The Afro-Semitic Experience: Our Feet Began to Pray (digital outlets)

 |   |  1 min read

Eretz Zavat Chalav
The Afro-Semitic Experience: Our Feet Began to Pray (digital outlets)

Released to coincide with the birthday of Dr Martin Luther King, January 15, this musical project of unity began in the Nineties when pianist Warren Byrd and bassist David Chevan hooked up to play in each other's bands.

And from that the idea of exploring Jewish and African American traditions grew.

Hence the Afro-Semitic Experience and a series of albums since which bring together soul, funk, gospel and cantorial influences within a jazz context of improvisation and exploration.

By turns cool, blue and swinging (Retelling the Tales Told By Our Ancestors) or referring to classic material (a vocal take on Moanin', a moving choral amalgamation of We Shall Overcome and Oseh Shalom, I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to be Free), Our Feet Began to Pray is an album of truth, history, shared suffering and eternal optimism (If I Can Help Somebody) despite the challenges of life.

The concept for the title song came during a protest march after the death of George Floyd, as the New Haven police were moving the crowd across a bridge. The similarity between the Floyd protests and the civil rights march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma -- after which both Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel and John Lewis referred to the experience as "praying with my feet" -- could not be ignored.

3cdbce75_ec5e_4229_b21a_f3e6fdacb171The vocals are well-intentioned if rather lacking in power (the title track, Shedding Our Colors) and those who prefer their socio-political jazz with a bit of astringency may well be disappointed by some of this album.

But the ethic here – and the common theme of marching in protest, out of Egypt, the Middle Passage and other journeys – is that of coming together and finding common ground which, almost by definition, requires compromise.

"Unity in the community" is the on-point shorthand for this admirable project.

.

You can hear this album at Spotify here

Share It

Your Comments

post a comment

More from this section   Music at Elsewhere articles index

Trip to the Moon: Welcome to the Big Room (Ode)

Trip to the Moon: Welcome to the Big Room (Ode)

This astral-ambient and very trippy outfit from Auckland record far too infrequently for my liking, and this seductive offering is further evidence of the singular path they have been travelling... > Read more

The Antlers: Hospice (FrenchKiss/Border)

The Antlers: Hospice (FrenchKiss/Border)

This may not sound like everyone's idea of an album to listen to -- it is a 10-track concept piece about caring for someone in a hospice who has been emotionally abusive. But whaddya gonna do? They... > Read more

Elsewhere at Elsewhere

Tord Gustavsen Trio; Being There (ECM) BEST OF ELSEWHERE 2007

Tord Gustavsen Trio; Being There (ECM) BEST OF ELSEWHERE 2007

This is Norwegian pianist Gustavsen's third album on the prestigious ECM label and his self-described style of "loving every note" is the hallmark of these often beautifully spare tracks... > Read more

RAVI SHANKAR INTERVIEWED (1998): In the house of the master

RAVI SHANKAR INTERVIEWED (1998): In the house of the master

2020 is the 100th anniversary of Ravi Shankar's birth and although tributes had been planned, most have been put on hold. We repost this [ and this personal essay] as our tribute... > Read more