Land Back!
An unadulterated opening statement intoned by Saul Williams three times,
as he joins Carlos Niño & Friends in sound ceremony underneath oak
and black walnut trees in Coldwater Canyon Park, Los Angeles, on
December 18, 2024.
The performance, which was organized by Noah Klein of Living Earth on
the grounds of longstanding conservationist organization TreePeople, was
the first of its kind for longtime friends and collaborators Williams
and Niño. The two have been in contact since 1997 and have worked on a
variety of projects together, but had never been moved to present in
this way. For the occasion, Niño assembled and directed an ensemble of
frequent collaborators including Nate Mercereau (Guitar Synthesizer,
Live Sampling with Midi Guitar, Sample Sources), Aaron Shaw (Flute,
Soprano Saxophone with Pedals, Tenor Saxophone), Andres Renteria (Bells,
Congas, Egyptian Rattle Drum, Hand Drums, Percussion), Maia (Flute,
Vibraphone, Voice), Francesca Heart (Computer, Conch Shell, Sound
Design), and Kamasi Washington (Tenor Saxophone).
Williams’ inspired poetics both fit seamlessly and guide clairvoyantly the electro-acoustic ecosystem created by Niño &
Friends – a constellation of deep connections and intersecting linkups
from complementary sound makers. There’s the dialogue between not just
Niño & Williams but Niño and Renteria’s reciprocal percussions; the
intergenerational woodwind counterpoint between Washington and Shaw; the
hovering harmonics of Maia’s vibraphone in aerial resonance with
Heart’s digital designs. Heart’s sounds also make a beautiful analogue
to synth-guitarist Nate Mercereau, whose live sampling and manipulation
techniques turn fleeting moments of sonic presence into musical
architecture in real time. Deepening the dimensionality of this
constellation, Mercereau and Niño are several years into a shared
musical simpatico that has yielded dozens of powerful collaborations,
making their particular interaction on this recording as spiritual and
transcendent as it is subtle and implicit. And there is yet another
connection to be highlighted still.
Late in the set, Williams shares an extended reflection on the Dutch
East India Trade Company, the indigenous Lenape people on the island of
Manahatta, the origins of Wall Street, and a prayer for the end of
empire as he incites an epic crescendo from the ensemble, swirling
behind the twin winds of Shaw and Washington, spirited by his repeated
call “I’ve seen enough.” The smoke has only begun to clear from this
emotional apex as Williams passes the torch to poet Aja Monet, who
arrests the atmosphere with a soft apocalyptic reading of a piece from
her notebook, “The Water Is Rising.”
As Monet finishes her poem and steps aside, Williams follows her
foreboding words with a solemnly hopeful return – closing the ceremony
with a parable about a firing squad, where one member's dilemma is a
"system of belief" allowing for humanity in the heart of an oppressor.
Tracklist:
1. Sound Then Words
2. We Would Lift Our Voice...
3. We Are Calling out in This Moment...
4. The Water Is Rising /
As We Surpass the Firing Squad... (feat. aja monet)
5. We Have Work to Do (Speaking After the Concert)