Inspired by revolutionary efforts against oppressive hegemonies in
Detroit, and in Black locales around the world, Memoirs of Hi-Tech Jazz
is a sound score evocative of that resistance.
It is also a reminder that although violence and injustice looms, it is
not the only story: we are much more than what oppresses us. The album
celebrates Black leisure and play; the mundane joys that persist in
spite of the depleting realities of the world.
Movement, and the very mobility of the car specifically is integral to
Memoirs of Hi Tech Jazz. Timed perfectly to match the duration of a
round trip drive from Underground Music Academy in the North End, to
Detroit’s island park, Belle Isle-- the album is undoubtedly best
experienced in while driving.
That journey signifies the transition from labor to pleasure: from the
neighborhood of the Techno Museum in North End to an outdoor park that
has long been a destination for Black Detroiters to cookout, park their
boats, play spades, and listen to local music.
Memoirs of Hi-Tech Jazz embodies the feeling this place engenders—a
reprieve from the midwestern work ethic, and a reminder to ground in the
pleasures of your body and the land.
Tracklist:
1. Memoirs of Hi Tech Jazz (feat. Black Nix)
2. Rouge
3. The Ballad of Robert O'Bryant
4. Motor City Madness
5. Let's Give It Up (feat. Archpriest Rev. Wanika K. Stephens & De'Sean Jones)
6. Snake Eyes
7. The Moment is Now
8. Right Now
9. Good Trouble
10. Keep It Coming
11. The Dub
12. Remember