The Guardian (USA)

The best albums of 2020, No 5: Sault – Untitled (Black Is)

- Lanre Bakare

In a recent essay for Harper’s magazine the author Garth Greenwell wrote about his problem with creating work that is described as “relevant”. He argued that there is “something demeaning about approachin­g art from a predetermi­ned angle”, and that increasing­ly artists are being asked if their work is timely and therefore of importance.

No one knows whether Sault were asking themselves that question when they made Untitled (Black Is), the first of two incredible albums they put out this year. ( The second, Untitled (Rise), came in at No 25 in our list.) Their motivation­s are opaque: the music tends to arrive with little more than a day’s notice and no informatio­n regarding the band’s members. Only later was it revealed that the collective included Little Simz producer Inflo, Londonbase­d vocalist Cleo Sol, the Chicago rapper Kid Sister and guests such as Mercury prize-winner Michael Kiwanuka. The album’s Juneteenth release date sent certain signals, but the music is our main clue as to their mindset.

Untitled (Black Is) is weapons-grade R&B: rugged, soulful and unapologet­ically Black. Lyrically, it’s steeped in imagery drawn from our present moment. The standout track, the anthemic Wildfires, is pulled from the headlines – with George Floyd’s death and the subsequent Black Lives Matter protests haunting every line: “Thief in the night, tell the truth / White lives, spreading lies / You should be ashamed / The bloodshed on your hands / Another man / Take off your badge / We all know it was murder /

Murder, murder, murder.”

That might sound on the nose, but the first thing that hits you is the quality of the songwritin­g and production. Then the message falls like a feather, not a brick. The music shares similariti­es with the visual art of Arthur Jafa and Kahlil Joseph, whose collages – such as Jafa’s Love Is the Message, The Message Is Death – assemble, juxtapose and remix ideas of Blackness. Images of preachers and high-school drum ensembles are interspers­ed with news clips of athletes and political activists. Sault’s music oscillates to all corners of Black culture’s past: from defiant breakbeats (Stop Dem) and spoken word (X, Us) to high-life guitar lines (Don’t Shoot Guns Down, Bow) and mutated gospel (Pray Up Stay Up, Eternal Life).

Simon Reynolds’s theory of the hardcore continuum – the idea that British dance music has consistent­ly drawn from a well of Black cultural influences while evolving into everything from drum’n’bass to British techno – characteri­ses the movement as “a bumpy but exhilarati­ng ride, but let no one doubt that it’s the same rollercoas­ter at every stage of the journey”. Untitled (Black Is) places you on that ride: well-aware of its lineage and capable of luxuriatin­g in it.

In a way there’s nothing timely about Sault’s work. It could have come at any period in the last 30 years: the sounds have existed and so have the stories that inspired the lyrics. I’d argue this is timeless music that continues the tradition of Black rebel sounds that started in Africa, were honed in the Caribbean and packaged for the world as soul, R&B and funk in the US. One of the greatest compliment­s you can pay Sault’s work is that it sounds like what has come before: not derivative of, but complement­aryto its forebears. And what a legacy they had to choose from. As the album’s opening lyrics go: “When everything else fails, Black endures.”

 ??  ?? ‘When everything else fails, Black endures’ ... Sault Photograph: PR handout
‘When everything else fails, Black endures’ ... Sault Photograph: PR handout

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