“No Beginning No End sums up how I feel about music right now,” says José James
of his Blue Note Records debut. “I don’t want to be confined to any
particular style. I decided I didn’t want to be considered a jazz singer
anymore and that was really freeing. Once I realized that jazz singing
is just something that I do and it’s just a label, it freed me as an
artist to just write without any boundaries.”
No Beginning No End is a seamless musical experience that moves between different styles with remarkable fluidity, bound together by James’ transcendent voice. It marks a new chapter in the artistic journey of the 33-year-old singer/songwriter. Conceived, recorded and produced independently without any recording contract, the album is his most personal statement yet.
No Beginning No End is a seamless musical experience that moves between different styles with remarkable fluidity, bound together by James’ transcendent voice. It marks a new chapter in the artistic journey of the 33-year-old singer/songwriter. Conceived, recorded and produced independently without any recording contract, the album is his most personal statement yet.
Along the way, he recruited a mighty team of collaborators that include noted producer/bassist Pino Palladino; pianist/composer and fellow Blue Note artist Robert Glasper; R&B singer/songwriter/guitarist Emily King; international French-Moroccan singing star Hindi Zahra; and the 2011 Thelonious Monk International Piano Competition winner Kris Bowers.
“I feel like this is my first album as an artist,” James says, “This is
the first time in which there were no label, no A&R – nothing but
myself and my relationship and history with my music.”
James has
already established himself as a trailblazer for his intoxicating blend
of jazz, hip-hop, R&B and electronica from his previous three
albums. His 2008 debut The Dreamer and its 2010 follow-up, BlackMagic
– both produced by the world-renowned DJ Gilles Peterson – transformed
the Minneapolis-born, New York-based singer into an underground
sensation in both the modern jazz and DJ culture scenes. His musical
path follows its own rhyme and reason. James is a musical omnivore, an
artist that resists being pigeonholed, equally at ease on stage with
jazz legend McCoy Tyner as he is in the studio with rapper Oh No or
electronica pioneer Flying Lotus.
Ben Ratliff described James’ musical magic in a February 2012 edition of The New York Times:
“He’s a romantic baritone with a deep-funk band, stretching out songs,
evoking both the ’70s of Roberta Flack and Gil Scott-Heron and the ’90s
and oughts of J Dilla,” then making smart comparisons to R&B
superstar D’Angelo but distinguishing James as “a very different kind of
singer than D’Angelo. He’s a little more acoustic singer-songwriter, a
little more delicate.”
On No Beginning No End, James
shows an even deeper regard for pop song structures while retaining the
“element of surprise” associated with jazz. Much of the music draws upon
James’ love for the softer sounds of late-‘60s and ’70s R&B,
particularly the music of Flack, Donny Hathaway and Marvin Gaye. In
fact, it was meeting Gaye’s legendary collaborator Leon Ware, who
produced Gaye’s seminal 1976 LP I Want You, that inspired James to write the lamenting “Bird of Space.”
“Leon really brought me back to a place that inspired my music, just
when I was learning about how artists really worked together,” James
says. “’Bird of Space’ goes back to The Dreamer with a very
intimate, sensual atmosphere and with the musical cycle looping. That’s
probably my most personal song in terms of lyrics.”
Like “Bird of Space,” the gospel-flavored “Do You Feel”
is another composition in which James composed both the music and
lyrics. It features a soulful Ray Charles-inspired piano solo from
Bowers. “I just sat at the piano and that song came out,” James recalls,
“When I did the bridge, it got really interesting. I love songs that
are simple on the outside then go somewhere very unexpected on the
inside.”
In addition to Ware, another major catalyst for the new
project was Palladino. While James was living in London, Palladino
invited him over for a writing session. The bassist had a series of
chords that he wanted to share. Within 20 minutes, the two came up with
the snapping “Make It Right,” which also features some
of James’ longtime band mates – drummer Richard Spaven, keyboardist
Grant Windsor, trombonist Corey King, trumpeter Takuya Kuroda, and
guitarist Jeremy Most.
James says that Palladino was so excited
about the results of “Make It Right” that he enlisted himself as a
producer of the forthcoming album. As some of the sessions began to
unfold at The Magic Shop studios in New York City, James met Brian
Bender, who eventually became another co-producer on the album. “Both
had really different roles. Pino’s role really dealt with the quality of
the musicianship. That quality went way up in comparison to my other
works,” James explains, “Brian really helped me with the mixing; he
created a great sonic world in which an artist can step into.”
With Palladino, James also wrote the sleek album opener, “It’s All Over Your Body”
with its voodoo horn jabs and the bewitching title-track, which
displays James’ gift of crooning ballads at crawling tempos. James
refers to “No Beginning No End” as the “baby-maker”
song on the album. It features him at his most sensual. “I wanted it to
sound like an internal conversation,” James explains, “The song really
deals with the struggles of being away from your loved one on the road,
while at the same time, being so close to something that you love, which
is the music. That lifestyle is not for everyone, but there is a lot of
curious poetry in that life, a lot of loneliness too.”
With Scott Jacoby, James penned “Trouble,”
an infectious mid-tempo jam, noted for its initial bass line
reminiscent of Bill Withers before the song morphs into a strutting Sly
Stone vibe. James says that the prowling lyrics and menacing vibe
connects him to R&B legends such as Sam Cooke, Marvin Gaye and Al
Green – noteworthy “troubled” soul men. “I think we really underestimate
how much of emotional trailblazers they were,” James says. “They opened
up channels of male vulnerability and sensitivity within black music.”
Several other songs on No Beginning No End are the result of
collaborations with different artists. As the title hints, the fetching “Vanguard”
was written at the famed Village Vanguard with Glasper. “We sat down at
that famous piano and he gave me those chords. It was a real blessing
to work with him in that particular way,” James recalls. In addition to
showcasing Glasper’s hypnotic Fender Rhodes on the track, Glasper’s
Experiment band drummer Chris Dave gives the song his signature rhythmic
spark.
The gentle ballads “Come to My Door” and “Heaven on the Ground”
were both written by the singer/songwriter/guitarist Emily King, a
frequent collaborator of James’. The former tune was actually written
for King’s Grammy-nominated 2006 debut, East Side Story, but it didn’t
make the final cut. “It’s such a beautiful and simple song. I really
wanted to express something very plainly. Previously, I’ve been really
interested in abstraction and writing lyrics that could be
multi-dimensional but ‘Come to My Door’ is a straight-up pop song.” The
latter is a duet with King that she wrote specifically for James.
The mesmerizing “Sword + Gun”
with its North African-flavored percussion and Fela-esque bass line is
another great duet – this time with French-Moroccan singer Hindi Zahra.
Here, James ventured farthest from his comfort zone. “That was me going
into Hindi’s world,” James explains, “Culturally it was very interesting
because we were dealing with the Gnawa music from Morocco,
where they play all this indigenous percussion. It was very communal. We
wanted to write a song that was beyond both of us.”
The album concludes with the stunning ballad “Tomorrow”
featuring accompaniment by Bowers on piano and a string section
arranged by Jules Buckley. James accredits famed R&B/funk
keyboardist/singer Amp Fiddler as the music’s composer. When James
initially collaborated in the studio with Fiddler, he recorded Fiddler
improvising rhapsodically at the piano. Later James had Bowers render
that piano part as the basis of “Tomorrow.” “Lyrically the song is about
transformation and acknowledging the pain that one feels when you lose
someone and wanting to transcend that pain,” James says. "I was also
listening to a lot of Nick Drake and decided to add a string quartet to
give it joy."
[source: Blue Note]
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