Showing posts with label Sahra Indio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sahra Indio. Show all posts

Thursday, September 20, 2012

'Making Space': A review of "The Tru I" by Sahra Indio

Constantly in motion. I have what I like to call a few running 'projects' in terms of who I listen to and who I make a point to pay attention to and make room for on my players when they have something new. These are artists who, for the most part, I haven't arrived at a prevailing judgment of what exactly I think of them and how much of a fan I'm going to be in their cases and, wonderfully, I think it's probably the same case for almost any fan of music who makes a point to listen to a wide variety of different voices. Of course you have your absolute favourites and favourites of varying degrees who you constantly check for the work of, but you're also always looking for new individuals to add to that list as well. Currently for me, I'm thinking of artists such as Eljai, someone like Ras Indio (both of whom, coincidentally, are from out of Belize), Avaran (if he can stay active) and a few others who, for one reason or another, have managed to pop up on my radars and I'm well interested in making more room for them should they continue making fantastic music. On top of that, in the scope of just the time spent on this blog, I can also point to examples such as, most notably, the incomparable Sara Lugo and Toussaint, who have been former 'projects' of mine who have ascended to the platform of really being individuals for whom I will GLADLY go out of my way to listen to anytime they bring something new. Another very interesting and colourful entry on whom we checked in initially (just a couple of years back was the very refreshing veteran, Sahra Indio from out of Hawaii. Our most informal formal 'greeting' with the vocalist came in the form of an album which I believe was her third set, the very strong "Change", which came via the camp of one of the most talented people in Reggae music, the legendary Tuff Lion. That latter part of that comment is more than enough to get my attention and to hold it for some time actually, but I'm pretty sure that if there were absolutely nothing else, two years later I wouldn't at all be interested in a followup.

"Change" [2007]
But clearly I am. What I heard on the "Change" album was someone who very much brought in a Jazzified blend of Reggae music and, retrospectively, it was a trait with which she didn't seemed to have programmed or over-developed or anything at all. Indio seemed to have just started making music and what you heard was what came out and so many times we hear artists intentionally going to mix certain things and certain styles and while that is exactly what she did, it did not seem to my ears that Sahra Indio had intentionally set out to make that style - which proved to be positively hypnotic. Again, it is just what her style happened to be. Also very fascinating was Indio's voice. I made a comparison back then that she sounded a bit like international superstar, Sade, which was another quality which caught my ear but, again, it wouldn't have been enough on its own. Sahra Indio had considerable talents as well. 

"Marijuana Music" EP [2010]
So, while it may have taken quite awhile (and it did, "Change" actually released back in 2007), Sahra Indio, "The Original Bush Mama" & "Jah's Jewel", now returns with a brand new album, "The Tru I". Indio originally comes from out of Philadelphia, but she's very much made Hawaii her physical and musical home. And as we talked about in the review for the last album, and several other times over the course of the past couple of years or so, Hawaii was and remains a hotbed of Reggae music and since then has even produced a bonafide potential star in the form of J-Boog. Sahra Indio hasn't exactly been absent in recent times either, she's popped up in the last two years as well. Most notably there was the EP, "Marijuana Music", from 2010. That five tune set focused on… well I'm sure you know what it focused on and even featured Indio on its cover showcasing her Marijuana Music Award. I don't know who many people heard that set, although it did contain a tune which was very popular I believe (more on that later, because it's also on this album), but it stood out for me, again, really just based on Indio's presentation of her music and as I go through it now, I go in the familiar direction of really just thinking of how much PASSION she has fro the music she sings. It is often typical when you find someone who ends up singing Reggae and doesn't come at all through some of the more stereotypical channels through which the music generally finds her stars, that you encounter people who just have a great deal of desire and LOVE for the music and those are qualities, even during some of her more laid back moments, which really show themselves well in Indio's case. So hopefully, by the time we're finished with "The Tru I", we'll be singing the same tune again. Besides that EP, Sahra Indio also dropped, just back in January of this year, what I believe is the first single from this album, 'Humanity'. Although I'm almost certain I remember seeing it, I didn't make the connection that it was probably a bit of an omen of things to come, but with that being said, I am DAMN please to have a new album from Sahra Indio and was well looking forward to diving in once again. And I'm taking you with me! Let's go!

Another nice point to the artist's music (as if she needed something else) (and she didn't), is her wonderful way of writing - a distinction which, most fortunately has manage to survive to the new album. She writes song s which are actually about some topic and she sticks to those topics. That won't sound like anything special, but as someone who has done more than a few of these, trust me when I say it's quite rare. She also has this very 'open-ended' way of writing which very much leaves spaces, and even entire tunes at times, really open for the listener's own interpretation and if you know me at all, I LOOOOOOOOOVE to interpret! My first opportunity to do that within the brand new album from Sahra Indio, "The Tru I", comes on the opener and my second favourite selection on this album, 'Big Fish'. When I first heard this tune I kind of didn't really know what to make of it (fitting), but where I am with it now is that Indio is speaking not necessarily to the leaders of the world, but to the leaders of the future. She says something very, very interesting: 

"Find a higher state of giving" 

And she's definitely projecting the message broadly and outward and not necessarily to any one specific person or group of people, directly. If I'm actually correct in that, that makes 'Big Fish' an incredibly unique tune and, even if your construal is different from mine, I still think that it is a big tune and a lovely way to get started. Next in is 'Finish Line' which is a bit more straight forward as here we find Indio really just speaking about motivating and inspiring the masses to finish what you started and stay the course even though the course, itself, may be dwindling and decaying. The third tune on "The Tru I" is the best song on the album to my opinion, the aforementioned (and hopefully pictured) previous single, 'Humanity'. 

"Was there ever a time we lived in peace?
Did we ever dwell on this earth in harmony?
Are there facts?
Are there clues?
Does anybody know?
Before dynasties recorded histories, does anybody know?
Do we allow the mystery to be?
Is this romantic fantasy?
Someone tell me where I can go!

Across seas and continents -
I'll keep searching for the evidence
A time of innocence, a time of patience -
A time when people weren't forsaken

In isolation and small bands, did we cooperate, did we overstand?
We check our lineage, we're all relatives and it should be a privilege to let it show
All the cave-drawings, all the Petri glyphs - 
Signs that a better life did exist
And did we use more of our intelligence?
I want to know!"

Indio, essentially, wants to know what went wrong, if we're under the thinking that society was once this very peaceful and still functioning unit that one day, or one time, suddenly became violent. She goes about this is a most unusual, yet entirely refreshing, manner - through taking the prehistoric route. MAGICAL tune!

'Humanity' - Digital Single [2012]
The next two songs, in my opinion, really continue the line of pieces from the head of "The Tru I" which are just unquestionably good songs. 'Testify' is an unfortunately rare type of selection because it's actually a female artist, very straight forward, just singing a song about her husband. Again, that's not something which sounds very rare, but I can't think of a similar piece without some HEAVY consideration (and no, 'Jim Screechie' does not apply). So biggup Sahra Indio for obviously being in love. And then there is 'Right Fight' ["some dressed to die, wearing plastic rims, others dressed to die in the skin they live in"] which is a stirring social commentary and the first, so directly, of its kind on the album. This tune also kind of brings in a bit more fire and an edge for the album, which is a very good thing in this case. A similar tune to that one would be the later piece, 'Enuff'.

"We've had enough
We've had enough, can't take no more
Too many hungry babies
Too many hopelessly poor
We've had enough
We've had enough, can't take no more
The masses are gathering
It's a global uproar

We're at the point - we're not giving in
With sticks and stones, we face opposition
No mask with tear gas or ammunition
Still we must holdfast to our position
We rise against abusive power
To attain freedom, we'll never cower
We'll sacrifice in the final hour
Coldhearted leaders must be devoured"

It's another kind of biting social commentary to my ears which, as you take in the entire album, is an aspect of it which you would have almost NEEDED. A completely kind of 'counter-punching' album would have lessened the point to my ears, you've got to go on the offensive at least once or twice and that's what you hear on 'Enuff' and 'Right Fight', respectively. Also definitely take a listen to 'I'm Not The Only One', which doesn't unerringly follow the same path as the previously mentioned pair, but isn't a huge deviation from them either. I really like how this one is set-up as Indio, basically, uses herself as a metaphor or a microcosm of struggling and oppressed society. She does step out of 'herself at times in the song, but only to even make a grander point. It is EASILY one of the finest arranged compositions you'll find here and one which is not to be missed. 

Of course, Indio is sure to touch on what is one her favourite topics of discourse on "The Tru I" and that comes through over the course of another very similar pair of tracks. The very 'matter-of-fact' 'Pro Marijuana' doesn't leave very much room for elucidation, but you wouldn't have had to think about that anyway in her case (remember the award). 

"I'm pro-marijuana 
More than a weed to get you higher
Through history - cannabis shaped destiny
Pro marijuana
More than a weed to catch a fire
For centuries - hemp was used extensively 

Laws don't make any sense you see
It's a global conspiracy 
Why hold down this magic weed?
It produces everything we need
Throughout Asia and the Middle East -
Hemp was man's first industry 
From ten-thousand years BC
Pick up the book, check the history" 

The piece which precedes it on the album, however, does require a bit more explanation. 'Roger Dat' is a song Sahra Indio does in tribute to Roger Christie who is a currently incarcerated Hawaiian minister and very large proponent of marijuana awaiting trial for. I wasn't at all very educated about Christie and I imagine that will be the case with many who hear this song which was, at least presumably, written in part to bring a global level of awareness and attention to his case which is OBVIOUSLY something very important to Indio. 

The eccentric side of "The Tru I" reveals itself during the album's final stages and we get some very TEXTURED efforts from Sahra Indio. Along with a SWEET dubbed out version of 'I'm Not The Only One', there's a very… different tune like 'DNA', which actually also appears on "Kinda Vol. 4" from "Dread & Alive" (where Indio has become a semi-regular contributor). I guess this may be what you call Dubstep (forgive me if it isn't, I know nothing about Dubstep), which would explain why I STILL don't know what to make of it. Lyrically, although it does kind of 'mind the moment' of the vibes of the song, it's pretty strong, but it's wrapped up within one very dark package musically on the easy choice for the album's changeup. There's also the very skeletal 'Natural Living' which is kind of an aura type of song. It's like a Dub with more vocals than usual, but the vocals are almost certainly just a kind of freestyle and the song makes its way, whether you like it ultimately or not, on the mood that it creates. It's a very interesting creation and one which I expect will generate a lot of response (again, on both sides). And finally, as I alluded to, we get a track which was present on the "Marijuana Music" EP, 'At The Awa Bar', in an acoustic version. No problem at all with this song and I believe it's one of the artist's most popular pieces (she also made a video for it) to date and its presence on this album comes to no surprise.  

Sahra Indio

Overall, I have a have a whole heap of prevailing thoughts on "The Tru I" album. The smallest of which certainly is not the fact that I hear this one as being a bit more accessible than its predecessor, musically. Tuff Lion is not someone you're going to be listening to very much if you aren't a very heavy fan of Reggae music and you may not even know who he is if you don't fit into that group (fortunately you do and that's no concern of yours and biggup the Lion who has a GORGEOUS new single running now - 'I Want the World To Know'), but this time around what you have is a less Reggae-centric type of a project, but it's still one which can be appreciated by fans who are, themselves, more Reggae-centric - like me and probably You. I'm also thinking that I kind of want to hear Sahra Indio doing a combination. She has such a nice and 'flexible' style that you would think that she very well make a nice voice alongside pretty much anyone and in the future I hope she goes more in that direction just to change things up. As it stands, however, "The Tru I" is an album which doesn't need very much help at all. It well lives up to expectations and it also manages to continue the surge began (at least) on the "Change" album. I don't know what the next step is and I hope I don't have to wait until 2017 to hear it, but as of 2012, she's no longer a project listen for me. Of Sahra Indio? I am a fan. Well done.
Rated: 4/5
Olumeye Records
2012
CD + Digital

Review #387

Friday, March 26, 2010

The Vault Reviews: Change by Sahra Indio

With such a wonderfully established foundation in the area, I cannot even tell you how many times I sit down to write these things and find that my literary ‘travels’ take me to the west coast of the US, particularly California. It has become a rather nice and anticipated stop and even homebase for many of the artists (and perhaps more importantly, the labels) about which I write and definitely find myself enjoying more times than not. The area has shown quite the interest in this wonderful music called Reggae and I taking that interest, it definitely has managed to put in and create just as much on its own also. And when you take that into consideration in looking at perhaps other Reggae hotbeds and communities in the States, CONSISTENTLY you probably put California at the top. However, it by no means is alone. Of course there’s New York, which traditionally has far more of an interest in Dancehall to my knowledge and there’re places like Boston, Miami, Florida, Virginia and even Atlanta. Still, as usual, a seemingly increasingly VERY interesting and crucial area for Reggae music in the US, remains quite forgotten - Hawaii. I don’t know very much about the historical relevance of Reggae in Hawaii and I may not even be too well up on the situation at this very moment (even after having done research for the sake of this review), but do know is the remarkable number of times I’ve received emails from promoters (I literally just got one right now) who’re holding shows in Hawaii with big named artists. Also, on my own, I’ve noticed quite a few big named artists on tour who seem to make sure to make a random stop in Hawaii and are sure to do so (even though it may be completely out of the way), which to me means that definitely the vibes are high in that area. I had it in my mind already before writing this review that names like Rob Symeonn and Rankin’ Scroo had nice followings in the ‘Aloha State’ (and apparently Symeonn has even recorded an album and upon further viewing I see more and more (very fittingly) artists from out of the Virgin Islands also holding court in Hawaii also. And just today I received a notice that Junior Reid soon had a show approaching in Maui and he follows artists like Kymani Marley that I’ve noticed being promoted for performances there also. Now, with all of that being said, of course what remains is to take a look at an actual artist from Hawaii who has big vibes and I think that I may have found just the appropriate individual.

Of course Sahra Indio’s name wouldn’t be the first, but definitely to my fault, her music is the first from a Hawaiian based artist that I’ve scrutinized to the point of writing a review for (after. . . I don’t know maybe nearly 800 reviews at this point altogether). I’ve certainly been aware of artists like the very strong Ooklah The Moc, The Lambsbread (who have some of the most passionate fans on the internet out of ANYONE), and definitely most recently, potential superstar (and CUTIE) Irie Love from out of the Morgan Heritage camp, but I’ve never managed to review any of their work, but I’m quite glad that I’ve started with Sahra Indio for various reasons. First of all, there’s Indio herself. She has a VERY interesting and SOOTHING style and I hate to fall into allegiance with almost hilarious stereotypes and clichés, but when I first heard her, I said to myself that she sounded like a Reggae version of international superstar musician Sade (and of course the subsequent research that I found on her had that name IMMEDIATELY present in it). It is certainly fitting because she has this wonderful ‘soulfully airy’ tone to her voice which just reaches the listener in places that most artists don’t. Indio also has this very nice way of presenting her music which I think is due to her excellent writing and as I tend to say, it’s always so nice when every song is actually ABOUT SOMETHING, which is what seems to occur in the vast majority (I.e. all) of Sahra Indio’s music to my experience. Now I wasn’t able (yet) to catch Good’s Gonna Happen, her debut album back from 2002, but in 2007, she released her sophomore born set, Change and did so through the most wonderfully familiar of channels. The album comes via a producer who I (fortunately) seem to be ‘running into’ quite a bit these days, the famed VI Reggae musical wizard, Tuff Lion. Perhaps it is even more a testament to the strength of the Hawaiian scene that this link even managed to take place (and I’m going to assume that it was through the Lion’s traveling to the area to play that the connection between he and Sahra Indio was made) and fortunately, although most certainly well in demand at that point, Tuff Lion saw something so worth it in vibing with Indio that Change became the result of said link. Now, if all you know about Sahra Indio’s music is what I’ve told you thus far, you should be well equipped to determine that, at least on paper, Tuff Lion working with such an artist is a potentially WONDERFUL thing (you just think about that - Sade produced by Tuff Lion and imagine the potential and possibilities) and significant as well, given the specificity of the actual album. Unsurprisingly, despite my dearth of knowledge about and experience with Sahra Indio and her music, the union proves quite successful from a musical standpoint although apparently it wasn’t very successful in the commercial sense and while I do remember seeing the cover for this album being quite prevalent a year or two back, I don’t think that many people had very much of a reaction to it, but I’m going to assume (strictly based on the quality of the project) that it MUST’VE been a pretty big deal on the Hawaiian scene when it dropped. And hopefully that’s the case, because as it unfolds, Change DEFINITELY proves to be one of the most interesting releases I’ve come across in a long time.

Sahra Indio was actually born in Philadelphia (another pretty nice place for Reggae I believe) and born into a very musical family at that. So, you can well imagine that she sounds even more ‘comfortable’ than the levels provided by her voice and delivery. The first example of her comfort levels evident on Sahra Indio’s vibrant sophomore effort Change is also one of the album’s finest efforts to my opinion, ‘Remedy’. This tune is about as vast and ‘tempting’ as it gets for me in terms of discussing - Indio finds herself examining many different aspects of society and just how terrible they’ve grown to be and in looking for an alternative to the madness, she offers Reggae and culture themselves! It’s a very powerful tune to say the least (and I definitely agree with her findings) and on top of that, it’s also an excellent way to open an album. Big tune! The next selection here, ‘Precious’, is also quite vast, but it’s not one of my favourites here. The tune is somewhat mechanical and ‘rigid’ (and I think it’s actually by design), but it’s also one of the most lyrically powerful tunes on the album also (“our constitution isn’t on a piece of paper, it’s in our blood, it’s in our DNA”). So, if you don’t find yourself completely captivated by what you’re hearing, definitely don’t just skip through the tune, because the point Indio goes on to make is surely the main attraction to this one. The next tune may not have the lyrical substance of ‘Precious’ (then again, it just may), but it definitely doesn’t come through as mechanical or rigid. Instead, ‘Reggae On The Farm’ is sonically downright delightful and charming at times having the kind of ‘hula Reggae’ one might associate with Hawaii and although I did find better tunes on Change (including the opener and the tune which immediately follows ‘Reggae On The Farm’), I couldn’t find one which was more pleasing to the ears. The tune also apparently pleased more than my ears as it won Indio some sort of American Hemp award in 2007 (and the physical album comes complete with a sticker on the cover representing just that) and I do so love hearing Tuff Lion in the backing adding wonderful various things (you literally have to hear them to understand) as well as adding to the well vibrant chorus for the tune. All in all, a very nice opening for an album which subsequently does not let down on it.

I had such an interesting (fitting) time trying to figure out what my absolute favourite tune on Change was before ultimately deciding on the MASSIVE ‘Jah Fire’. The first time I heard this song, I don’t know if I was going through an emotional moment or what, but I literally teared up a bit and I’m not quite sure why. Having listened to it several (dozen) times since, I’ve been unable to reacquire that particular feeling (which is so nice because perhaps that meant that Sahra Indio’s wish that “Jah fire burn out our tears” has actually occurred for me), but I LOVE this song, I really do. It has that characteristically crisp Tuff Lion sound to it and of course the vibes and the message are well powerful as well.

Speaking of powerful messages, there were a few in particular throughout this album which kind of caught me nicely for one reason or another, be it Indio’s approach to them or the fact that those topics in general are very un(der)explored in Reggae music to my knowledge. Para ejemplo, check the tune ‘Good Bredren’. This one (obviously) is a tune for the guys who get things right and to those who aren’t getting things too right, but may not be very far from doing so. So many times we hear tunes (by both male and female artists) which analyze the absence of these upstanding gentlemen, but Sahra Indio gives them (US) credit and don’t you just LOVE this line:

“To the upright men in their community - 
I see them meditating doing good deeds daily 
Fathering their babies, being leaders in their house and family
What the youths dem is what they strive to achieve 
THE TUFFEST LIONS PRODUCE THE STRONGEST SEEDS”

Staying on that sentiment (of very interesting messages), there’s also the tune ‘Get To It’, which goes on a vibes of physical health, particularly in women. This is another rarely (shockingly) identified message in Reggae, as we’re primarily used to dealing with spiritual and mental health, but Sahra Indio essentially offers the tune as a bit of workout music to the ladies, telling them many thing essential for keeping one’s body in shape (“in order to stay young, you‘ve got to swim, bike and run“) (even dropping a mention of ‘plus sized fashion’ early in the tune). I absolutely love TANGIBLE messages like that and the tune is easily one of the finest on Change altogether. And there’s also ‘Hey Sista’, later on in the album on which Indio does actually deal with more of spiritual health of women (and does it in a very clever metaphorical way, “hey sista what you cooking? Are you baking any love today?”). She also goes on to deal with the entire family structure as well, on the tune ‘Man & Woman’ and that song is OUTSTANDING! ‘Mature’, ‘Smart’, ‘Intelligent’, ‘Powerful’, call it all of those things because what happens there is Sahra Indio, rather ‘matter of factly’ just describes the way things should be happening in a household in her opinion (doing a pretty good job of doing it in my opinion also). And she doesn’t go after anyone stronger or more harshly than anyone else, giving everyone equal treatment (“what kind of legacy are we leaving if Mama and Daddy are always cheating?”) (Oh, and the song kind of reminds me somewhat of ‘I Understand‘ by Anthony B from the Black Star album). And speaking of intelligent, I should probably also mention ‘Look To The East’ which is a bit vaguer, ostensibly, than the others mentioned here, but if you can decipher it, it rolls through just as strong. The tune speaks on the effect of the sun on daily life and Indio’s stressing of its importance. What I found most interesting here (as someone who has battled mental illness in his life) (not to tell you too much of my business), is when she mentions, a few times, the sun’s effect on Serotonin in the body and that alone definitely shows that she’s well up on the matter of this tune and it is very powerful, as you might imagine.

The balance of Change also features some more interesting material, perhaps ostensibly, the most interesting on the album (as far as being interesting for the sake (again, ostensibly) of being interesting). The least dynamic of these four is probably ‘Give It Up’. I use that word ‘dynamic’ hesitatingly because when you drop in on this tune, you kind of run into a riddim which is food for the soul and is an excellent backdrop for Indio when she does come through on what is essentially a social commentary and an excellent one at that. You also have the kind of ’thumping’ and mentally vast album title track which finds Sahra Indio (somewhat reminiscent of Danny I on the title track for his album Unchangeable a few years back) espousing on the nature of CHANGE. What I take away from this tune which could be taken in a hundred different directions I believe, is that Indio is basically using the tune as an inspiration type of vibes. She never goes into the expected route of talking about really drastic situations and horrors of life and she kind of keeps it ’open’ for the most part, but earlier in the tune she says, “Change is a verb, that’s an action word. Be the change that you want to see in this world”, which to me implies that what she’s saying is if you have something in your life that you aren’t liking, then YOU are to change it. I could spend hours examining this one surely, but just trust me that it’s one of the best tunes on the album named after it. Then there’s ’Jah’s Jewel’, which is a title track of a different type because the song’s title is actually a nickname of sorts for Sahra Indio. I’m not too fond of the substance of this tune, but it sounds so nice with a very ‘jazzy’ type of vibes and of course the riddim is nearly divine. And lastly there’s ‘Nosotros’ [Spanish for ‘We’], which closes out the Change album. I love the kind of laid back (even more than usual) type of vibes and I think whoever was my last Spanish instructor may be happy that I’ve retained enough of what I was taught to make out the chorus which I THINK says, “We are children of God”, or something like such. To my ears, this tune is on a unifying vibes and although it probably isn’t one of my favourites here, it’s still a powerful piece definitely. There’s also a very nice ‘hitch’ to the tune which occurs about halfway through it, but I’ll leave that to you to discover.

Overall, while I most certainly am recommending that you pick up a copy of Sahra Indio’s album Change, I’m doing so with a caveat and a bigger one than usual I think. Almost ANYTIME you’re dealing with something which is manned by the Tuff Lion, I’m going to say something along the lines of ‘if you’re an older and more established fan of Reggae music, then you’re likely to enjoy it more than if this if your first time out’ and while I am going to say that about this album, I have to stress it even greater in this case I feel. Sahra Indio definitely has Jazz inclinations in her brand of Reggae music and I think that it’s even more likely that an ‘older’ fan of Reggae will be able to appreciate them and actually see how they ADD to her style. And I’ll also say that (even though I think it’s unlikely that such a person is reading this) if you just happen to be a big fan of Jazz music and you’re looking for an ‘entry point’ into Reggae music, that you won’t find more stellar opportunities than Change. Again, while I’m by no means an expert on the Hawaiian Reggae scene, if they’re able to produce an artist like Sahra Indio (and they are), then perhaps I need to become one. With the kind of perception that exists of the area, I can’t think of another place in the world which would seemingly be more inclined to have top notch vibes like this. A closer examination, my first, reveals that is EXACTLY the case. Very well done.

Rated 4.25/5
Olumeye Records/Outpost Music Workshop
2007