New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Imamu Amiri Baraka's Pan-African manifesto It's Nation Time — African Visionary Music, out of print since 1972, is available once again via Motown/UMe. The spoken-word jazz album, originally released on Motown Records'
Black Forum subsidiary, has been repressed on 150g black vinyl with tip-on jacket in a faithful reproduction of the original packaging.
A poet, writer, theater director, activist and more whose career spanned five decades, Baraka (born LeRoi Jones) fearlessly vouched for racial equality until his passing in 2014. For It's Nation Time, his first album, Baraka was backed by many threads of African-American musical expression, including a funk band led by
James Mtume and a free jazz quartet featuring bassists Reggie Workman and Herbie Lewis, pianist Lonnie Liston Smith, alto saxophonist Gary Bartz, and drummer Idris Muhammad.
More than four decades later, It's Nation Time is thrilling and evocative. Over an R&B groove, "Who Will Survive" ponders who will be left standing in the midst of Western carnage. ("Some Americans, very few Negroes, and no crackers at all," Baraka dryly reports.) "Who we are is the magic people / The black genius prophets of the planet," he insists in "Answers." In "Pull the Covers Off," Baraka calls for liberation in syncopation over Bartz's high-powered horn. On "Come Back Pharoah," he forms a call-and-response with backing singer Gwen Guthrie ten years before she was a solo star.
In addition, this "African man's vision/version of music," as it states in the liner notes, was newly mixed in stereo from the original analog master tapes by award-winning engineer and producer Russell Elevado (D'Angelo, Jay-Z, Erykah Badu, Kamasi Washington, et al).
It's Nation Time — African Visionary
Music sums up all of the late Baraka's brilliant dimensions and rough edges. On this beguiling, outspoken lost album, we hear a brilliant artist fighting fire with fire in a socially, politically and racially precarious moment in American history. Whether familiar or unfamiliar with the unique, prolific Baraka, fans of experimental music with forthrightness should look no further than this uncompromising work.
It's Nation Time — African Visionary
Music Track Listing:
Side A - It's Nation Time
Chant
Answers
All In The Street
Come See About Me
Peace In Place
Bad News
Wha's Gonna Happen
Side B - It's Nation Time
Kutoa Umola
Come Back Pharoah
Who Will Survive
How Africans
Move
The
Spirit Of Creation
It's Nation Time
Pull The Covers Off
Pamoja Tutashinde