Madlib lets you know what he's after at the onset, with cover art emulating
Ornette Coleman's free-jazz pioneering
Ornette! and a hip-hop-rooted revision of
Miles Davis' "Bitches Brew" as the album's first song. The familiar "Brew" vamp is updated with
Madlib's genius sensibilities and a welcome addition to
Yesterdays New Quintet: the jazz-drumming, hip hop-producing
Karriem Riggins. For the next 14 tracks,
Madlib,
Riggins, and
Azymuth's
Ivan Conti create the most stunning fusion of jazz and hip-hop to date.
Madlib began this in March 2001, indulging all of his eccentricities, tastes and ideas with Angles Without Edges, where
Madlib one-man-banded his way to a forward-moving testimony that appropriated everything from jam band vibes of
Soulive and
Beastie Boys-style organic hip-hop, combining it with freewheeling, experimental jazz ingredients to produce an album hailed as an evolution. Yesterdays Universe, however, is meaner, nastier and even more ambitious.
Madlib has clearly grown as an artist, mastering the area where the improvisational nature of jazz meets the sampled urbanity of hip-hop. The additions of
Riggins and
Conti give the music even more textures and emotion. While "One for the Monica Lingas Band" is pretty and expressive, the hallmarks of this album are tunes such as "Street Talkin'" and "Marcus, Martin and Malcolm" -- the former sounding like a jazz breakbeat and the latter sounding like a new-millennium, reared-on-hip-hop version of
Joe Henderson's early '70s work. You don't hear music this daring and edgy in the jazz idiom, nor do you often encounter music this evolved and creative from its hip-hop peers. The 12-minute "Vibe from the Tribe Suite" is an instance that happens rarely in music, when it seems that new terrain has been discovered and you aren't just listening to a quirky hip-hop producer dibble and dabble at his whim, but that a full-fledged, unique musical idea has developed. The bassline is sinister, the drum rhythm is as head-nodding as it gets, the distorted flute staccatos with an MC's cadence, the piano chords are from the school of
Mwandishi-era
Herbie Hancock, and the soprano sax is off-kilter. The result is a musical and creative statement that caps an album full of new statements. This album is an early 21st century landmark flushed with the optimism and possibilities of a new frontier.
Madlib and
Yesterdays New Quintet are the bold first settlers waiting for other musicians (if they can) to follow the leaders. ~ Vincent Thomas