Yussef Dayes
Black Classical Music


3.5
great

Review

by Miloslaw Archibald Rugallini STAFF
September 15th, 2023 | 24 replies


Release Date: 09/08/2023 | Tracklist

Review Summary: 'salright innit

You like music, kid? Well then; Yussef Dayes is your fucking guy. He plays the drums. He's so good at playing the drums that people on the internet actually agree with each other about it. He's not talented in a limited and show-offy way, like one of those people that spins pizza dough on Twitch without ever actually cooking it, but in a heartfelt and pure way that sounds dope even to the common philistine who is entirely ignorant as to what the fuck a hemidemisemiquaver even is.

This uncanny talent didn't strike Dayes overnight. Reputable sources suggest that he was tutored by Billy Cobham (Miles Davis, The Mahavishnu Orchestra) as an adolescent, and since about age sixteen he's been leaving evidence of this hard-learned talent on wax. Fourteen years on, following collaborations with his siblings (United Vibrations); Kamaal Williams (Yussef Kamaal); and Tom Misch (Tom Misch and Yussef Dayes); with an impressive catalogue of loosies, videos, and a live album to his name; and having produced songs for Kali Uchis and Kehlani, Dayes has accrued a harem of four-skin fans who have been drooling for a proper solo studio release to announce the dawn of Dayes for many an orbit.

Credentials aside, Black Classical Music is here, and it is looooooooooong. 74 minutes long, and packed with so many details and flourishes that AI won't be able to generate anything of its ilk until quantum computing develops itself. As a matter of fact, while the roots of Yussef Dayes' drumming draw from waters percolated in West Africa, Jamaica, Mauritius, Haiti, and Cuba*, Dayes' rapidfire variations often tap into something reminiscent of the quasi-linear, programmed percussion of jungle, suggesting that he might actually be the drummer that makes AI redundant. Add to that his innate feel for the song — the deep splash of the cymbals in "Rust'' that welcome the addition of the mood-enhancing and bliss-inducing lead melody from the vocals; the many tension-building rolls that dramatically precede reprises throughout; the way he'll start to really hammer away and go full dial-a-fill mode to punch a track's conclusion into its rightful place — and crikeygoshfuckgeewhiz this fulla is really something special isn't he. Don't you just want to put him in your pocket?

You know who else you really want in your pocket? Rocco Goddamn Palladino, man, son of Pino Palladino (bassist of, um, like, every band ever), and one of the most accurate bassists in the game. When he hits those drunk rhythms ("The Light", for instance), by God, have a towel ready, because he makes the oddest shit groove in ways that'll have you sweating buckets as you try to count those 64th note rests. Lil Palladino accompanies Dayes across many of these tracks, heaping tinder on the burning rhythmic heart that passionately pumps throughout Black Classical Music.

Oddly, "Black Classical Music" opens the album with a domineering performance on the keys from Charlie Stacey. This is the only track on the album where a guest really lets loose, and with the skittering backing of Dayes glueing things together Stacey has room to really explore. The following run of tracks is masterful, with "Afro Cubanism" following up the looseness of "Black Classical Music" with a tight, tricky, and cheeky rhythmic foundation, "Rust" bringing a familiar and practised Dayesian feel with the ever-pleasant Tom Misch, "Turquoise Galaxy" breezing through spacey timbres on the back of a laser-precise triplet feel on the hi-hat, and "The Light" feeling like a culmination of this whole movement, foregrounding Dayes' personal connection to his music and his family through the simple but evocative act of including recordings of his daughter in the mix. This 25 minutes of music is well worth the price of entry — get your arse on Bandcamp this fucking second and finance the future of jazz, will ya?

Of course, Black Classical Music keeps going for a hot minute yet, and thus we must ask lofty and holistic questions about What This Album Is beyond a mere collection of tracks. Dayes has discussed the significance of the album's title, which is a term coined by Miles Davis. Black Classical Music, according to Davis, was a term that would free jazz from its era-specific confines, allowing it to be dissected, discussed, and enjoyed for centuries to come. I strongly suspect that this will happen anyway and that the gun was somewhat jumped there, but the idea is as poignant as it is pointed. Dayes, then, would like to expand on this idea, drawing on the past to make music that will last far into the future, and, well, to be fair, you'll certainly find yourself hurtling through large chunks of the present whenever you listen to the whole shebang.

Facetious quips aside, when it comes to LPs, it's less about the length and more about how it's utilised. Following the explosive opening, there are a fair few standout tracks and moments in the likes of "Chasing the Drum" and "Tioga Pass", but the stylings and influences begin to blur together into something of an easy-listening haze, the sequencing becomes a bit stop-start, and momentum flags. Damn. Accordingly, the impetus of the record's title starts to seem more like a coat of paint than a true performance upgrade. It doesn't feel as if we are pulling from jazz's rich and varied canon in order to showcase its many sides and potential futures. Much of the time it feels as if thoughtful composition or creative implementation of studio time and technology is forsaken in the name of capturing that one cool part of a jam jammed previously. In this way, Black Classical Music is perhaps too much like Welcome to the Hills — Yussef Dayes' previously released live compilation — in that its main effective function is conveying what's already evident: if the London Ladz come to town you'd better go and fucking see them, because even the four-count that starts proceedings will probably groove hard enough to stank the joint up good and proper. But as far as timeless record releases go, well, keep your Alans on bruv.

—-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

*https://15questions.net/interview/yussef-dayes-about-body-rhythms-metronomic-time-and-family-ties/page-1/ as detailed here because why the *** else would I know that

https://www.loudandquiet.com/interview/yussef-dayes-ive-always-been-on-a-search-to-study-rhythm/ I may have also referenced this, I can't remember anymore



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user ratings (21)
3.8
excellent


Comments:Add a Comment 
MiloRuggles
Staff Reviewer
September 15th 2023


3025 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Milo's struggles are currently piling on and this album has been a lovely little island of comfort to escape to. Listen to it, tell your friends, love each other etc

Dewinged
Staff Reviewer
September 15th 2023


32020 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Great, great read as always Milo, I heard this one last week. It was way too long, but there were some really cool moments, namely Rust, Woman's Touch and Turquoise Galaxy, also the opener which us WILD.

Digging: Earth and Fire - Earth and Fire

someone
Contributing Reviewer
September 15th 2023


6588 Comments


you didn't have to sell it with your beautiful words there, Professor, I was already sold on the album. cheers

dedex
Staff Reviewer
September 15th 2023


12785 Comments

Album Rating: 3.6 | Sound Off

a blissful way to start a friday morning is to read a Milo rev. great job love!

MiloRuggles
Staff Reviewer
September 15th 2023


3025 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

thanksthanks for your time me ol chums! ye, title track is BANANAS and Rust is One Smoov Daddy

someone
Contributing Reviewer
September 15th 2023


6588 Comments


"This 25 minutes of music is well worth the price of entry — get your arse on Bandcamp this fucking second and finance the future of jazz, will ya?"

who gave you the right to be this good and can you tutor my uni professors on how to actually write?

MiloRuggles
Staff Reviewer
September 15th 2023


3025 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

paging @potsy we are nujazzing please validate this thread with your presence

(ty someone tbh confidence is low in this writeup but i'd love to jump in a glass house with some mortarboards and start slinging stones)

MiloRuggles
Staff Reviewer
September 17th 2023


3025 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Did you hear something?

MiloRuggles
Staff Reviewer
September 17th 2023


3025 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Huh, must've been the wind

Havey
September 17th 2023


12073 Comments


nice drums here, useless music though

MiloRuggles
Staff Reviewer
September 17th 2023


3025 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Harsh assessment but it is an assessment nonetheless and I shall respect it and give it space

Rowan5215
Staff Reviewer
September 17th 2023


47598 Comments


probably not my kinda thing but this review rips brother. hope everything's all okay in milotown

Pajolero
September 17th 2023


1421 Comments


Huge fan of this dude's drumming on Black Focus, but I haven't really kept up with his work since that record. Not sure about the length here, but considering his skill I think this deserves at least a listen.

MiloRuggles
Staff Reviewer
September 17th 2023


3025 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Ty Mr Emeritus sir, things are aight, dw about this lil orange dog

Get in there pajo! Black Focus is definitely the better album but if it's drums you want it is drums you shall get

Pajolero
September 19th 2023


1421 Comments


Aye will do Mr Ruggles sir!

bakmakapa6
October 11th 2023


32 Comments


Although it was excessively long, there were some really fantastic moments. painters near me

mikeroses1
October 16th 2023


1 Comments


Thanks a lot! I love Yussef Dayes as it gives more into the rich tapestry of musical expression. Music's power can of the great use for students. That's why I'd like to share an article that explains how music can help you to write your paper at https://xttrawave.com/can-music-help-you-write-an-essay-listening-to-music-while-studying/ as it demonstrates how music can be a valuable tool in academic studies. Thanks to Dayes, I discovered more musical creativity with a focus and productivity during study sessions.

Havey
October 16th 2023


12073 Comments


thank YOU mike

MiloRuggles
Staff Reviewer
October 17th 2023


3025 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Mike is a goddamned hero

Butkuiss
October 23rd 2023


6948 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Doesn’t capture my imagination or bring much new to the table like Black Focus did but as far as modern south London jazz goes it’s unpretentious, groovy and pleasant, if a little unfocused. I dig the nods to spiritual jazz throughout too.

Digging: Grace Cummings - Ramona



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