and funk, pushing her music to the furthest reaches of genre boundaries and then liberally crossing territorial lines. Since her début, in 2006, she has released twenty-one albums, and rarely will the next sound anything like the one that preceded it. Her range is vast and her taste is diverse; the tracks she makes can swing in temperament dramatically, even within a single project. Now, having said everything that she is capable of, musically, she is allowing instincts to guide her.
Muldrow’s creative constellation hints at a wide-ranging skill set. Her parents were musicians within a flourishing L.A. community, and Alice Coltrane was a family friend. Muldrow moved to New York City to study jazz, as a voice student at the New School, but she found the instruction rigid and dropped out to explore electronic music, becoming a mentee of Don Preston, the keyboardist for Frank Zappa and the music director for Meredith Monk. Muldrow found the process of working with computers far more intuitive and liberating than formal jazz indoctrination. “The allure of technology and sound design and sound creation with computers was my experience as a composer of being listened to,” she told the Times. By the late two-thousands, Muldrow had worked with artists across rap, jazz, soul, and R. & B., including a turn with the neo-soul sage Erykah Badu, coining the phrase “stay woke.”
As an electronic-music practitioner versed in the ways of hip-hop, Muldrow has been a fixture on the L.A. beat scene, which is defined by a community of producers who make production-focussed, electronics-led tracks and is demarcated by its relationships to spaces: record stores, club nights, labels, and locally based Internet radio. Although the music that Muldrow makes has grown more eclectic (she is also prone to songs that are more vocals-based), she is one of the scene’s foundational players. In the mid-two-thousands, Sketchbook, a L.A. beat night started by the d.j. and producer Kutmah, became an experimental venue where she played CD mixes alongside such defining artists as Daedelus, Dibiase, Teebs, the late Ras G, and Flying Lotus. In 2018, Muldrow released the future-soul album “Overload,” on Lotus’s esteemed Brainfeeder label, and she remains an influence on scions of the beat scene, such as Linafornia.
The beat scene put emphasis on ambience, the way that production functions in a live space. After Sketchbook fizzled out, a new weekly event arose: the influential Low End Theory club night, which ran at the Airliner until 2018. A sound once defined by hardware and laptops began to merge with other instrumentalist movements. “The beat scene being the center of gravity, at least in LA, being at Low End Theory, these guys start coming through,” a co-founder of the club night, Daddy Kev, said in 2017. “All of a sudden, it’s not just FlyLo with his laptop anymore, it’s FlyLo and [bassist] Thunder[cat], that’s one show. Then the next time he plays it’s FlyLo, Thunder, and Ronald Bruner, Jr. The next thing you know we’re booking Kamasi [Washington] down there.” Muldrow exists at the scene’s intersection of rap, jazz, and digitized MIDI-created sounds, woven together in improvisational performance. Her 2020 album, “Mama, You Can Bet!,” released under the moniker Jyoti, which was given to her by Alice Coltrane, was an introspective jazz release that centered on lineage—Muldrow’s place along the continuum of female musicians and her connection to her mother. It was a project fit for the self-reflection of an imposed quarantine. But, after being cooped up, the wide-open beckons. Her new album, “Vweto III,” the third installment in an instrumental series, is fidgety and animated, as if longing to escape confinement and vibrate toward something.
The last year has pushed music inside, but it seems like there is an unfurling coming. Muldrow’s new album is part of such a transition. It is like static running along power lines, awakening them. “ ‘Vweto III’ is intended for movement,” Muldrow wrote in a short note on her Bandcamp page. “It’s to be played when you birth yourself back outside after a long introspective period to get the things you need.” In the Times interview, she spoke of the album’s instrumental tracks as a sort of call to others, saying, “They’re like D.I.Y. songs that people can have for themselves. I want to see the sisters rapping up a storm.” The themes of returning to the open air and collaboration gel with a post-pandemic society in which we are all attempting to rëestablish contact.
“Vweto” is a word that means “gravity” in the Congolese Kikongo language, and though Muldrow’s previous music has often dealt with matters of urgent importance—with a particular interest in the paths toward Black liberation—the gravity here is a physical force: the internal pull of the grooves. These tracks aren’t designed to detonate and diffuse across a dance floor, but there is the unshakeable impulse to move to them, to feel the way they respond to the shifting textures of the outdoors, to absorb them as a city passes and comes into focus. The music is casually kinetic: it exists in the classic beat-music tradition of turning something computerized into atmosphere.
Muldrow’s creations feel so organic that it’s difficult to tell which parts are digital and which are actual instruments. The idea that computers can listen and respond, like any instrument, is key to how Muldrow puts her Afrofuturist music in conversation with the past—and her ability to contort the shape of those recognizable sounds is essential to her art. (“Get a MIDI controller and you feel like you can play anything,” she once said.) She works on most of her compositions herself, formulating and playing and plugging in sounds to assemble rich cuts that carefully unfold themselves as they get further along. With song titles such as “Old Jack Swing,” “Throwback Baps,” and “Boom Bap Is My Homegirl,” the album invokes a deep love for classic hip-hop, along with the soul and funk traditions from which the genre has always borrowed heavily. This transference makes “Vweto III” a perfect gateway through which to appreciate the old in a refreshing new context. In its most vibrant moments, the album feels like venturing out, arms outstretched, releasing the tautness of a body left idle for too long.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Sheldon Pearce is a music writer for Goings On About Town.
https://jazztimes.com/features/profiles/georgia-anne-muldrow-blazes-her-own-trail/
Georgia Anne Muldrow Blazes her Own Trail
The one-woman orchestra is in her own universe. Could she now be opening up to other universes too?
Georgia Anne Muldrow laughs easily when she speaks. The charm of her laughter does not come from anything silly, although she can be downright funny in frank conversation. Rather, the breathy chortle you hear when speaking with the free, funky progressive jazz/R&B/hip-hop multi-hyphenate expresses sheer joy at the fact that music is an everyday part of her self-empowered existence, and that all of her sound and all of her life flows into, and from, one towering tributary: her soul.
“Thank you so much for knowing that, because it is all ongoing and going on, all at once,” Muldrow says from her forever home in Los Angeles, a studio-house environment where she’s been letting loose with spirited left-field jazz and sumptuous space soul ever since her 2006 debut, Olesi: Fragments of an Earth. “There really isn’t demarcation, a place where one stops and the other begins. I’m always making music.” And it is always making Muldrow.
In discussing that which she does under her own name as a vocalist/instrumentalist (e.g., albums like 2010’s Kings Ballad), as showcases for her Technicolor production skills (three VWETO albums, the latest being VWETO III), or through the pseudonym Jyoti, a name given to her by free-jazz giant Alice Coltrane (the latest album to use that moniker being 2020’s Mama, You Can Bet!), Muldrow has found herself compared to Lauryn Hill, early Roberta Flack, Geri Allen, Amina Claudine Myers, Erykah Badu (with whom she’s worked), and the late great Mrs. Coltrane. Yet listening to the multitudes that fill VWETO III (everything from cool postbop and thundering dub to Blaxploitative soul) or the transcendental jazz of Mama, You Can Bet!—both albums recorded with nary a collaborator save for voice and sax—leaves the listener without any real comparison, despite all of the possible influences. Everything Georgia is a genre apart: positively Muldrow-nian.
“She really is her own universe,” says saxophonist Lakecia Benjamin, Muldrow’s longtime friend and lone outside contributor to Mama, You Can Bet! “And to be invited in to be part of that is rare, and a pleasure.”
One of the first clues to Muldrow’s everything-all-at-once-ness comes from her selection of favorite music. “Coming up, I loved anthologies, like Curtis Mayfield’s, that showed his ride from his time with the Impressions to his solo-career vibes at Curtom,” she says. “Box sets like James Brown’s Star Time, Motown reviews with the Four Tops and Martha and the Vandellas, and Rhino soul collections from the ’60s with Dyke and the Blazers, Otis Redding, and Jackie Wilson. You could hear the growth of an artist. It was an affordable way to do so too.”
When I tell her I hear some raunchy Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis-style synth bass lines in her work, she screams with happiness. “OF COURSE I AM A JAM & LEWIS JUNKIE,” she yells. “Without question. Their production of the S.O.S. Band influenced how I sing.” And while she slips in Stevie Wonder’s Secret Life of Plants (“hands down my favorite Stevie”) and tracks by Bahamadia and KRS-One, Coltrane’s A Love Supreme (“that album changed my life”), Bobby McFerrin’s Medicine Music, Salif Keita’s Soro, and Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers (“Take your pick of which album … he made me want to be a drummer”) are at the head of her psychic mixtape.
Jazz, in particular, gave young Georgia Anne additional exposure to the aesthetics of her parents. Her late father was jazz guitarist Ronald Muldrow, famed for his gig with saxophonist Eddie Harris; her mother Rickie Byars-Beckwith co-founded the Sound of Agape and worked with Pharoah Sanders and Roland Hanna. “My mother and father lend me my coherence,” Muldrow says. “Their influence keeps me from going off the deep end. My dad lent me my melodic coherence and my mom gives me harmonic coherence. Phrasing and the way the words fit the melody—my mom gave me that too. Instead of being too hip for the blues, I’m modifying the blues.”
Georgia Anne studied jazz at Manhattan’s New School, where she majored in voice; she dropped out. She then worked with mentor/former Mothers of Invention keyboardist Don Preston, who encouraged all levels of experimentation. A picture of dissatisfaction at any form of status quo develops. “Who likes to do things the so-called correct way?” she says with a laugh. “It was about getting away from the grid.”
‘Black music is my superpower. It’s my way of showing love’: the art of Georgia Anne Muldrow
Georgia Anne Muldrow may be more than 20 albums into her career and the woman who brought the word “woke” to wider consciousness, but she is not one for counting off milestones. “I’m the type of traditionalist that wants to give meaning to life,” she says. “My [concept of] success is directly linked to how Black folks see themselves; it’s not enough for me to be filthy rich or something, owning an island somewhere in the midst of what we live through.”
Since debuting with her EP Worthnothings in 2006, she has become known for her chameleonic ability to master different genres – soul, G-funk, jazz, electronic – under a number of aliases (for instance Jyoti) and collaborative projects. Last week, the 37-year-old vocalist, songwriter and producer released Vweto III, the latest in a series of beat tapes. These are self-produced and mostly instrumental albums full of psychedelic funk and prowling hip-hop (track titles such as Boom Bap Is My Homegirl show where her head is at). Besides solo releases, she has been featured on tracks by artists such as Erykah Badu, Flying Lotus and Yasiin Bey (formerly Mos Def), who described her as “like [Roberta] Flack, Nina Simone, Ella [Fitzgerald] – she’s something else”.
She video-calls from her kitchen in Los Angeles, and is so charming that it feels as if I have been physically ushered into her home. She is making a huge batch of homemade muesli, and people come in and out: we are interrupted by her mother and friends, as well as her 12-year-old son, Nokware, who joins midway to dance for us and show his new hairstyle. Muldrow is as cool as you would imagine, her sentences interspersed with “You know what I’m saying?” in a relaxed, smoky cadence, and she drops phrases so winning they stick like lyrics (“I was already happy to be nappy by the age of two,” she quips, referring to natural Black hair).
An absence of vocals can sometimes turn off the average listener, but Vweto III is captivating. Unforgettable features west coast G-funk synths and 70s disco claps, conjuring up images of lowriders on highways in her native sunny LA, while eccentric outliers such as Ghostride 21716 captivate with echoing synths and glitchy, skittering beats. Muldrow made the tape to alleviate the downcast mood brought about by the racial reckoning of the past year and the pandemic; to weather the “traumatic events experienced as a community online and offline”.
“It’s like a symbiosis kind of thing,” she says. “You know how Shaft had theme music, or Black Dynamite? I want to supply my people with some theme music so that they can feel self-confident, self-possessed; something to keep their heads up high. And posting the beats on Instagram and seeing the comments – people saying: ‘Please take my money!’ – helps me to know that somebody’s looking forward to what I share in a time where we can’t play any shows.”If somebody uses ‘woke’ in a derogative way, I don’t really care for what’s on their mind. I don’t really care about somebody who don’t even like Black people.
Muldrow grew up in LA. Her father was the jazz guitarist Ronald Muldrow, while her mother, Rickie, sang in the church where the daughter first honed her vocals. She recalls rubbing shoulders with musical greats: the late Leon “Ndugu” Chancler once stopped by her Sunday school to teach her “traditional African drumming and West African rhythms” with a pair of claves and plastic water bottles. She also sat at the feet of civil rights activist and drummer Babatunde Olatunji to hear him play the conga. “It’s been a magical life,” she admits. “I felt seen by people without even expressing any musical talent, in a world where people don’t see little Black girls. It just so happens that those people were world-class musicians.”
The desire to make music professionally hit around age 15, and she began picking up music production skills soon after. Her beatmaking is easily the match of her more famous leftfield male peers Flying Lotus and Danger Mouse, although she doesn’t have their recognition factor. Muldrow agrees that misogyny in the industry tends to obstruct female producers from getting the appreciation they deserve. “Oh heavens – yes! And don’t let anybody tell you differently.” But it’s given her some resilience. “It’s made me fierce. And what better obstacles than those of chauvinism, misogyny and racism to be a catalyst for becoming fierce?”
The theme of social justice runs through her work. By co-writing Erykah Badu’s Master Teacher, with its lyrical hookline “I stay woke”, Muldrow brought the word to the modern lexicon. Muldrow previously said the word meant “being in touch with the struggle that [Black] people have gone through”, but its modern-day meaning has been mangled beyond belief. There has been an uptick in the sarcastic usage of “woke” as a means of criticising “social justice warriors” and people perceived to be oversensitive. Even this week, culture secretary Oliver Dowden said: “I worry that elements of what has been branded woke culture runs contrary to the great liberal traditions of western democracies.”
Muldrow is largely unfazed: “If somebody uses ‘woke’ in a derogative way, I don’t really care for what’s on their mind,” she says. “I can’t worry about what some Republican is worried about; I don’t really care about somebody who don’t even like Black people. If people understand it, I feel blessed by that. But me having a sense of consciousness about my food, water, health and wellbeing is more important.”
She is more concerned with the material welfare of Black people around the globe, and issues such as gentrification. Muldrow spent time in Brixton, south London, during the mid-2000s and is concerned with the rapidly changing social landscape and how Black communities bear the brunt of it all – the “flavour tax”, she calls it. “I’ll never forget Brixton, the quality of the people at that time was amazing. But everything’s changing all over the world. I can’t get my head around it; if everywhere is rising in price, where are Black people gonna go?
“That’s what’s deep about gentrification: people not being able to sustain living somewhere after they gave that place all its appeal. It’s like a penalisation for having flavour.”
Muldrow instead wants to have a mutually giving relationship with her fans, and to invest in the wellbeing of her community.
“First and foremost I make my music for Black folk,” she says. “I definitely want to be more of a community worker and find ways where my music aids the community directly, and partner with organisations. I want it so that when people support my work they’re not just supporting me, they’re supporting the lives of folks who are moving their bodies in aid of others. I want to be a benefactor for our human right to flourish.”
The best tool to use, in her opinion, is the thing that’s aided her all her life – music. “Black music is my superpower. It’s the music of my ancestors. It’s my way of showing love, paying homage, keeping sounds alive that sometimes people think are dead. It’s reviving dead forms of music, and honouring them. That’s the functionality of art.”
Georgia Anne Muldrow - 'Overload' (Official Video)
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Simply Put
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Zulu Bounce
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Strike
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Lil Layers
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Thump
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fOnk Stroll
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Pad Kontrol
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If So
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Artwork by Gene Pendon of HVW8.
credits
produced by Georgia Anne Muldrow
"I Was A Reluctant Afrofuturist!"-Going Deep With Georgia Anne Muldrow
May 26, 2021
Sound Of Life
Georgia Anne Muldrow is perhaps one of the lesser known figures on the US West Coast avant garde hip hop and jazz scene in comparison to contemporaries like Flying Lotus, Madlib and Thundercat, but she's certainly not a lesser talent. Far from it. Over the course of a huge discography, alone and in collaboration with artists like Mos Def, Erykah Badu, Madlib and Robert Glasper, she's stretched her creative wings wide. Following closely an album by her more jazz-leaning alter-ego Jyoti, she's just released the third in her beat heavy VWETO album series. While these have previously been instrumental, this one features more of her vocals, further blurring the boundaries between her many projects. It’s also presented as an open collaboration: she’s asked singers, rappers, dancers and remixers to respond to it, the results of which will be showcased on her Instagram.
Mixtape spoke to her at home, to find a little more about her utterly unique approach...
Did you have a conceptual framework for this? It's kind of in between an album and a beat tape...
It's really more of a beat tape though. If you follow me on Instagram, you'll be familiar with the things I do - sometimes I'll have hooks that I'll present on there and say, "here you go, this is a bundle", these are the things to sell online, just hustling on the net. It's a very real thing, folks make beats and then sell 'em, this is giving you an experience of that.
Like a snapshot of ongoing work in progress?
Yeah. I have done a LOT of records - I think it's even more than 20, I think it's 22 records. So the deal is like, I don't feel like there's no rules to making no record, and if there is I don't care about em, you know? I feel this is open-ended music, I've said so many things about where I'm at, they may modify themselves as they speak - but Black folks still need to be compensated for their labour, they still need to be able to afford to rest, they need to be free. So I can either flog a dead horse, or I can I go the hell on and have a little stuff on record where people can rap to it, they can interact with it and do their own thing with it... I'm making space for people to be the star of the story, that's the record. That's why I said this music is the theme music so people can be their own superhero.
You don't sit exactly within hip hop, or jazz, or electronic, or experimental music...
Welllll... when it comes to hip hop, if someone wants to battle me on beats it would be a very good thing, I know what I'm doing in hip hop!
Sure, but you're not constrained within any one of those things... Is there a specific desire to show people that they can be free from these definitions?
Yes I want my people to be free! There's a very specific category of people that my priorities lay with, and it's the people who are oppressed, the people among the African diaspora. Those are the main people that I want to know they can be free to do whatever the hell they wanna do. That's my main focus. The music is just a by-product of what my intent is. I want people to know, there's no such thing as music that's too brainy on the one side - if you love Coltrane, you want to express that shit through your music, then do it! But then on the other side, if you want to just sing the blues and it's not as so-called brainy as the other thing that's out there, do that - be yourself. Whatever your moment call for, be yourself in that moment and own it. That's what I'm on. It's all about freedom, the freedom to choose your own expression and be tough enough to not give a damn what someone else has to say about it.
There's a lot of academic discourse on "Afrofuturism" that seems to insist that it has to be complicated or ultra radical, and writes off anything that's simple or straight-up emotional...
First thing on that: I have no critique of my people. I have nothing but love and space for us figuring out whatever it is we need to figure out. That should be noted. Now, for many years, I was very much a reluctant Afrofuturist, until I just did a deep research and deeper inquiry into what was going on there and then it was "oh... that's exactly what I'm doing!" My only thing is I'm an ultra-present African, I strive to be ultra-present. With time, I think a lot of things can get misconstrued with the title "Afrofuturism" as far as what the aims of it is: but it's a dealing with time itself, knowing we been here so long, and I really believe in the past, present and future merging into one thing. That comes out in my sound, in how I talk to people, in my sense of humour: the whole spectrum of Black people throughout time. It's not just in the future, it's happening right now. All we've ever had is "right now", moment to moment. I'm into technology: my job title is that I'm an "instrument of the ancestors", and I work with computers, so that's really Afrofuturist. But that was really happening naturally before that title gained more traction for naming things and labelling them and shipping them off. Which is cool: that's allowed me to be a guest on college courses, I've had great experience in what this is as a philosophy, and it's beautiful that this is something that's of value to academia or the like. But when you zoom out, academia has a far way to go in the values that it holds for children, for people who seek to gain knowledge. Some of the values it holds are very flawed and very colonial. So when it comes to Afrofuturism, it's cool that people can name it this, that or the third, but it's always been happening, it's just another name for us living, for Black folks just be. We talk and we talk, we been in the past, present and the future, so I say "that's just how we be": it's different to "that's just how we are."
When you look to musical expression of the past do you think of genres and eras? There are definite parts on this record that seem to reference specific times, whether it's 60s soul with hammond organs, 80s synth stuff, classic 90s hip hop breakbeats...
Yeah! For the longest time, what afforded me a sense of being able to travel when I couldn't afford to go nowhere, was the sense of being able to travel through time. I could build my own time machine through music, and feel the vibe and speculate about how it would feel to be an adult in that time or an artist. With jams like "Unforgettable" it was definitely some new wave kind of thing, but there's breakdancers that love that kind of song. I always envision groups of people, places and things when I make music. Something that's always intrigued me is convergence of different scenes at one point, like how hip hop brought together punk rock, new wave, a lot of different people because they're all on the outside looking in on general society, which wasn't working for them.
Talking of scenes, do you feel part of, or close to, what people call the "beat scene" out of California?
Man, c'mon, I know these people! I made record with Madlib, I know these people, these people know me, know what I'm saying? They know that I got beats. Even before the beat scene turned to what it turned to with the more abstract leaning, I really had something to do with that going that way. I'm definitely part of that. I'm from L.A. Yes! I'm literally from here!
Do you have feelings about how that sound and scene has gone global, so now you've got people making off-kilter, Californian inspired beats from Moscow to Macau?
Well.... my main target is Black people. I think that's what distinguish me from some other beat scene people: the Black folks is my concern. I feel in servicing them, everyone else going to be serviced. That's where I'm coming from. My beats is not really off-kilter - I'm doing ancient rhythm. It's informed by very ancient African rhythm what I'm doing, it's not just to be abstract and bleeps and bloops! I have a background in experimental synthesiser music too, and in my experience of that, when you're shaping a waveform and seeing where it's going to take you, you're not doing it just so it sounds experimental, you're doing it to search. You're not thinking about other people trying to figure out how you did it, you're doing it to unleash a vibration, right? That's where I'm at with it. I very much do appreciate the respect I get in L.A., I've worked really hard to bring a sound to life that people could use. I really wanted to bring about an open-source sound: a sound that allows people to interface their own whims and preferences on to it, and just to be themselves on it. And yeah that's happening here, it's finally happening. It's happening because of the devotion of fine musicianship, the devotion of fine multi-media artists, and due to folks just wanting to hear more things as listeners. All of those things have contributed to me being able to still work, and I do appreciate it. I love it. I love that this sound is growing, because it's my sound! So if this sound is expanding into the world, that allows me to keep on experiencing and reaching myself, and being able to actually work.
And do you tend to work on discrete projects, or multiple things at once?
Oh man, I be jumping, skipping, hopping and tripping - I love music. I'm always doing something different. Just when I think I can't, there'll be something inspiring to lead the way. A collaboration that presents itself, or the right band, or the right kind of creative environment that's going to provide. I just released a new single, "Can't Let Go" with Donn T who's an amazing singer and fellow Black woman, so I'm excited about that. I been dropping guerilla stuff, doing all kinds of stuff, it's quite immense and I love it. Because I'm just still into being what I want to do when I want to do it, and getting people into the concept of sharing as they feel, and that's it!
Georgia Anne Muldrow
Unforgettable (Track Visualizer)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Joe Muggs is a writer, DJ and curator of many years standing,
covering both mainstream and underground. His book 'Bass, Mids, Tops',
covering decades of UK bass music, is out now via Strange Attractor /
MIT Press, and you can subscribe to his newsletter at
tinyletter.com/joemuggs
Georgia Anne Muldrow Explores Her Jazz Legacy As Jyoti
From funk and soul to hip-hop and electronic music, Georgia Anne Muldrow has rarely limited herself to any one particular genre. Over the course of a broad discography spanning nearly two decades, she’s regularly touched upon and frequently blended all of these and more for releases on labels like Mello Music Group and Stones Throw, as well as her own SomeOthaShip Connect label.
Her latest album Mama, You Can Bet! comes under the name Jyoti, an infrequently used moniker that has generally served to explore the jazzier side of her sonic spectrum. As the daughter of two musical parents—her father the jazz guitarist Ronald Muldrow and her mother singer-songwriter/composer Rickie Byars—her uniquely suited background and continued progression as an artist make the record a sublimely compelling listen.
Released under her own name, her 2018 album Overload for Flying Lotus’ Brainfeeder imprint earned Muldrow a Grammy nomination in the Best Urban Contemporary category. Though the nod was admittedly unexpected and her record ultimately lost to Lizzo’s Cuz I Love You, she looks back on it with fondness for the surreal experience. “It was fun to bring my mom there and have a walk,” she says over the phone about attending the red carpeted festivities back in January. “We definitely gave our telecast tickets to some homeless people.”
It's been nearly seven years since the last project under your Jyoti moniker. What brought you back to it?
Sometimes I want to be doing things that are more free. I do whatever I want; that's the rule. But there's this part of me that is greatly informed by improvised music. Jazz, as we call it today, some people call it Black American music, some people call it American music, music of the diaspora, Pan-African—it's all types of different things. It's a more responsive forum for my emotions.
And how has jazz informed your creative process?
That's like asking how water informs a fish. It's something I was born into for sure, just like with the funk and everything else. Being immersed in it, in the world of Art Blakey’s music, Max Roach’s music, Wes Montgomery’s music, my father's music. That's the music he played. We weren't allowed at that time to touch the radio dial in the car. We weren't allowed to touch the radio in the house. A lot of us access music for the first time through a parent or through whoever our guardians were because we didn't have no tablet, you feel me? You got a chance to study your parents. Watching my father enjoy music, and seeing what he enjoyed about the music he listened to, taught me a lot about who he was, the part that he would not openly share. Certain songs, the way the mix will sound, the way the groove is sounding, the harmonic structures, all of those turned into language for me at a very early age. So I access it in the same way to be able to get to feelings I feel inside to you guys. Trying to name what you feel, some people are very good at summing it up. But for those whose feelings got colors and shadows, sometimes music is the only thing that can explain it.
Jyoti, that body of work, allows me to dive into this beautiful well of my childhood, my young adulthood, my teenage life, trying to understand my father, trying to know him better and, at the same time, working out my feelings about him. And my mom, the way she used chords and stuff in the music that she's doing, both of them being really chord savvy people, that's what's made me my ear just naturally hear something. It's not like I'm trying to be hip. The point is that it's something natural. There's a natural idea that comes to a composer. In the world that I've been raised in, the culture I've been raised in, that has been a very valid form of communication, just as talking with you now. That's the way I raise my kids with music that's not even recorded. We just talk in music sometimes. It's like the second language of the home—the first language of the home and English as a second language, for sure, when you have jazz-informed parents.
One of the things that differentiates this new album from 2013’s Denderah is the increased use of voice and, in particular, singing. What prompted you to include more of a vocal presence on this album?
It was just a metamorphosis going on inside of me where I want to be more free. I want to sing where my voice carries me and this allows me to do that. Since Denderah, the deal has been like, how can I merge these worlds into a performance? I don't want to be singing in the same song the same way for 35 years. I don't. I'm willing to sacrifice the audience that would have me do that. I love to reinvent music, reinvent a song. I was raised to do that, to make it a new experience every time. I was trained to do that. You gotta have a certain amount of undifferentiated chaos in your sound. You gotta have a certain percentage of it so that it can engage the chaos in other people.
Is that also kind of why you reached for those Charlie Mingus compositions “Bemoanable Lady” and “Fables of Faubus” for the album?
Oh yeah! I totally resonate with his stuff because [of] his honesty. His honesty was his music and his honesty was what he’d feel, his honesty about the time he had to live in. All those things, it equates to a certain type of innocence. That don’t mean do no harm. Humans do harm—period. But just the innocence in as much as that he wants you to experience who he really is and not who he thinks you’ll like. It comes out in his music with the melodies that he has, with the trajectory of rhythm and harmony that accompany that melody. It's very legit, but then it's very pure.
Your Overload full-length for Brainfeeder earned a Grammy nomination for Best Urban Contemporary Album. I’m assuming your process has never been about that sort of recognization as an aim, correct?
It's definitely never been the goal. You're good to pick that one up.
You did it on your own terms, the way you wanted to do it, and put out into the world. So what's that experience like then for you being nominated for Grammy in that context?
It was unexpected to say the least. I know some folks that really have a team and they write down goals and complete their tasks so that they can manifest and bring those goals to life. They really are pushing to best by, like, international standards. For real, I just want my mom to smile and be proud of me. I want my kids to be proud of me, to think I'm cool, maybe, you know, sometimes. And those things kind of make your kids think that you might be cool. At the same time, there is nothing like playing in Leimert Park and the elders who you've looked up to do music are coming up to going, I've heard your work, I think it’s wonderful. When I get that, that does something for my soul. Like when my elders, I just don't remember. My uncles or aunties can look at my work and smile. It brings a lot of honor to my soul. It lets me know that it’s needed, it's important. Not so much that it's the best, but that there's a place for it.
You see somebody like Keb’ Mo’ on the red carpet and then you feel like it's less strange for you then. He played on some of my mom’s records, you know what I'm saying? I got a chance to hear that banjo, all the heritage he played. And so to see him in a different place and we see each other, I like that. I like seeing my brothers and sisters there, and celebrating each other while we're there. We know that the press unfortunately is only looking at a few people, because that's the nature of the celebrity culture, of the investments that very large companies invest into a single human being in order to be better than all. It's a model that I feel is clunky, personally. I feel like it needs to be streamlined and updated. And it is updating itself, more and more each day. So I feel like, that nomination let me know that certain things may be changing.
Something particularly notable is that the award category you were nominated in had its name changed recently. In the light of the Black Lives Matter protests following George Floyd’s death, it’s now become Best Progressive R&B Album.
Yeah! We we kicked up some dust about that urban. I was part of the gang that was doing that, definitely was getting that. [laughs] I was kicking up a lot of dust, because I think that it just means n*****. I feel like Tyler [The Creator] said it really well. I mean, it's going to take more than just renaming stuff. It's going to take people really getting into the heart of the matter. And if you’re calling it progressive R&B, really look into that field and really look into the pioneers of the sounds that are there. I feel like that's good though. I think that that's very good though. We’re prog-R&B!
I am a freelance writer, music critic, content creator, and marketing professional born and raised in New York City. In addition to Forbes, my work on music, entertainment, and popular culture has appeared in various outlets including Billboard, Complex, Deadspin, The Guardian, High Times, The New York Times, Pitchfork, Remezcla, Rolling Stone, Vibe, and Vice. I began writing on these topics in 1999 and have done so more or less continuously since then. In January 2020, I founded the hip-hop media brand Cabbages, beginning as a newsletter and expanding to include a namesake podcast later that same year.
https://www.thenation.com/article/culture/georgia-anne-muldrow-mama-you-can-bet-music/
The Culture Is Still Catching Up With Georgia Anne Muldrow
Whether in jazz, rap, or R&B, she has made music out of liberation.
by Marcus J. Moore
August 31, 2020
The Nation
In mid-July, during a 48-minute Instagram Live interview with the Black culture and art website Afropunk, Georgia Anne Muldrow explained the meaning behind Mama, You Can Bet!, her third album under the pseudonym Jyoti. As she put it, single mothers forgo their own desires for the betterment of their children; the album was written to celebrate them. “I wanted to make a song for when a daughter sees their mother as a woman, for when the child respects a mother’s right to have passionate love in her life,” Muldrow said. “They say after a certain age, you’re not beautiful. They say that this woman, who’s given her whole body [and] done the holiest thing known to man, has now depreciated in value.” On the title track, which also opens the album, Muldrow speaks specifically to Black mothers. And with its distinctly West African sound—a woozy mix of goblet drums, upright bass, and quiet piano chords, produced by Muldrow in her home studio—it’s meant to empower a group of women who’ve been historically mistreated and disconnected from their ancestry. “There’s many a man who’d love your hand,” she sings. “Love is waiting for you.”
Muldrow has made a career of such empowerment. Long before being “woke” was trendy, she and Erykah Badu coined the term in the song “Master Teacher,” from Badu’s 2008 album New Amerykah Part One (4th World War), where they sang about finding utopia and themselves in times of madness. In the early 2000s, as a student at the New School in Manhattan, Muldrow and her friend and saxophonist Lakecia Benjamin talked about wokeness as a way to understand how they could contextualize their music within the political battles of their everyday lives. “Most of the conversation in our friendship was about putting our struggles in our music because that was all we could do,” Muldrow told Pitchfork in 2018. “[We spoke about] trying to find points of power: in your soloing, in your composing. Most of our conversations were about things situated around African liberation all over the world.” To that end, Muldrow, who had been releasing rap and soul music under her own name, has long encouraged Black people to fully embrace their heritage and fight systemic oppression. “We play nice while they stackin’ up kills,” she proclaimed on “Blam,” from her Grammy-nominated 2018 album, Overload. “How much we gotta grow, before we can learn to defend ourselves?” On “187,” from the collaborative Black Love & War, with the rapper Dudley Perkins, she declared, “Death to all oppressors.”
As Jyoti—a name given to her by family friend Alice Coltrane, which means “light” in Sanskrit—Muldrow creates a wistful blend of spiritual jazz indebted to the work of jazz greats. Through contemplative piano and organ solos, thick bass lines and electronic drums, she crafts a sound equally informed by the past and present, as if she’s trying to imagine how legends like the aforementioned Coltrane and Nina Simone would fit within the scope of modern-day jazz. It’s also decidedly West Coast; listening to it, one hears the lush Afrocentric influences of Los Angeles stalwarts Horace Tapscott and Charles Mingus.
There’s a certain ease to Muldrow’s Jyoti work; she borrows and riffs on the textures of Coltrane, Tapscott, and Mingus in her jazz-centered arrangements with panache. Yet, while she pays homage to her influences, she doesn’t center them to the point of diminishing her own sound. Muldrow remixes two Mingus songs on Mama, You Can Bet! For “Bemoanable Lady Geemix,” she brightens his moody arrangement with big electronic drums and darting synths, turning the down tempo original into a glossy hypnotic thump. On “Fabus Foo Geemix,” she quickens the original with an upbeat drum loop and electric bass, turning an old Mingus cut into a funk-infused breakbeat. Equally spacious, scenic, and forward-looking, they both use traditional jazz as the basis for something remarkably new and vibrant.
Born in Los Angeles to a musical family, Muldrow’s current creative direction is rooted in her biography. Her father, Ronald, was an acclaimed funk and jazz guitarist known for his work alongside the saxophonist Eddie Harris. Her mother, Rickie Byars-Beckwith, is an experimental vocalist who specializes in New Thought music and used to sing with the jazz musicians Pharoah Sanders and Roland Hanna. Muldrow started composing her own music at the age of 10. In 2006, the LA-based Stones Throw Records released her first full-length album, Olesi: Fragments of an Earth, a dense collage of hip-hop, Black Liberation soul, and free jazz that foreshadowed Muldrow’s work as Jyoti.
Muldrow’s first two Jyoti albums, the free-jazz-focused Ocotea and the more straight-ahead Denderah, were released in 2010 and 2013, respectively, before the resurgence of interest in jazz that’s occurred in recent years. In 2015, amid a nationwide reckoning over police killings of Black people, the music of certain artists took on a darker, more political tone: Rappers like Kendrick Lamar and musical collaborators like the saxophonist Kamasi Washington responded to the moment with jazz-centered protest music that thrust the genre back into vogue. Muldrow predates Lamar and Washington, even though her Jyoti work was never appreciated to the same extent. “I don’t care how that shit happens, we need breakthroughs,” she once told me. “I’m very thankful that people are making jazz their own, and making it live in a unique way for them.” Still, she should be applauded for releasing such resonant jazz at a time when few were looking. Whether it’s bringing the term “woke” to public view or helping shape the current state of jazz, Muldrow’s work represents thinking ahead, waiting for people to catch up with her.
Mama, You Can Bet! is livelier than the previous Jyoti records, leapfrogging swing, ambient, and hip-hop through shorter instrumentals that don’t linger too long. Across the 15-song album, Muldrow doesn’t just nod to the past. On “Ancestral Duckets,” she summons her ancestors through meditative chants. On “This Walk,” in particular, she sounds weary yet resolute, lamenting state violence and how it takes a toll on mental health. Overall, Mama feels more like a beat tape resembling the instrumental projects she’s released under her own name. Where those albums display Muldrow’s love of electronic funk and West Coast hip-hop, the Jyoti work reaches back even further—to the late 1960s and early ’70s, when jazz musicians such as Miles Davis and Herbie Hancock broadened their sounds to include traces of funk and psych-rock. Jyoti celebrates the music of her youth while honoring the relatives and artists who’ve passed away. “Black improvised music is my foundation for life,” Muldrow told Afropunk’s Timmhotep Aku. “The Jyoti stuff is the root. It’s the square root of my sound.”
That explains “Ra’s Noise (Thukumbado),” a brassy cut featuring Benjamin, with its rhythmic scatting dedicated to the cosmic jazz pioneer Sun Ra. Its sauntering pace and vast arrangement is more restrained than Sun Ra’s sprawling compositions, but I can still hear parts of him in the track, from Benjamin’s shrill saxophone wails to Muldrow’s shouts of “interplanetary!” in the background. Sun Ra believed that Black people would never find peace on Earth and should live on other planets. “Ra’s Noise,” in turn, seems to score a voyage to deep space. “Orgone” similarly finds Muldrow longing for another place far from America’s systemic racism. “How I dream of living in Africa,” she sings over sparse piano chords. “I wanna go back, way back to the time when I was free.” Of course, a declaration like this isn’t surprising for her. She’s long sought this sort of liberation for herself and her people. Now that social unrest and police brutality have reached a feverish clip, Muldrow’s calls for Black freedom ring louder than ever.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Marcus J. Moore is a contributing writer for The Nation and the author of The Butterfly Effect: How Kendrick Lamar Ignited the Soul of Black America.
Georgia Anne Muldrow
Unforgettable (Track Visualizer)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Joe Muggs is a writer, DJ and curator of many years standing,
covering both mainstream and underground. His book 'Bass, Mids, Tops',
covering decades of UK bass music, is out now via Strange Attractor /
MIT Press, and you can subscribe to his newsletter at
tinyletter.com/joemuggs
Georgia Anne Muldrow Explores Her Jazz Legacy As Jyoti
From funk and soul to hip-hop and electronic music, Georgia Anne Muldrow has rarely limited herself to any one particular genre. Over the course of a broad discography spanning nearly two decades, she’s regularly touched upon and frequently blended all of these and more for releases on labels like Mello Music Group and Stones Throw, as well as her own SomeOthaShip Connect label.
Her latest album Mama, You Can Bet! comes under the name Jyoti, an infrequently used moniker that has generally served to explore the jazzier side of her sonic spectrum. As the daughter of two musical parents—her father the jazz guitarist Ronald Muldrow and her mother singer-songwriter/composer Rickie Byars—her uniquely suited background and continued progression as an artist make the record a sublimely compelling listen.
Released under her own name, her 2018 album Overload for Flying Lotus’ Brainfeeder imprint earned Muldrow a Grammy nomination in the Best Urban Contemporary category. Though the nod was admittedly unexpected and her record ultimately lost to Lizzo’s Cuz I Love You, she looks back on it with fondness for the surreal experience. “It was fun to bring my mom there and have a walk,” she says over the phone about attending the red carpeted festivities back in January. “We definitely gave our telecast tickets to some homeless people.”
It's been nearly seven years since the last project under your Jyoti moniker. What brought you back to it?
Sometimes I want to be doing things that are more free. I do whatever I want; that's the rule. But there's this part of me that is greatly informed by improvised music. Jazz, as we call it today, some people call it Black American music, some people call it American music, music of the diaspora, Pan-African—it's all types of different things. It's a more responsive forum for my emotions.
And how has jazz informed your creative process?
That's like asking how water informs a fish. It's something I was born into for sure, just like with the funk and everything else. Being immersed in it, in the world of Art Blakey’s music, Max Roach’s music, Wes Montgomery’s music, my father's music. That's the music he played. We weren't allowed at that time to touch the radio dial in the car. We weren't allowed to touch the radio in the house. A lot of us access music for the first time through a parent or through whoever our guardians were because we didn't have no tablet, you feel me? You got a chance to study your parents. Watching my father enjoy music, and seeing what he enjoyed about the music he listened to, taught me a lot about who he was, the part that he would not openly share. Certain songs, the way the mix will sound, the way the groove is sounding, the harmonic structures, all of those turned into language for me at a very early age. So I access it in the same way to be able to get to feelings I feel inside to you guys. Trying to name what you feel, some people are very good at summing it up. But for those whose feelings got colors and shadows, sometimes music is the only thing that can explain it.
Jyoti, that body of work, allows me to dive into this beautiful well of my childhood, my young adulthood, my teenage life, trying to understand my father, trying to know him better and, at the same time, working out my feelings about him. And my mom, the way she used chords and stuff in the music that she's doing, both of them being really chord savvy people, that's what's made me my ear just naturally hear something. It's not like I'm trying to be hip. The point is that it's something natural. There's a natural idea that comes to a composer. In the world that I've been raised in, the culture I've been raised in, that has been a very valid form of communication, just as talking with you now. That's the way I raise my kids with music that's not even recorded. We just talk in music sometimes. It's like the second language of the home—the first language of the home and English as a second language, for sure, when you have jazz-informed parents.
One of the things that differentiates this new album from 2013’s Denderah is the increased use of voice and, in particular, singing. What prompted you to include more of a vocal presence on this album?
It was just a metamorphosis going on inside of me where I want to be more free. I want to sing where my voice carries me and this allows me to do that. Since Denderah, the deal has been like, how can I merge these worlds into a performance? I don't want to be singing in the same song the same way for 35 years. I don't. I'm willing to sacrifice the audience that would have me do that. I love to reinvent music, reinvent a song. I was raised to do that, to make it a new experience every time. I was trained to do that. You gotta have a certain amount of undifferentiated chaos in your sound. You gotta have a certain percentage of it so that it can engage the chaos in other people.
Is that also kind of why you reached for those Charlie Mingus compositions “Bemoanable Lady” and “Fables of Faubus” for the album?
Oh yeah! I totally resonate with his stuff because [of] his honesty. His honesty was his music and his honesty was what he’d feel, his honesty about the time he had to live in. All those things, it equates to a certain type of innocence. That don’t mean do no harm. Humans do harm—period. But just the innocence in as much as that he wants you to experience who he really is and not who he thinks you’ll like. It comes out in his music with the melodies that he has, with the trajectory of rhythm and harmony that accompany that melody. It's very legit, but then it's very pure.
Your Overload full-length for Brainfeeder earned a Grammy nomination for Best Urban Contemporary Album. I’m assuming your process has never been about that sort of recognization as an aim, correct?
It's definitely never been the goal. You're good to pick that one up.
You did it on your own terms, the way you wanted to do it, and put out into the world. So what's that experience like then for you being nominated for Grammy in that context?
It was unexpected to say the least. I know some folks that really have a team and they write down goals and complete their tasks so that they can manifest and bring those goals to life. They really are pushing to best by, like, international standards. For real, I just want my mom to smile and be proud of me. I want my kids to be proud of me, to think I'm cool, maybe, you know, sometimes. And those things kind of make your kids think that you might be cool. At the same time, there is nothing like playing in Leimert Park and the elders who you've looked up to do music are coming up to going, I've heard your work, I think it’s wonderful. When I get that, that does something for my soul. Like when my elders, I just don't remember. My uncles or aunties can look at my work and smile. It brings a lot of honor to my soul. It lets me know that it’s needed, it's important. Not so much that it's the best, but that there's a place for it.
You see somebody like Keb’ Mo’ on the red carpet and then you feel like it's less strange for you then. He played on some of my mom’s records, you know what I'm saying? I got a chance to hear that banjo, all the heritage he played. And so to see him in a different place and we see each other, I like that. I like seeing my brothers and sisters there, and celebrating each other while we're there. We know that the press unfortunately is only looking at a few people, because that's the nature of the celebrity culture, of the investments that very large companies invest into a single human being in order to be better than all. It's a model that I feel is clunky, personally. I feel like it needs to be streamlined and updated. And it is updating itself, more and more each day. So I feel like, that nomination let me know that certain things may be changing.
Something particularly notable is that the award category you were nominated in had its name changed recently. In the light of the Black Lives Matter protests following George Floyd’s death, it’s now become Best Progressive R&B Album.
Yeah! We we kicked up some dust about that urban. I was part of the gang that was doing that, definitely was getting that. [laughs] I was kicking up a lot of dust, because I think that it just means n*****. I feel like Tyler [The Creator] said it really well. I mean, it's going to take more than just renaming stuff. It's going to take people really getting into the heart of the matter. And if you’re calling it progressive R&B, really look into that field and really look into the pioneers of the sounds that are there. I feel like that's good though. I think that that's very good though. We’re prog-R&B!
I am a freelance writer, music critic, content creator, and marketing professional born and raised in New York City. In addition to Forbes, my work on music, entertainment, and popular culture has appeared in various outlets including Billboard, Complex, Deadspin, The Guardian, High Times, The New York Times, Pitchfork, Remezcla, Rolling Stone, Vibe, and Vice. I began writing on these topics in 1999 and have done so more or less continuously since then. In January 2020, I founded the hip-hop media brand Cabbages, beginning as a newsletter and expanding to include a namesake podcast later that same year.
https://www.thenation.com/article/culture/georgia-anne-muldrow-mama-you-can-bet-music/
The Culture Is Still Catching Up With Georgia Anne Muldrow
Whether in jazz, rap, or R&B, she has made music out of liberation.
by Marcus J. Moore
August 31, 2020
The Nation
In mid-July, during a 48-minute Instagram Live interview with the Black culture and art website Afropunk, Georgia Anne Muldrow explained the meaning behind Mama, You Can Bet!, her third album under the pseudonym Jyoti. As she put it, single mothers forgo their own desires for the betterment of their children; the album was written to celebrate them. “I wanted to make a song for when a daughter sees their mother as a woman, for when the child respects a mother’s right to have passionate love in her life,” Muldrow said. “They say after a certain age, you’re not beautiful. They say that this woman, who’s given her whole body [and] done the holiest thing known to man, has now depreciated in value.” On the title track, which also opens the album, Muldrow speaks specifically to Black mothers. And with its distinctly West African sound—a woozy mix of goblet drums, upright bass, and quiet piano chords, produced by Muldrow in her home studio—it’s meant to empower a group of women who’ve been historically mistreated and disconnected from their ancestry. “There’s many a man who’d love your hand,” she sings. “Love is waiting for you.”
Muldrow has made a career of such empowerment. Long before being “woke” was trendy, she and Erykah Badu coined the term in the song “Master Teacher,” from Badu’s 2008 album New Amerykah Part One (4th World War), where they sang about finding utopia and themselves in times of madness. In the early 2000s, as a student at the New School in Manhattan, Muldrow and her friend and saxophonist Lakecia Benjamin talked about wokeness as a way to understand how they could contextualize their music within the political battles of their everyday lives. “Most of the conversation in our friendship was about putting our struggles in our music because that was all we could do,” Muldrow told Pitchfork in 2018. “[We spoke about] trying to find points of power: in your soloing, in your composing. Most of our conversations were about things situated around African liberation all over the world.” To that end, Muldrow, who had been releasing rap and soul music under her own name, has long encouraged Black people to fully embrace their heritage and fight systemic oppression. “We play nice while they stackin’ up kills,” she proclaimed on “Blam,” from her Grammy-nominated 2018 album, Overload. “How much we gotta grow, before we can learn to defend ourselves?” On “187,” from the collaborative Black Love & War, with the rapper Dudley Perkins, she declared, “Death to all oppressors.”
As Jyoti—a name given to her by family friend Alice Coltrane, which means “light” in Sanskrit—Muldrow creates a wistful blend of spiritual jazz indebted to the work of jazz greats. Through contemplative piano and organ solos, thick bass lines and electronic drums, she crafts a sound equally informed by the past and present, as if she’s trying to imagine how legends like the aforementioned Coltrane and Nina Simone would fit within the scope of modern-day jazz. It’s also decidedly West Coast; listening to it, one hears the lush Afrocentric influences of Los Angeles stalwarts Horace Tapscott and Charles Mingus.
There’s a certain ease to Muldrow’s Jyoti work; she borrows and riffs on the textures of Coltrane, Tapscott, and Mingus in her jazz-centered arrangements with panache. Yet, while she pays homage to her influences, she doesn’t center them to the point of diminishing her own sound. Muldrow remixes two Mingus songs on Mama, You Can Bet! For “Bemoanable Lady Geemix,” she brightens his moody arrangement with big electronic drums and darting synths, turning the down tempo original into a glossy hypnotic thump. On “Fabus Foo Geemix,” she quickens the original with an upbeat drum loop and electric bass, turning an old Mingus cut into a funk-infused breakbeat. Equally spacious, scenic, and forward-looking, they both use traditional jazz as the basis for something remarkably new and vibrant.
Born in Los Angeles to a musical family, Muldrow’s current creative direction is rooted in her biography. Her father, Ronald, was an acclaimed funk and jazz guitarist known for his work alongside the saxophonist Eddie Harris. Her mother, Rickie Byars-Beckwith, is an experimental vocalist who specializes in New Thought music and used to sing with the jazz musicians Pharoah Sanders and Roland Hanna. Muldrow started composing her own music at the age of 10. In 2006, the LA-based Stones Throw Records released her first full-length album, Olesi: Fragments of an Earth, a dense collage of hip-hop, Black Liberation soul, and free jazz that foreshadowed Muldrow’s work as Jyoti.
Muldrow’s first two Jyoti albums, the free-jazz-focused Ocotea and the more straight-ahead Denderah, were released in 2010 and 2013, respectively, before the resurgence of interest in jazz that’s occurred in recent years. In 2015, amid a nationwide reckoning over police killings of Black people, the music of certain artists took on a darker, more political tone: Rappers like Kendrick Lamar and musical collaborators like the saxophonist Kamasi Washington responded to the moment with jazz-centered protest music that thrust the genre back into vogue. Muldrow predates Lamar and Washington, even though her Jyoti work was never appreciated to the same extent. “I don’t care how that shit happens, we need breakthroughs,” she once told me. “I’m very thankful that people are making jazz their own, and making it live in a unique way for them.” Still, she should be applauded for releasing such resonant jazz at a time when few were looking. Whether it’s bringing the term “woke” to public view or helping shape the current state of jazz, Muldrow’s work represents thinking ahead, waiting for people to catch up with her.
Mama, You Can Bet! is livelier than the previous Jyoti records, leapfrogging swing, ambient, and hip-hop through shorter instrumentals that don’t linger too long. Across the 15-song album, Muldrow doesn’t just nod to the past. On “Ancestral Duckets,” she summons her ancestors through meditative chants. On “This Walk,” in particular, she sounds weary yet resolute, lamenting state violence and how it takes a toll on mental health. Overall, Mama feels more like a beat tape resembling the instrumental projects she’s released under her own name. Where those albums display Muldrow’s love of electronic funk and West Coast hip-hop, the Jyoti work reaches back even further—to the late 1960s and early ’70s, when jazz musicians such as Miles Davis and Herbie Hancock broadened their sounds to include traces of funk and psych-rock. Jyoti celebrates the music of her youth while honoring the relatives and artists who’ve passed away. “Black improvised music is my foundation for life,” Muldrow told Afropunk’s Timmhotep Aku. “The Jyoti stuff is the root. It’s the square root of my sound.”
That explains “Ra’s Noise (Thukumbado),” a brassy cut featuring Benjamin, with its rhythmic scatting dedicated to the cosmic jazz pioneer Sun Ra. Its sauntering pace and vast arrangement is more restrained than Sun Ra’s sprawling compositions, but I can still hear parts of him in the track, from Benjamin’s shrill saxophone wails to Muldrow’s shouts of “interplanetary!” in the background. Sun Ra believed that Black people would never find peace on Earth and should live on other planets. “Ra’s Noise,” in turn, seems to score a voyage to deep space. “Orgone” similarly finds Muldrow longing for another place far from America’s systemic racism. “How I dream of living in Africa,” she sings over sparse piano chords. “I wanna go back, way back to the time when I was free.” Of course, a declaration like this isn’t surprising for her. She’s long sought this sort of liberation for herself and her people. Now that social unrest and police brutality have reached a feverish clip, Muldrow’s calls for Black freedom ring louder than ever.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Marcus J. Moore is a contributing writer for The Nation and the author of The Butterfly Effect: How Kendrick Lamar Ignited the Soul of Black America.
Georgia Anne Muldrow Interview: Rhythm Is A Form of Gravity
Photo by Antoinette A. Brock
BY JORDAN MAINZER
May 19, 2021
SILY
“The
people keep you fresh. They keep you on your toes,” Georgia Anne
Muldrow told me over the phone last month. The prolific L.A. musician,
whose output ranges from experimental hip-hop to neo soul to jazz and
everything in between, is releasing her fifth record in four years on
Friday, and the third overall in her beats series. VWETO III (FORESEEN + Epistrophik Peach Sound) follows last year’s Mama, You Can Bet! (released under the name Jyoti), 2019′s collaboration with Dudley Perkins and VWETO II, and 2018′s acclaimed, Grammy-nominated Overload. Unlike any of the previous albums, it was put together with some “calls to action” in mind.
Thought some of the songs were around for longer, VWETO III as an entity was made last year, “over a course of time where things were changing in terms of different recording techniques I was trying,” said Muldrow, harking back to techniques and inspirations from her early years of music making. The record was also, obviously, formed during a global pandemic that caused folks to lock down, and Muldrow is conscious to giving listeners opportunities to reach out on her very active Instagram account. Each of the album’s singles have been paired with those aforementioned calls to action. “Unforgettable”, which combines 80′s-sounding synths with 90′s G-funk, calls for vocalists to submit performances to go along with Muldrow’s vocals on the song. “Mufaro’s Garden”, inspired by an illustrated folktale book called Mufaro’s Beautiful Daughters, asks for visual artist submissions. On the day of the album’s release, Muldrow will ask for dance submissions to “Slow Drag”, a throwback Hammond-guitar-piano ditty named after the juke joint dance of the same name. Next month, it’ll be “Action Groove”, with calls for turntable scratch ‘n’ sampling remixes from DJs. And it’s not just the singles that exemplify Muldrow’s desire to connect with listeners on a granular level. Many of the songs on VWETO III refer to or are inspired by specific eras, from the Afrofuturist jazz of “Afro AF” to the genre tribute “Boom Bap Is My Homegirl”. That the titles are clearly referential, too, like “Old Jack Swing” or “Synthmania Rock”, shows that Muldrow’s not winking and nodding or trying to fool us, earnestly inviting us to dive in.
Moreover, VWETO III is coinciding with what Muldrow’s calling the Teacherie, classes she’s trying to develop to spread knowledge of what she’s learned throughout her own career, everything from philosophy to instrumental-specific classes. Right now, from her saved Instagram story called “Teacherie!,” you can take an assessment to fill out what you’re interested in. “It helps me to see what skill levels people have and what they want to learn in the class,” Muldrow said. “I seek to continue to stay open enough to make relevant music and have relevant things to share with people.” Overall, Muldrow is the type of artist that uses online platforms the way they’d be used in an ideal world. Her use of NFTs, too, is noble; the album art by Cape Town-based Breeze Yoko is being auctioned off, with 50% of proceeds going to prison abolitionist organization Critical Resistance. Even when the offline world returns–Muldrow’s slated to play Pitchfork Music Festival on Saturday, September 11th–Muldrow’s created a blueprint for navigating an increasingly isolating digital world, by seeking out real connections.
Below, read my conversation with Muldrow, edited for length and clarity, as she discusses making the record, being inspired by African rhythms, the influence of Digital Underground, and why her work logically extends into prison abolition. You can also catch her tomorrow on Bandcamp Live at 8 PM CST.
Since I Left You: Why did you decide this was a good time to revisit your beats album series?
Georgia Anne Muldrow: The people love it, you know? I always like to post beats on Instagram and share my poetry or state of mind of what’s going on in the world according to my people, and provide a place of joy and uplift. The voice of the people kind of determined what songs were on there. There are some songs that nobody’s ever heard. Different ideas, something a little bit more energized.
Something for the people. It’s really great that I have direct contact with them. Some of the songs are things I like to try based on the vibes I get from their feedback. It’s great; it’s a beautiful thing for me. I’ve gone through phases where critics love me, but the voice of the people that really support your work is really cool to hear. It’s like a little focus group. I just like sharing my music with folks because it’s my way of contributing love energy to the world in a direct, immediate way.
SILY: A lot of folks are still staying home and needing that connection. You’re connecting with them but also providing a platform for them to connect with each other.
GAM: Yes. I’m way into that and seek to be expanding that in an even more literal sense with my classroom project [Teacherie], like a live webinar sort of thing, that enables folks to speak amongst themselves. A more extended form of what I do on social media. An intimate look at what’s really going on in music. They can see where my emotions end and the music begins and try to make things seamless within their own music. Teach what I’ve picked up along the way, because I won’t be here forever. Spreading the love but the knowledge, too, with the music that I share. There’s a certain quality that you can achieve if you have patience.
SILY: Did you always know you wanted to do these calls for action, like for vocalists on “Unforgettable”? And how did you decide which tracks you wanted to do them for?
GAM: It’s definitely my way of trying to promote some sort of hip hop jam in lieu of the isolation that folks are weathering…I’m really inspired by the early age of hip hop where everyone had different dances. They brought their art books to the hip hop jams. The jackets with the art on it, the MCs rapping. The breakdancing, the DJs. All of the different things in place for it to be complete. That’s part of what got me hooked on production. One night years ago, [when I first played] my stuff, and folks started to dance, it got me hooked–to make somebody move. Somebody can rap over this, somebody can dance to this or draw to this. That’s the reason for the calls to action. Opening up a hip hop jam all over the world. I hope it gains some momentum. That would be nice, for more people to put themselves out there. But I do understand we live in different times right now and people are trying to get by. I still have to post some of the artists from “Mufaro’s Garden” and these rap videos from “Unforgettable”.
SILY: You’re giving people an opportunity, even if they’re just trying to get through the day, to take a break or have a beneficial creative exercise.
GAM: Yeah. Being creative together, and togetherness. The thinking that the songs aren’t complete without dance. Lyrics are a certain kind of fulfillment of music. But the movement of the body is another one. [It] goes back to gravity. Drummers harness the power of gravity and manipulate it so things can fall at a certain time. Same thing with dance–[dancers] don’t manipulate gravity, but interact with it and create an interdependence with it. When somebody’s dancing, they come back down to the ground, and you could let that go and let gravity guide what your dance looks like. Rhythm is a form of gravity–a form of gravity engaging with life. I feel like movement is the fulfillment of all the arts. I just seek to do my part.
SILY: You mentioned being inspired by a specific early era in hip hop, and there’s a lot on here inspired by genre or era-specific trends, like the G-funk in “Unforgettable” and “Boom Bap Is My Homegirl”.
GAM: [Boom bap] is one of the things that I specialize in. It’s a home base for me. In my experience, it’s a very African point of access. A lot of the boom bap rhythms are straight from Africa. Most of them are. Off the shores of West Africa. I heard so many of them, from The Gambia, Senegal, Mali. Over there, you hear so much of it. I want to be part of that. At the same time, I might wake up and make a free jazz record. I don’t feel like a traditionalist; I just want to preserve the culture of Black music from this hemisphere. I love traditional ideas, but it’s not like I’m gonna do this one idea for the sake of staying in a lane. There’s no place that Black music hasn’t influenced, molded, shaped, nurtured.
SILY: When was the last time you were able to perform in Africa?
GAM: I believe it might have been 2017. These years have started to run together. I don’t mind it, though. Keeps me young. [laughs]
VWETO III cover art by Breeze Yoko
SILY: How did the songs on here with vocals come together, whether the ones with your singing or the ones with featured artists? Did the words or beats/melodies come first?
GAM: The beats came first except for “Shana’s Back”. Shana Jensen is my sister; she’s the mother of my niece. Every time she’d come over and I had an idea to compose songs around her, they’d end up being huge songs. She’d be like, “Bye!” [laughs] I guess she wanted something a little more understated. I’d always end up doing big Motown sounds. There’s a song on The Blackhouse called “Shana’s Groove”. It’s a like a reoccurring situation and character. It’s kind of funny at this point.
The other ones, like “Unforgettable”, I’m very much matching the vibe, the punk-funk aesthetic. Sometimes a little hook just pushes it over the edge and gets them into the mindset I was in when thinking about it. Other songs like “Love Call” I just wanted to sound like it was in an arena. Arena rock, funk, Digital Underground-inspired, all the way.
SILY: Are you a big Digital Underground fan?
GAM: I think it shows in a lot of the music I make. I don’t think I can hide it. This record has so many examples of that. I love Shock G so much. He was so bad, as a thinker, a philosopher, a community builder, artist, pianist, maestro. The “Love Call” groove, “Unforgettable”, “[Old] Jack Swing”, you can hear it. I was raised with that kind of music in my head as a child. Unashamed to be funky and make a groove have extra grease on it. That’s what distinguished our sound from other region’s sounds. Getting greasy. While still doing the boom bap and all that other stuff. For me, it was always a goal to represent where I’m from in my music in a non-traditional way. Bringing what I love about the West Coast to whatever I was working on.
Shock G lives in all of us. He brought so many different vibes. A rhythmic pocket that breathes. Somewhat right under “Atomic Dog”. It keeps you moving. It has a breath of life in it. I’m so thankful to have lived in an era where I could hear and experience his work.
SILY: How did “Ayun Vegas” come together?
GAM: Ayun is my little brother. I think I’ve known him since 2014 or ‘15. He’s quite a talent. I love his style. He’s from [New] Jersey. I love his sense of rhythmic dynamic. His use of metaphor, double entendre. I feel like he’s really a gifted poet. He can do all types of different things. He’s an amazing MC–he just released a project with Jacob Rochester called Slaps & Hugs. I’m gonna lean towards people who are creative themselves and insert themselves into everything they do.
Ayun is very secure in being different. He came out to Vegas, and I had this song. Usually, when I play leftfield stuff, MCs want that beat they can crush and not feel challenged by. This song is really old. I feel like it was made in 2016. I feel like that was the first time when somebody was willing to rap on an idea that was out of the ordinary. It’s not just in your face. It’s something different, but I want you to rap for your life on this. Something more like a movie score, where you find your character. He did it! He didn’t leave one beat behind.
He’s rhythmically gifted and quite the poet. He almost went into pro football but he chose music. He’s a very enterprising brother, doing all types of apparel. He was working in the visual artist community, in the videographer community. Any time I can showcase what it is that he got to share, I’m there. He’s not afraid to speak the truth. This verse is impressionistic. It’s like somebody is taking a really big brush and making a beautiful image, strong-arming it. It’s dope. I love it.
We did another song together on the Overload album, but it didn’t make the cut. The Japanese version of Overload has a song called “What Can We Do Now”, and it has Ambrose Akinmusire, Ayun, and me. I’d love for that to be heard stateside, because it’s definitely about what’s happening over here.
SILY: Why did you choose to have the proceeds for this record go to Critical Resistance?
GAM: I’ve always wanted my music to be a tool for the motion of people. It doesn’t stop with dance and rapping and singing and drawing. It begins with that. Where it ends up, the movement of people coming into their powers, truths that in order to have a more humane society, we are going to have to throw some of this bullshit away. The spoils of enslavement. We’ve got to get rid of those spoils so we can get to a more realistic place of folks being cognizant of the activities that they take a part in. Jails ain’t gonna help people feel like they’re part of the community. They cage people and endanger their lives and run the risk of ruining somebody’s mental, emotional, and spiritual state even if they did commit the crime they’re in there for.
There’s a sense that all crime is committed from a place of fear. Many crimes people are locked up for is just folks trying to find a way. I don’t see how more fear is going to rehabilitate. The idea that punishment leads to enlightenment. People in the public school system are taught about some of the baddest people that ever lived–mass murders. But they’re not the type of people held accountable. They’re who brought over the imprisonment systems from their failed nations.
I don’t believe in reform at all. Critical Resistance seeks to abolish prisons as we know them. I love that their resolve is so sure and bold.