Mail & Guardian

The musical law of Lau

With talented friends around him, Eric Lau is recrafting instrument­al hip-hop with ‘Examples’

- Kwanele Sosibo

Eric Lau confesses a little secret — he would like to meet and work with pianist Afrika Mkhize. Lau, an electronic music producer based in London, encountere­d the pianist some years ago when he was touring abroad as part of Simphiwe Dana’s band.

Lau remembers that Dana and Mkhize were “incredible” but there was something about Mkhize’s energy — “very up and electric” as Lau puts it — that reminded him of his dear mentor, the prolific and gifted pianist and producer Kaidi Tatham.

“They have the same eyes and hands,” says Lau. “Their spirits were very similar.”

That Lau, whose latest album

was released on January 13, describes Mkhize in mystical rather than musical terms explains something about his outlook on life. Lau considers the process of making music as channellin­g the energies of “the source” as opposed to an exhibition of one’s ego.

A point he stressed consistent­ly during the Q & A portion of the

listening session, held at Ants in Parkhurst, Johannesbu­rg, the day before its release, was the interconne­ctedness of people and how music should be used to further this idea.

Observing the session, and how Lau turned it into a free exchange of ideas as opposed to a narcissist­ic platform, the song (featuring Tawiah) from the album sprang to mind.

“You’d be surprised to see how much love is really on your side/ Open your eyes,” sings Tawiah to a beat with its feet firmly on the ground, but its heart from a source altogether celestial.

Lau was born in England to Chinese parents from Hong Kong. He encountere­d music while studying towards a business marketing degree in London. Playing around with music production software, Lau was soon shopping his demos around London while working as an intern at a record label.

A positive response led to a deal with the United States-based Ubiquity label, when he was 24, an age he had set as his cut-off time for changing careers.

“It was great, it was my ideal home at the time,” he recalls. “I had just started making music for one or two years. SA-RA was on there. The Platinum Pied Pipers with Wajeed were on there. They did a lot of compilatio­ns that I really liked.”

When Lau started interning at Barely Breaking Even, the label had recntly released J Dilla’s

a modern classic of an album that stretched Lau’s ears.

“I was learning by myself, just learning people’s techniques and applying them to my music,” says Lau of his early attempts at beat. Some of the names he lists are The Neptunes, Wajeed, DJ Premier, Pete Rock and Kev Brown. But Dilla’s influence towered above the rest. then you’ve got

Then you’ve got a Donald Byrd cover.

“You’ve got hard-hitting hip-hop tracks on there too. You’ve got an electro track. It’s like no one was doing that then. No one has done it since. It still blows me away — to have so much range.”

Lau widened his palette too, but his approach has been more of a subtle synthesis of his influences as opposed to Dilla’s wildly swinging approach. From listening to the 45-minute

you can sense a man nodding to all his influences, ranging from Pete Rock to Dego, but still leaving his own fine imprint on these traditions.

You can sense Lau’s openness to experiment­ation with beat patterns, but all these shades are packaged with a beguiling sense of quietness, as if Lau is still tuning in to the inspiratio­n even though the music has been fully mixed and mastered.

During the listening session, Lau unveiled snippets of work-in-progress tracks from an upcoming album called They reveal a more emboldened Lau, heading even further off the beaten track but still with a finely tuned sense of sonic clarity.

To borrow a Roots Manuva lyric, “decent people keep decent friend”, In Lau’s case two among them would be Tatham and Dego of 4Hero fame. Alongside Marc Mac, Dego has guided the evolution of Britain’s electronic sound from drum ’n bass to nu jazz.

Alongside other collaborat­ors, notably IG Culture, Tatham and vocalist Bembe Segue, 4Hero stewarded the globally influentia­l broken beat scene, a musical approach saddled with a descriptor that did not do its fierce musical and philosophi­cal outlook any justice.

Last year, tweeting under the moniker @2000black_dego, Dego set the record straight, writing: “know this: nothing here is ‘broken’ or ‘bruk’ or ‘faulty’ in anyway or form. doing this shit for years & you ain’t NEVER heard us say the above”.

Lau met Dego at a Dilla tribute. “I didn’t know him but I gave him my CD, with my number on it. Like a month or so later, I got this text message, ‘Who the fuck is Eric Lau?’ That was his way of saying he had listened to the CD. And then we started talking.”

The two have become solid friends. “He may not see this but I see him as a big brother,” said Lau. “He has given me direction and so much guidance in terms of how to carry yourself as a man in this industry, in terms of integrity. To me he is leading by example on that.”

Of Tatham, whom he met through a fellow musician friend, Lau says: “I play his music to everyone. He is a genius. He is one of the most phenomenal people on the planet. I don’t think there are many people who do what he does. I’m like his biggest fan.”

If one senses a growing musicality to Lau, put it down to the company he is keeping but also to his refusal to back down. Of his involvemen­t in

off Tatham Mensah Lord and Ranks’s 2012 eponymous album, he says: “They were like, ‘Eric’s here, let’s make the track.’ And I’ve just met them. I thought I was chilling in the studio, just saying hi. And they’re like: ‘Make the track. It can’t be 4/4.’ I did this 7/4 drum pattern.

“It was crazy, I thought it was just a jam. And when they released the album, Dego had chosen it to be the first track on the album. That meant a lot to me, coming from them.”

If sounds like an offering to the heavens, it probably is — a cyclical, almost mantra-like thanksgivi­ng for the past half-decade. It is also a signal of where this gifted and understate­d presence on the music scene is headed.

It is an instrument­al rap record not hungry for rappers, a soulful record communicat­ing to the human spirit, a testament to both the power of one and the sustenance of community.

If you didn’t see Eric Lau coming, it’s because he wouldn’t have it any other way.

 ?? Photo: Oupa Nkosi ?? Good connection­s: Eric Lau’s album is a subtle reflection of his wide range of influences.
Photo: Oupa Nkosi Good connection­s: Eric Lau’s album is a subtle reflection of his wide range of influences.

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