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Jowee Omicil

SpiriTuaL HeaLinG: Bwa KaYimaN FreeDoM SuiTe (2LP, Red and Blue)

Label: Bash! Village Records

Format: 2LP, Coloured

Genre: Jazz

Preorder: Releases October 11th 2024

€52.00
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Saxophonist Omicil builds atmospheres then upends expectations in this free-jazz homage to Haiti’s successful 18th-century slave insurrection - The Guardian

Tip! *Coloured vinyl deluxe edition* In August 1791, a group of enslaved Haitians met in the woods of Bois Caïman, on the north coast of Haiti, and conducted a secret Vodou ceremony that planted the seeds for the Haitian Revolution. This collective ritual, which would go on to inspire a mass uprising, now forms the energetic inspiration for Haitian saxophonist Jowee Omicil’s latest album, Spiritual Healing: Bwa Kayiman Freedom Suite. Over an hour, Omicil transposes the imagined energy of the ceremony into a free jazz interpretation, switching between several woodwinds and brass while accompanied by percussion, keys and bass. The album opens minimally, with Omicil vocalising over plaintive snatches of saxophone melody, guttural bass clarinet and rattles of percussionist Yoann Danier’s ka drum. Sweeping his hand across the surface of the drum as if replicating the rustle of forest leaves, Danier situates the listener in the imagined setting of Bois Caïman before Omicil punctures the soothing soundscape with a clarion call on cornet. That forceful entry signifies much of what is to come: compositions that build a certain comfortable mood before switching tack and upending expectations.

On tracks such as Spirit Yo Bak, for instance, a rapid polyrhythmic drum and ka groove is played with intensity before pianist Randy Kerber drowns out the percussion to deliver a slow, introspective solo. Conversely, Blue Cotton starts soft with Omicil’s breathy flute laying down a steady melody and then picks up into a frantic tangle of saxophone lines over drummer Arnaud Dolmen’s cymbal smashes.

It all works to jolt listeners to attention, keeping us poised for this sense of change and tension – the risk of uprising. His band never fully explode into the spiritually cleansing, life-reimagining free jazz of genre pioneers such as Albert Ayler; Omicil instead invites us to enter a fidgety space of possibility. It’s not always easy to listen to, but it is exciting, its sudden ructions suggesting that revolution is always an option, and closer than we might think.

Details
Cat. number: BV01LPC1
Year: 2024