Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pandemic Payoff

Asante releases ‘dreamy, atmospheri­c album’

- SEAN CLANCY

Little Rock astral soul singersong­writer Joshua Asante, frontman for Amasa Hines and Velvet Kente, began work on a record in late 2019 with the idea of rolling it out in 2020. Care to guess what happened next?

“I had in my mind that I’d get these songs together. I’d started touring solo, and I thought that at the top of 2020 I’d go out and play these songs,” Asante says with a chuckle.

Of course, the pandemic prevented any touring or shows for a while. “There are probably half a billion stories like that from pre-covid life, of musicians and artists who thought they were going to do something,” Asante muses.

Something positive came from the delay, however. The record, titled “All the Names of God at Once,” which comes out Jan. 28 on Asante’s Quiet Contender label, was initially planned as a quickly recorded project. With more time on his hands, Asante began to tinker with the album, with help from Zachariah Reeves, who played bass and keyboards and contribute­d to the production.

“We recorded at the chapel behind Fellowship Hall Sound,” he says. “As the virus proliferat­ed, we ended up sort of mixing and overdubbin­g on it for the next year and a half. So it sounds like an expensive record, but the primary capital investment was time … . Having that time changed the shape of the record. It made it an album.”

The result is a dreamy, atmospheri­c album that calls to mind TV on the Radio, Radiohead and Alabama Shakes. There are forays into jazz, electronic­a, rock, soul and ’80s synth pop, all highlighte­d by Asante’s passionate and intense vocals.

“Seen It, Say It,” an album highlight that Asante calls his best compositio­n, features saxophonis­t Stuart Bogie, a member of New York-based afro-beat group Antibalas, who also played on TV on the Radio’s “Return to Cookie Mountain” and has recorded or performed with the Hold Steady, Run the Jewels, Arcade Fire, Amy Helm, Adia Victoria, Taylor Swift and more.

“I sent him the song to put some clarinet on and he made such a lush orchestrat­ion, I have to credit him for a greater contributi­on because of how diligent he was with this one song,” Asante says.

There’s also an undeniable spiritual element to the record, whose title was inspired by the Saul Williams song “All John Coltrane’s Solos at Once.”

“I was like, if you’re trying to create a mental framework around all of his solos at once, you’re trying to hear all of the names of God at once,” Asante says. “The way [Coltrane] worked, he was trying to pronounce all he understood about creation, the creator, the creators and divinity. I scribbled those thoughts down, and they stayed with me as a common thread from a philosophi­cal standpoint.”

Lyrically, Asante is influenced by things like “Blade Runner,” “Dune,” Black speculativ­e fiction and the sci-fi novels of Octavia Butler. “Everybody Gets Used,” the album opener, reflects these touchstone­s and sets the tone for the record, he says.

“This notion of like, you’re in a car, and it’s a scene in ‘Blade Runner’ but there are actually Black people there. Or you’re on Arrakis [from ‘Dune’] and there are Black people among the Fremen. I wanted the rest of the record to pan out from there.”

 ?? (Special to the Democrat-Gazette/Joshua Asante) ?? Little Rock musician Joshua Asante debuted his new album, “All the Names of God at Once,” by playing it in its entirety Dec. 30 at the White Water Tavern in Little Rock. It’s become fairly common for musicians to perform entire albums in concert, but Asante’s approach of presenting an unreleased work was unusual. The album will be available Jan. 28.
(Special to the Democrat-Gazette/Joshua Asante) Little Rock musician Joshua Asante debuted his new album, “All the Names of God at Once,” by playing it in its entirety Dec. 30 at the White Water Tavern in Little Rock. It’s become fairly common for musicians to perform entire albums in concert, but Asante’s approach of presenting an unreleased work was unusual. The album will be available Jan. 28.

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