September 17, 2024
On the Record: Immanuel Wilkins' "Blues Blood"
By SFJAZZ
This Saturday is our first concert in Terence Blanchard’s UpSwing series – a double bill with trumpeter Keyon Harrold and saxophonist Immanuel Wilkins. To get ready, we’re looking at Immanuel Wilkins’ upcoming Blue Note release, Blues Blood.
On October 11, acclaimed saxophonist and composer Immanuel Wilkins will release his expansive third studio album Blues Blood, a meditative offering co-produced by Meshell Ndegeocello that features his quartet with Micah Thomas on piano, Rick Rosato on bass, and Kweku Sumbry on drums; vocalists Ganavya, June McDoom, and Yaw Agyeman; plus special guest appearances by vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant, guitarist Marvin Sewell, and drummer Chris Dave. A multimedia performance about the legacies of our ancestors and the bloodlines connecting us, Blues Blood marks the first time Wilkins has included vocalists on an album, with each of the distinctive voices tapping into different aspects of heritage. The enthralling lead single “AFTERLIFE RESIDENCE TIME” is out now.
The album title culls inspiration from a quote by Daniel Hamm, a member of the Harlem Six, a group of young boys who were falsely accused of murder in 1964 and severely beaten by prison guards while awaiting trial: “I had to, like, open the bruise up and let some of the blues (bruise) blood come out to show them.” He said this while attempting to seek medical attention for his wounds. The police refused to address Hamm’s injuries because, although they had beaten him themselves, he had no visible blood running across his skin. Within Hamm’s quote, the mistaken placement of the word ‘blues’ in place of ‘bruise’ when read aloud or silently, lends subtly to a new interpretation of the sentence. “The blues as a feeling has served as a symbol of pleasure in pain for Black folk dating back to work on the plantation,” Wilkins says. “There is a dichotomy of Black people singing songs about how bad their conditions were, yet the blues is something that feels so good.
“Blood is often a symbol of things ancestral and generational,” he continues. “The history and preparation of most foods across the African Diaspora have been passed down through oral tradition. Mothers teach their children recipes that they learned from their mother, and their mother’s mother, so on and so forth, generating a sensorial and ancestral memory through taste and smell.” Meals are cooked onstage during the live performance of Blues Blood. The pan and table are set up with mics, allowing the composition to fill up with the sounds of knives chopping, water boiling, and oil frying in a pan.
While Blues Blood is rooted in the experiences of Wilkins and his collaborators, it’s meant to be a soothing balm for anyone searching for peace, and for Black people trying to reconcile history in a country that tries to erase it. “I don’t even know how to put it in words,” Wilkins says of the album’s sheer potency. “What I do know is that there are alchemical properties in the music. It’s powerful. It’s our calling to take care of this music properly and make sure that it does something to people.”
Immanuel Wilkins performs 9/21 as part of a double bill with trumpeter Keyon Harrold. Tickets and more information are available here.