Kahil El’Zabar’s Ethnic Heritage Ensemble ’Compared to What’
Kahil El’Zabar’s Ethnic Heritage Ensemble is celebrating 50 Years of their Legacy and Unwavering Contribution to Great Black Music with a new album, ’Open Me, A Higher Consciousness of Sound and Spirit’, Out March 8th On Spiritmuse Records.
This is the first single for the album: ’Compared to What’.
Open Me is a joyous honoring of portent new directions of the Ethnic Heritage Ensemble; it’s a visionary journey into deep roots and future routes, channeling traditions old and new. It mixes El’Zabar’s original compositions with timeless classics by Miles Davis, McCoy Tyner, and Eugene McDaniels. Thus, the Ethnic Heritage Ensemble continues affirming their indelible, half-century presence within the continuum of Great Black Music.
The Ethnic Heritage Ensemble (EHE) constantly shifts gears and tempos in a jazz-blues continuum, in perpetual spontaneity, and “Compared To What” is a powerful statement on their incomparable sound. It’s a deeply funky read of Eugene McDaniel’s eternal protest song first recorded by Robert Flack, and later, Les McCann and Eddie Harris. Featuring vocals and kalimba by El’Zabar, backed by bassist Alex Harding, the EHE’s “Compared To What” is 8 minutes of contemplative, dynamic drums combined with El’Zabar’s incredible vocals, with horn and string stabs bringing the listener to a higher consciousness state.
“‘Compared To What’ was my father, Clifton Blackburn Sr’s favorite tune,” says El’Zabar. “On Saturdays he would play jazz all day, and later in the evening, he would scat, sing rhythms, and then he and I would improvise together on the grooves that he taught me. It was all ‘Compared to What.’”
Open Me, El’Zabar’s sixth collaboration with Spiritmuse in five years, marks another entry in a run of critically acclaimed recordings that stretch back to the first EHE recording in 1981. The storied multi-percussionist, composer, fashion designer, and former Chair of the Association of Creative Musicians (AACM) is in what might be the most productive form of his career, and now in his seventies, shows no signs of slowing down. Few creative music units can boast such longevity, and fewer still are touring as energetically and recording with the verve of the Ethnic Heritage Ensemble.
The EHE was founded by El’Zabar in 1974 originally as a quintet, but was soon paired down to its classic form — a trio, featuring El’Zabar on multi-percussion and voice, plus two horns. It was an unusual format, even by the standards of the outward-bound musicians of the AACM: “Some people literally laughed at our unorthodox instrumentation and approach. We were considered even stranger than most AACM bands at the time. I knew in my heart though that that this band had legs, and that my concept was based on logic as it pertains to the history of Great Black Music, i.e. a strong rhythmic foundation, innovative harmonics and counterpoint, well-balanced interplay and cacophony amongst the players, strong individual soloist, highly developed and studied ensemble dynamics, an in-depth grasp of music history, originality, fearlessness, and deep spirituality.”
With El’Zabar at the center, the band’s line-up has always been open to changes, and over the years the EHE has welcomed dozens of revered musicians including Light Henry Huff, Kalaparusha Maurice Macintyre, Joseph Bowie, Hamiett Bluiett, and Craig Harris. The current line-up has been consolidated over two decades — trumpeter Corey Wilkes entered the circle twenty years ago, while baritone sax player Alex Harding joined seven years ago, after having played with El’Zabar since the early 2000s in groups such as Joseph Bowie’s Defunkt.
For Open Me, El’Zabar has chosen to push the sound of the EHE in a new direction by adding string instruments — cello, played by Ishmael Ali, and violin/viola played by James Sanders. The addition of strings opens new textural resonances and timbral dimensions in the Ensemble’s sound, linking the work to the tradition of improvising violin and cello from Ray Nance to Billy Bang, Leroy Jenkins, and Abdul Wadud.
As a milestone anniversary celebration and a statement of future intent, Open Me effortlessly carries El’Zabar’s healing vision of Higher Consciousness of Sound and Spirit.
ETHNIC HERITAGE ENSEMBLE
Kahil El’Zabar - multi-percussion, voice
Corey Wilkes - trumpet, percussion
Alex Harding - baritone sax
Featuring:
James Sanders - violin, viola
Ishmael Ali - cello
Recorded in Soundmine Studios, Chicago in July 2023
Recorded and Mixed by Dennis Tousana
Mastered and Cut by Frank Merritt at The Carvery, London
Videography by Christopher Andrew, Stoptime Live
Shot by Alex Brescanu and Christopher Andrew
Album Art Direction by Nep Sidhu
Featuring Nep Sidhu’s tapestry ‘The Sound Sculpture Forms & Knowledge of Kahil El’Zabar’
Tapestry photo by Without Shape Without Form
Spiritmuse Records
Music for the Spirit
3 views
265
56
6 months ago 00:08:08 1
Ethnic Heritage Ensemble_Degi Degi_
6 months ago 00:04:57 1
Ethnic Heritage Ensemble_Holy Man_
6 months ago 00:08:28 3
Kahil El’Zabar’s Ethnic Heritage Ensemble ’Compared to What’
6 months ago 00:08:19 2
Ethnic Heritage Ensemble_Compared to What_
9 months ago 01:13:40 1
Kahil El Zabar Ritual Trio feat. Pharoah Sanders-Chicago JF
1 year ago 00:08:19 1
Brother Malcolm
1 year ago 00:10:12 1
Conversations 2; The Dialogue
1 year ago 00:09:28 1
Whenever I Think Of You
1 year ago 01:17:45 1
The Kahil El’Zabar Quartet – A Time For Healing (2022 - Album)
2 years ago 00:10:58 10
Ethnic Heritage Ensemble “Speed of Light“
2 years ago 01:56:46 2
Art Ensemble of Chicago & Guests - 1976-11-28, The Kitchen, New York, NY
2 years ago 00:34:10 16
Kahil El’Zabar & Osunlade | Boiler Room: Streaming from Isolation with Night Dreamer & Worldwide FM
3 years ago 00:55:57 1
Hamiet Bluiett - Bluiett Baritone Nation - 2000-11-25,Hothouse, Chicago, IL