Soothsayers (band)
Soothsayers | |
---|---|
Also known as | Soothsayers and the Red Earth Collective |
Origin | United Kingdom |
Genres | Reggae, dub, Afrobeat, funk, jazz |
Years active | 1998–present |
Labels | Red Earth Records |
Website | |
Members | Robin Hopcraft, Idris Rahman, Kodjovi Kush, Julia Biel, Patrick Illingworth, Kishon Khan, Phil Dawson, Patrick Hatchett |
Soothsayers are a London-based band who perform and record original afrobeat and reggae-influenced music. Founded in 1998 by sax player Idris Rahman and trumpeter Robin Hopcraft, they have released five studio albums and a series of vinyl singles on their own label Red Earth Records.[1]
Band History
Soothsayers's first album 'Lost City' (released in 2000) represents the band's early period. The band spent this formative period performing in venues around South London and developing a compositional style influenced chiefly by the music of South African township musicians such as Abdullah Ibrahim and Hugh Masekela, and instrumental reggae artists such as Tommy McCook and the Skatalites. The album also includes the song 'Follow Your Path', which features Nigerian singer/musician Adesose Wallace and shows the band developing their own version of afrobeat which was to become an important feature of their subsequent work. 'Lost City' also features the great South African guitarist Lucky Ranku, as well as a whole host of top London-based musicians who became part of the loose and diverse Soothsayers collective.[2][2]
The second album 'Tangled Roots' was released in 2005 and was a more afrobeat-inspired set featuring collaborations with Keziah Jones, Adesose Wallace, Maxi Jazz and Netsayi Chigwendere. With Rahman and Hopcraft writing, producing and mixing, this album is a more studio-based, produced album than 'Lost City', and represents a big step forward in the pair's desire to bring together elements of afrobeat groove and melody with dub production and sonics.[3][4] Soothsayers released the track 'Blinded Souls' from this album as a ten-inch vinyl single, featuring remixes by Quantic and Mad professor.
The third studio album 'One More Reason' (2009) (credited as Soothsayers and the Red Earth Collective) featured a collection of veteran reggae artists including Johnny Clarke, Michael Prophet and Linval Thompson. This album was the first to feature mixes by London-based reggae producer and dj Manasseh, and also was the first album to feature the harmony vocal style which has since become a major feature of the band's sound.[5]
'Red Earth Dub' (2010) was Soothsayers' subsequent release which is largely a collection of dubs and remixes by Manasseh and which also features two fresh compositions which are collaborations with Manasseh.[6]
On their most recent album 'Human Nature' (release date October 2012), Soothsayers have fully developed their own three-part harmony vocal style (using the voices of Rahman, Hopcraft and more recent band member Julia Biel) which has become an integral part of the sound. Still fundamentally inspired by dub, reggae and afrobeat, the sound now has a unique compositional and production style, resulting from years of development and experimentation bringing together the various strands of bass-heavy, groove-inspired music that has characterised their output over the last decade.[7][8] 'Human Nature' has been played by DJs on BBC Radio 2, Radio 3, Radio 4, BBC 6 music and numerous radios stations worldwide. It was recentlt featured on Gilles Peterson's 'Best of 2012' show.[9]
Touring
Throughout their career the band have maintained a busy touring schedule, performing with various line-ups throughout the UK, Europe and beyond, and playing at many of the major jazz, reggae and world music festivals including Rototom Sunsplash, the North Sea Jazz Festival and Glastonbury Festival. Soothsayers have also performed and toured extensively with Johnny Clarke, Michael Prophet and Cornel Campbell,[10] performing some of their old classics as well as new collaborative material.
Collaborations
Hopcraft and Rahman have also collaborated on many other musical projects in this time, with artists including Osibisa, Mad Professor, Rico Rodrigues, Jerry Dammers, Ayub Ogada, Aswad, Zoe Rahman and Arun Ghosh. In 2011 they were asked by members of the band Antibalas to take part in the London production of the hit musical 'Fela!',[11] about the life of afrobeat creator Fela Kuti, which ran for four months at London's National Theatre. Hopcraft was musical director and trumpeter and Rahman played lead sax part mimed to by the actor in the title role.
The Band
Robin Hopcraft (trumpet, vocals, production) Idris Rahman (sax, vocals, production) Kodjovi Kush (bass, vocals) Patrick Illingworth (drums) Julia Biel (vocals) Phil Dawson (guitar) Patrick Hatchett (guitar) Kishon Khan (keyboards)
Members of the wider Soothsayers Collective
Westley Joseph (drums) Zoe Rahman (keyboards) Adesose Wallace (vocals) Yuval "Juba" Wezler (drums) Frank Tontoh (drums) Lucky Ranku (guitar)
Discography
Albums
Lost City (2000, Red Earth Records) Tangled Roots (2004, Red Earth Records) One More Reason (2009, Red Earth Records) Red Earth Dub (2010, Red Earth Records) Human Nature (2012, Red Earth Records)
EPs and Singles
Blinded Souls 10", featuring remixes by Quantic and Mad Professor (2005, Red Earth Records) Bad Boys 7', featuring Johnny Clarke (2009, Red Earth Records) Love Fire 7", featuring Michael Prophet (2009, Red Earth Records) I'll Never Leave/I'm Leaving 7", featuring Cornel Campbell and Lutan Fyah (2011, Red Earth Records) We're Not Leaving 7" (2012, Red Earth Records) We're Not Leaving 12" (2012, Red Earth Records)
Compilations featured
Vibrations from the Motherland ("Crocodiles" featuring Busi Mholongo, 2008, Melt 2000)
References
- ↑ taylor, angus. "reggae newssoothsayers interview". reggae news. Retrieved 8 November 2012.
- 1 2 Fordham, John (5 April 2002). "Jazz CD Releases". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
- ↑ C, JJ. "November 2005". BBC AFRICA ON YOUR STREET. BBC. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
- ↑ May, Chris. "Soothsayers: Tangled Roots". All about Jazz. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
- ↑ Mann, Ian. "The Jazz Mann Soothsayers Review". The Jazz Mann. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
- ↑ Taylor, Angus. "Red Earth Dub BBC Review". BBC Reviews. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
- ↑ taylor, angus. "bbc music review - human nature". bbc online. Retrieved 8 November 2012.
- ↑ male, howard (18 November 2012). "review". the independent. London. Retrieved 27 December 2012.
- ↑ Peterson, Gilles. "Gilles Peterson BBC6". best of 2012 BBC6 show. BBC6. Retrieved 27 December 2012.
- ↑ Katz, David. "Cornel Campbell in London". United Reggae Reviews. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
- ↑ Taylor, Paul (2012-10-15). "Fela! National Theatre". The Independent. London. Retrieved 15 October 2012.