With Hourglass, Antibalas returns to its instrumental roots. Previous
albums featured lyrics that addressed topics like patriarchy, climate
change, militarism, late stage capitalism, oligarchy, white
ethnonationalism, and the genocide of Native Americans. In this album
the group rearticulates these themes, however speaking through melody
and rhythm. “Once a song has lyrics, everyone who doesnʼt speak that
language is on the outside. We use rhythm and melody to translate the
emotions in the album and make it universally accessible,” explains the
co-producer/founder Martín Perna.
The new album draws on compositions written by several current and
emeritus members of the group. "Hourglass" begins with a plaintive and
ecstatic tenor saxophone solo before digging into an intense 12-8
groove. The group pivots with “Lo-Life” highlighting the groupʼs ability
to swing a lá Machito or the 1970s Ghanaian dance band leaders like
Gyedu Blay-Ambolley. Others like “Solace,” “Escape” and “La Ceiba,”
conjure echoes of the classic Lagos afrobeat sound, albeit spoken with a
Brooklyn accent. “Oasis,” the albumʼs finale, is a step into a
psychedelic unknown future, with a deep sense of liberatory funk
eternally at its core.
Tracklist:
1. Solace
2. Lo Life
3. Escape
4. Hourglass
5. La Ceiba
6. Oasis
