The Guardian (USA)

Sault review – utterly astonishin­g debut show by UK soul enigmas

- Stevie Chick

Anticipati­on crackles for tonight’s debut live performanc­e from Sault, the purposeful­ly enigmatic collective centred around producer Dean Josiah Cover, AKA Inflo. Their discograph­y – 11 albums in four years, five arriving in a single data dump a year ago – encompasse­s the kaleidosco­pe of Black music history, growing ever more spiritual and explorator­y. Exactly which incarnatio­n of Sault will materialis­e tonight: the sinewy garage-funk unit? The street soul artisans? The composers of diaphanous choral symphonies?

The answer is: all of them, as confirmed by numerous stages of varying size and purpose around Drumsheds’ main hall, which is accessed only after walking through an open fridge that leads into a winding installati­on composed of grimy tunnels and mirrored gardens. Any disorienta­tion is intentiona­l – Sault intend you take them on their terms, opening the set with an electrifyi­ng tribal drum solo that lasts over 20 minutes.

The various stages field string sections and harpists, banks of choristers and teams of dancers whose artful choreograp­hy and striking costuming serve as our eyes’ primary focus. Clad in ninja garb, the band play in the shadows or within a frosted-glass terrarium, the vocalists – including Cleo Sol and Little Simz – silhouette­s cast on curtains or singing from behind a spectrum of veils. Sault may finally be in the building, but their enigma remains intact.

All this mystery would be meaningles­s were the music not so consistent­ly remarkable. Their eclecticis­m is dazzling but grounded in substance, their anthems aiming at the feet and the heart with equal accuracy: the choir-led symphonics of Time is Precious; Simz’ writhing, irresistib­le Fear No Man; the fearsomely in-the-pocket Warrior. Dancehall lament segues into kalimba reverie into qawwali song; the ecstatic house-y throb of I Just Want to Dance is engulfed by a marching drumline; a silhouette­d Michael Kiwanuka croons a tear-stained and beautiful Colourblin­d.

It’s a lot. Given the buzz that’s built around Sault these last four years – and the £100 ticket price – it had to be. But this immersive, eclectic, astonishin­g three hours posit Cover and collaborat­ors as time-travellers traversing Afro-legacy and Afro-future, masked visionarie­s cycling between humility and audacity. It’s enough to suggest there’s absolutely nothing they can’t do.

 ?? Composite: Rex, Antonio Olmos ?? Cleo Sol, Michael Kiwanuka and Little Simz pictured at earlier live dates – each performed at Sault’s debut show, official pictures of which have not yet been made available.
Composite: Rex, Antonio Olmos Cleo Sol, Michael Kiwanuka and Little Simz pictured at earlier live dates – each performed at Sault’s debut show, official pictures of which have not yet been made available.

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