Tag Archives: laraaji

The records that made me: Laraaji on Ahmad Jamal, Carole King and Oscar Peterson

Featuring Ahmad Jamal Trio, Simon & Garfunkel and more.

Multi-instrumental sound artist Laraaji joins us to discuss the albums that have impacted him personally and professionally.

Read more: Claire Rousay on Pedro The Lion, Cecil Taylor, Olivia Block and more

“Some of these were piano idols that showed me directions I could go–hot, nasty licks from Oscar Peterson’s piano style, and the coolest Ahmad Jamal’s piano style,” Laraaji explains. “The sessions of Carole King and Crosby, Stills & Nash have opened up the windows for me exploring the voice. They inspired my creative performance, and I’ve listened to them for hours”.

Read on to learn more about Laraaji’s favourite albums.


Ahmad Jamal Trio

At the Pershing: But Not for Me

(Argo)

I don’t remember how I found it, but I found it. I probably bought it new. When I first heard Ahmad Jamal, I was learning the piano at that time and he was one of my idols. The album contains one song called “Poinciana”, which stuck in my head for years with its rhythm.

At that time, I was purchasing many albums and 45s, but that was one of my favourite ones. It drove me to seek him out as a performer and I finally caught up with him in Greenwich Village years later. That album was released in 1958 and I must have gotten my hands on it some time in the ’60s.


The Oscar Peterson Trio

We Get Requests

(Verve Records)

Oscar Peterson was another one of my favourite keyboard artists and his fingers seem to glide over the keys like they’re floating, it’s very virtuosic.

I don’t have this record in my life now, but it was a big treasure when I did have it. I played it on a very small deck, the kind you played 45s on. I found out later on that Peterson was from Canada and that was striking to me. I originally didn’t know where in the world this music was from, but it was odd for me to hear that one of my keyboard players was from Canada.


Crosby, Stills & Nash

Crosby, Stills & Nash

(Atlantic)

I got my hands on this record in maybe 1970. The harmonies on that album, especially on “Marrakech Express” and “Wooden Ships”, were very impressive to me. This album artwork of three fellows sitting on an old couch outside a house just reminded me of the many kinds of jam sessions that I used to do out in the country on the back porch.

It seemed very homemade, very musician-like. The idea of musicians getting together in that type of setting stands to me.


Simon & Garfunkel

Bookends

(Columbia)

Simon & Garfunkel’s “Old Friends” and “Looking For America” were two of my favourite songs. I always remember the cover with the two fellas’ faces. The album itself I must have collected in 1968 or 70. I get very nostalgic when I reflect on it and the brilliance of their voices working together. I wish they had done more albums, but this one really sticks in my memory as one of my favourite all-time records.


Carole King

Tapestry

(Ode Records)

This album’s artwork struck me. This young woman, sitting on a windowsill with a cat, looks very at home. It’s an implied at-home, yummy music situation. I will always remember the visuals and the sensual feel of Tapestry.


Check out Laraaji’s Segue To Infinity, a boxset of his earliest works, out via Numero Group now.

The records that made me: Laraaji on Ahmad Jamal, Carole King and Oscar Peterson

Featuring Ahmad Jamal Trio, Simon & Garfunkel and more.

Multi-instrumental sound artist Laraaji joins us to discuss the albums that have impacted him personally and professionally.

Read more: Claire Rousay on Pedro The Lion, Cecil Taylor, Olivia Block and more

“Some of these were piano idols that showed me directions I could go–hot, nasty licks from Oscar Peterson’s piano style, and the coolest Ahmad Jamal’s piano style,” Laraaji explains. “The sessions of Carole King and Crosby, Stills & Nash have opened up the windows for me exploring the voice. They inspired my creative performance, and I’ve listened to them for hours”.

Read on to learn more about Laraaji’s favourite albums.


Ahmad Jamal Trio

At the Pershing: But Not for Me

(Argo)

I don’t remember how I found it, but I found it. I probably bought it new. When I first heard Ahmad Jamal, I was learning the piano at that time and he was one of my idols. The album contains one song called “Poinciana”, which stuck in my head for years with its rhythm.

At that time, I was purchasing many albums and 45s, but that was one of my favourite ones. It drove me to seek him out as a performer and I finally caught up with him in Greenwich Village years later. That album was released in 1958 and I must have gotten my hands on it some time in the ’60s.


The Oscar Peterson Trio

We Get Requests

(Verve Records)

Oscar Peterson was another one of my favourite keyboard artists and his fingers seem to glide over the keys like they’re floating, it’s very virtuosic.

I don’t have this record in my life now, but it was a big treasure when I did have it. I played it on a very small deck, the kind you played 45s on. I found out later on that Peterson was from Canada and that was striking to me. I originally didn’t know where in the world this music was from, but it was odd for me to hear that one of my keyboard players was from Canada.


Crosby, Stills & Nash

Crosby, Stills & Nash

(Atlantic)

I got my hands on this record in maybe 1970. The harmonies on that album, especially on “Marrakech Express” and “Wooden Ships”, were very impressive to me. This album artwork of three fellows sitting on an old couch outside a house just reminded me of the many kinds of jam sessions that I used to do out in the country on the back porch.

It seemed very homemade, very musician-like. The idea of musicians getting together in that type of setting stands to me.


Simon & Garfunkel

Bookends

(Columbia)

Simon & Garfunkel’s “Old Friends” and “Looking For America” were two of my favourite songs. I always remember the cover with the two fellas’ faces. The album itself I must have collected in 1968 or 70. I get very nostalgic when I reflect on it and the brilliance of their voices working together. I wish they had done more albums, but this one really sticks in my memory as one of my favourite all-time records.


Carole King

Tapestry

(Ode Records)

This album’s artwork struck me. This young woman, sitting on a windowsill with a cat, looks very at home. It’s an implied at-home, yummy music situation. I will always remember the visuals and the sensual feel of Tapestry.


Check out Laraaji’s Segue To Infinity, a boxset of his earliest works, out via Numero Group now.

Numero Group to release Laraaji 4-LP boxset featuring unreleased early material

Featuring his debut album Celestial Vibration and 3 discs of unreleased material.

Numero Group has shared details of Segue To Infinity, a 4-LP box set of Laraaji’s earliest releases.

Segue To Infinity includes Laraaji’s 1978 debut Celestial Vibration, 3 discs of unreleased material, new photos of Laraaji and liner notes by Living Colour guitarist Vernon Reid. A college student discovered the previously unreleased material after purchasing storage locker acetates on eBay that held Laraaji’s birth name, Edward Larry Gordon. 

Hear “Ocean”, one of the new songs taken from the collection, below.

You can pre-order the boxset now ahead of its February 10 release date.

Tracklist:

Disc A (Celestial Vibration)
1. Bethlehem
2. All Prevading

Disc 2 (Edward Larry Gordon recordings)
1. Ocean
2. Koto

Disc 3 (Edward Larry Gordon recordings)
1. Kalimba 1
2. Segue To Infinity

Disc 4 (Edward Larry Gordon recordings)
1. Kalimba 2
2. Kalimba 4

Ryuichi Sakamoto, Suzanne Ciani, Laraaji feature on new Coldcut ambient compilation

Plus Steve Roach, Obay Alsharani, Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith, Skee Mask, Helena Hauff, Nailah Hunter, and Julianna Barwick.

Coldcut are releasing a new compilation of ambient music, called @0, via Ahead Of Our Time this November.

Watch next: Suzanne Ciani — A Masterclass in Modular Synthesis

@0 features music from Ryuichi Sakamoto, Julianna Barwick, Obay Alsharani, Nailah Hunter, Steve Roach, Mira Calix, Skee Mask, Sigur Rós, Laraaji, and more.

@0 refers to that liminal state experienced many times where my mental and emotional stability was not solid and it felt like teetering on a zero axis about to fall into depression, or more rarely, mania,” shares Coldcut’s Matt Black.

“I found that ambient music, by making no psychic demands, often opened some space and with its soft fascination, subtly raised the energy, helping to avoid that downward spiral and navigate slowly up and out.”

Ninja Tune will be donating its share of profits to the following charities: CALM, Mind, and Black Minds Matter.

Pre-order @0 here in advance of its 19th November release, check out the artwork and tracklist below.

Tracklist:

1. Ryuichi Sakamoto – Aqua (from Playing Piano for the Isolated)
2. Double Cushion – For Ignatz Karmelito
3. Julianna Barwick – Star Ray
4. ANNA – Another Dream
5. Obay Alsharani – Dream Within a Dream
6. Daniel Pemberton & FSOL – Behind the Eyes
7. NDiPA X Flex Machina feat. Sandeep Mishra – Bandra Tanpura
8. ill-esha – Sonata of Solitude
9. Specimens – Concrète Dreams
10. Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith – Mt Baker
11. Skee Mask – CG Drip
12. Helena Hauff – Thalassa
13. Rovo & System 7 – Unseen Onsen (Translucent Mix)
14. Coldcut – The Fire Burns Out
15. Sigur Rós – Rembihnútur (Liminal re-work by Paul Corley)
16. Imogen Heap – The Happy Song (Coldcut Remix)
17. Ned Scott (The Egg) – Patchwork
18. Noodreem – The Healing Light of Sound
19. Suzanne Ciani – Morning Spring
20. James Heather – And She Came Home (Strings Version)
21. Nailah Hunter – Sadko
22. David Wenngren – Pianoise
23. A Winged Victory for the Sullen – Beethoven 250
24. Steve Roach – The Drift Home
25. Laraaji – Illusion of Time
26. Yak Herder – Otaku Reverse
27. Mira Calix – danaïdes
28. FRKTL – Rhododendron Forest Rescue
29. Irresistible Force X Coldcut – Autumn Leaves Return
30. Coldcut X Mixmaster Morris – @0 Mix


Album artwork by Fefe Talevara.

Laraaji unveils new album, Moon Piano

Melancholy piano improvisations recorded in a working church.

Ambient master Laraaji is releasing the second album in a trilogy of improvised piano releases, titled Moon Piano, via All Saints Records this October.

Read more: Laraaji on Eno, drugs and healing music

Laraaji recorded Moon Piano live in a Brooklyn church, with the sounds of both the everyday happenings of the church and New York itself finding their way into the album.

Designed as a companion piece to his Sun Piano album, which was taken from the same session, Moon Piano sees Laraaji crafting more sombre, melancholy improvisations.

He presents the album as a “contemplative sound painting, embracing quiet tranquil unfolding of nurturing reflection”.

Head here to pre-order a copy in advance of Moon Piano’s 9th October release, check out the artwork and tracklist below.

Tracklist:

1. Prana Light
2. Stillness
3. Lightly
4. Quiet Journey
5. Through This Moment
6. Bathed In A Glow
7. Pentatonic Smile
8. Feeling Lovely
9. Trance Gaze Pt 1
10. Trance Gaze Pt 2

Photo by: Daniel Oduntan