Blog June 29, 2021
Photo Essay: Yonatan Gat, Innov Gnawa, William Parker at Sultan Room, Turk’s Inn
<p>
At the second of Yonatan Gat’s <a href="https://afropop.test.ejaedesign.com/articles/return-of-the-show-yonatan-gat-and-mamady-kouyat%C3%A9-at-the-sultan-room-5-22-21" target="_blank">Visuæls residency </a>Saturday at The
Sultan Room in Bushwick, everything felt looser—looser COVID
restrictions as the city has now passed the 70
percent-one-vaccine-shot threshold and also looser jams. The only
thing that got tighter was space on the dance floor and on the stage
as Gat welcomed Innov Gnawa to join him, along with Guinean guitar
master Mamady Kouyaté and their growing ensemble.
</p>
<p>
The evening began with jazz musician William Parker’s solo bass
performance, then a duet with Mamady Kouyaté as Parker picked up the
kora, then a trio, as Innov Gnawa’s Maalem Hassan Benjafaar joined
them. Kouyaté played a tense, percussive rhythm around Parker’s
free-jazz kora playing, but as Hassan filled in the low end on
his <em>guembri</em> bass lute, the West African’s guitar flittered
around the sparse harmonics, and a storm was brewing.
</p>
<p>
Joined by Gat and ex-Swans bassist Christopher Pravdica, North Africa
and the Sahel met the noise rockers. Swells of feedback, distortion
and reverb began clanging around the room. Drummer Cinque Kemp found
a loose, jam-band 6/8 that was mostly compatible with Maalem Hassan’s Gnawa pocket, and the groove was on.
</p>
<p>
Gat traded palm-muted percussive hits on the guitar with Avishag
Cohen Rodrigues, as each took treble-heavy solos. The evening built
on the last Visuæls with Jaimie Branch lending her trumpet to the
chaos, wandering from blasting to soothing to shrill again. Innov
Gnawa came to the stage as everything reached a fevered pitch.</p>
<p>
The room absolutely rocked, as loose as a group has felt in New
York’s relatively advanced vaccinated summer, so much that it was
hard to slow down for Innov Gnawa’s relatively calm ending. The
crowd spilled out into the night as people outside on sidewalk asked,
“Hey—what <em>was</em> that?” FOMO was back.</p>
<p>The next Visuæls show is July 17 and <a href="https://www.eventbrite.com/e/yonatan-gat-presents-visuls-feat-eastern-medicine-singers-tickets-155703646799?aff=erelexpmlt" target="_blank">will feature the Eastern Medicine Singers</a>.</p>
Yonatan Gat, Cinque Kemp, Maalem Hassan Benjafaar
William Parker on kora, Mamady Kouyaté on guitar
William Parker
Innov Gnawa’s Maalem Hassan Benjafaar, Mamady Kouyaté
Innov Gnawa
Christopher Pravdica, Innov Gnawa
Mamady Kouyaté
