Top40-Charts.com
Support our efforts,
sign up for our $5 membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Jazz 23 September, 2021

Ben LaMar Gay's Album 'Open Arms To Open Us' Due November 19, 2021

Hot Songs Around The World

APT.
Rose & Bruno Mars
288 entries in 29 charts
Die With A Smile
Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars
512 entries in 28 charts
All I Want For Christmas Is You
Mariah Carey
1413 entries in 28 charts
That's So True
Gracie Abrams
211 entries in 21 charts
Taste
Sabrina Carpenter
324 entries in 21 charts
Please Please Please
Sabrina Carpenter
323 entries in 22 charts
Last Christmas
Wham!
1263 entries in 26 charts
Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree
Brenda Lee
526 entries in 24 charts
Jingle Bell Rock
Bobby Helms
423 entries in 20 charts
Grustnyi Dens
Artik & Asti
213 entries in 2 charts
Merry Christmas Everyone
Shakin' Stevens
325 entries in 11 charts
No One
Alicia Keys
465 entries in 32 charts
Beautiful
Christina Aguilera
534 entries in 29 charts
A Bar Song (Tipsy)
Shaboozey
699 entries in 22 charts
Ben LaMar Gay's Album 'Open Arms To Open Us' Due November 19, 2021
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Today, the last day of Summer 2021, composer, singer, and instrumental polymath Ben LaMar Gay announces the release of his new album, Open Arms to Open Us, November 19 on International Anthem / Nonesuch Records.
The first offering from the Southside Chicago native's newest project is a pulsing melodic bellow featuring OHMME singers Sima Cunningham and Macie Stewart, titled "Sometimes I Forget How Summer Looks on You." According to Gay, the song is "inspired by the preparation one makes for another when it's time for them to enter or exit an embrace, a memory or a life." You can watch the video for it here:



Highlighted in the New York Times's Fall 2021 preview last week, Open Arms to Open Us is a dispatch from "postmodern folklorist" Gay's current place in space, filled with imaginative arrangements and his "wise and confiding baritone."

It was produced and recorded at International Anthem Studios in Chicago between March and June of 2021. Across sixteen tracks Gay fluently interweaves jazz, blues, ballads, R&B, raga, new music, nursery rhyme, tropicalia, two-step, hip-hop and beyond in a beaming expression of his signature omni-genre "Pan-Americana" brew. Alongside his own sizable toolkit of instruments (cornet, keyboards, synthesizers, flutes, percussions), Gay surrounds himself with steady bandmates (including Tommaso Moretti on drums, Matthew Davis on tuba, and Rob Frye on woodwinds), while also shining the spotlight on female artists from his cast of regular collaborators. Featured artists on the album include: OHMME singers Sima Cunningham and Macie Stewart, bassist/vocalist/arranger Ayanna Woods, multi-disciplinary Rwandan artist Dorothée Munyaneza, poet A.Martinez, cellist Tomeka Reid, and vocalists Onye Ozuzu, Gira Dahnee, and Angel Bat Dawid.

Reflecting on the meaning of the music in a prologue he wrote for Open Arms to Open Us, Gay says the album's title is "a suggestion of a body movement that is used in many spiritual practices and is also a gesture that represents a type of understanding that leads to touch or a hug." He also says, "Open Arms to Open Us deals with rhythm as an inheritance of information - sort of like DNA or RNA. Coping with the present-day bombardment of data and recycled ideologies from sources essentially fed by the creed 'Destroy Them. Own the Earth,' often leaves me with only one thing to look forward to: Rhythm."

This latest project is the follow up to Gay's 2018 critically-acclaimed, debut album Downtown Castles Can Never Block the Sun, which was a compilation of previously-unreleased material composed and produced by Gay over seven years. It was heralded by Pitchfork, NPR, and the Guardian, the last of which called it, "a record of endless depth and unpredictability." But Gay's work is not limited to album releases. He has composed for dance troupes (including the Ruth Page Civic Ballet) and architectural features (including a 2019 duet with the DuSable Bridge in downtown Chicago), and also has done extensive film score work (including the 2018 Tribeca Film Festival award-winning documentary The Good Fight). In 2019 he debuted 'Hecky Naw! Angels!' at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, using video art and choreography to explore the shapes and sounds of Chicago's Black social dances.






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2025
top40-charts.com (S6)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.0059531 secs // 4 () queries in 0.0042264461517334 secs