642623801727
642623801710

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Fred Moten & Brandon Lopez

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Format: CD

Cat No: TAO17

PRE-ORDER: This item will be shipped with the aim to deliver on release day.

PRE-ORDER: This item will be shipped with the aim to deliver on release day.

Release Date:  11 April 2025

Label:  Tao Forms

Packaging Type:  Digipak

No of Units:  1

Barcode:  642623801727

Genres:  Spoken Word  Jazz  

Release Date:  11 April 2025

Label:  Tao Forms

Packaging Type:  Slip Sleeve (CD or Vinyl)

No of Units:  1

Barcode:  642623801710

Genres:  Spoken Word  Jazz  

  • Description

    The work of each of these powerfully creative & exceptionally perceptive individuals - poet and scholar Fred Moten and jazz bassist Brandon Lopez - concerns itself with how one might navigate the ascending reign of long-institutionalised madness while simultaneously keeping humanity and sanity intact.

    The synergistic mesh of these two voices in Duo is here presented on record for the first time, following two acclaimed works on the Reading Group label in trio with Gerald Cleaver.

    Inimitable poet, cultural theorist, author, 2020 MacArthur Fellow, Fred Moten creates new conceptual spaces that accommodate emergent forms of Black cultural production, aesthetics, and social life. Moten is a professor of performance studies and comparative literature at New York University concerned with social movement, aesthetic experiment, and Black study. He is also a United States Artists Rockefeller Fellow and was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

    Puerto Rican-American bassist Brandon Lopez is the son of a gravedigger who himself put time in doing the same, developing muscles that serve him well in his thorough command of the upright bass. On moving to NYC, Lopez made himself indispensable within numerous realms of creative music. As the Cleveland Review of Books noted, "This is virtuosity as vocabulary, a total command of texture, subtlety, and a depth that can be reached into."

    On their previous work in trio with Gerald Cleaver:

    "Best Jazz Albums of 2022: Moten is after nothing less than a full interrogation of the ways Black systems of knowledge have been strip-mined and cast aside, and yet have regrown." - New York Times

    "8.0 - A conceptually rich, politically weighty album that asks timeless questions without over-explaining...breathlessly complex" - Pitchfork

    Fred Moten: texts, voice
    Brandon Lopez: bass

    Description

    The work of each of these powerfully creative & exceptionally perceptive individuals - poet and scholar Fred Moten and jazz bassist Brandon Lopez - concerns itself with how one might navigate the ascending reign of long-institutionalised madness while simultaneously keeping humanity and sanity intact.

    The synergistic mesh of these two voices in Duo is here presented on record for the first time, following two acclaimed works on the Reading Group label in trio with Gerald Cleaver.

    Inimitable poet, cultural theorist, author, 2020 MacArthur Fellow, Fred Moten creates new conceptual spaces that accommodate emergent forms of Black cultural production, aesthetics, and social life. Moten is a professor of performance studies and comparative literature at New York University concerned with social movement, aesthetic experiment, and Black study. He is also a United States Artists Rockefeller Fellow and was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

    Puerto Rican-American bassist Brandon Lopez is the son of a gravedigger who himself put time in doing the same, developing muscles that serve him well in his thorough command of the upright bass. On moving to NYC, Lopez made himself indispensable within numerous realms of creative music. As the Cleveland Review of Books noted, "This is virtuosity as vocabulary, a total command of texture, subtlety, and a depth that can be reached into."

    On their previous work in trio with Gerald Cleaver:

    "Best Jazz Albums of 2022: Moten is after nothing less than a full interrogation of the ways Black systems of knowledge have been strip-mined and cast aside, and yet have regrown." - New York Times

    "8.0 - A conceptually rich, politically weighty album that asks timeless questions without over-explaining...breathlessly complex" - Pitchfork

    Fred Moten: texts, voice
    Brandon Lopez: bass

  • Tracklisting

      Disc 1

      Side 1

      • 1. #14
      • 2. #5
      • 3. #3
      • 4. #4
      • 5. #6
      • 6. #2
      • 7. #8
      • 8. #10
      • 9. #7
      • 10. #11
      • 11. #9

    Tracklisting

      Disc 1

      Side 1

      • 1. #14
      • 2. #7
      • 3. #3
      • 4. #4
      • 5. #2

      Side 2

      • 1. #10
      • 2. #11
      • 3. #8
      • 4. #9