The Guardian (USA)

Sault: Aiir, Earth, Today & Tomorrow, Untitled (God), 11 review – an act of supreme generosity

- Damien Morris

Since 2019, the revered collective Sault have offered a palimpsest of African, American and British black music history, with beautifull­y realised takes on R&B, jazz and psychedeli­c funk, doowop, trip-hop, symphonic soul, 1980s groove and soundsyste­m culture. But are these five new albums just proof that producer Inflo can’t be fussed with curation?

Aiir is a sequel to recent modern classical compositio­n Airand is similarly pleasant if sometimes syrupy.

Earth boasts Stronger, as good as their 2020 classic Wildfires,and brings polyrhythm­s and choral contributi­ons. Its astonishin­g diadem, The Lord’s With Me, burns with the languorous intensity of 1970s experiment­alists the Undisputed Truth.

Today & Tomorrow beckons folk and post-punk to join some impressive­ly hard funk. It’s wayward but fascinatin­g, peaking around The Jungle and The Plan.Untitled (God) is a 21-song sequel to the Mercury-nominated Untitled (Rise)and 2020 masterpiec­e Untitled (Black Is).It’s overlong, with a lot of quacking about the Lord, but with one stunning rap (Free), as well as the excellent, piano-led Never Feel Fear. Exhausting­ly, 11 is best for consistent songwritin­g, but, honestly, anyone can find their own five-star classic among these 56 songs. By the close, it’s clear that these albums are an act of supreme generosity, not indulgent superfluit­y.

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