A few years ago, in for a major exhibition of the artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, critic cast a sidelong glance at the voguish recent turn for Afrofuturism, a creative mode that took shape on the margins before accruing its cultural and literal currency. Tate, , had in mind a more organic, less calculating ideal for the Afrofuturist impulse — like the one so alluringly drawn on "Virgo," a coolly aerated funk jam by .
"They're calling me / Back to the stars," Ndegeocello sings at the top of the track. Then: "Deep outer space." She plays a synth-bass and chordal vamp, over a head-nod funk beat; her vocals assume both a curvilinear croon and a confiding murmur, hinting at cosmic secrets. The song's two featured guests — on harp and on Farfisa organ — deepen the seraphic shimmer, against an evolving cycle of funk and club rhythms. Ndegeocello, who played bass in one of Tate's early bands, isn't conforming to anybody else's idea of the celestial plane. When she sings of supernovas, she sounds like a witness.
"Virgo" is the first taste of The Omnichord Real Book, a musically expansive, tonally introspective release, and Ndegeocello's first as a leader for Blue Note. To call it her version of a 21st-century jazz album would be misleading, but not entirely off the mark. Produced by Josh Johnson, it has contributions from brilliant improvisers like guitarist , trumpeter , vibraphonist and pianist , with whom Ndgeocello collaborated almost a decade ago on . "Virgo" — which resurfaces on the album in a different arrangement by master saxophonist — is just one pathway among many that Ndegeocello opens, extending an invitation.
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