By Lee Rice Epstein
Maybe you've already heard about Ben LaMar Gay (who has been covered here
    
        a few times
    
    ), and maybe you’ve already heard this album or even started listening to
    the newly-released back catalog (more on that below). But I sat with this
    album for months, listening to it almost daily, because even as a
    compilation of experiments, it’s much larger than the sum of its parts, and
    heavier and deeper even than I think Gay’s been given credit for.
The story’s been told enough times: Gay had recorded seven albums over
    seven years, had no intention of releasing them, had a good experience
    working with International Anthem on Bottle Tree’s debut album, and
    eventually went through the process of picking out the best of the best for
    a “greatest hits” of sorts. And it is a very excellent story, but I think
it fails to represent the fullness of    Downtown Castles Can Never Block the Sun as a masterpiece all its
    own, partly because it represents the cumulative product of all of Gay’s
    various experiments and partly because it’s a radical, creative work.
First, the album is something of a 21st-century update of the ’69–’70 run
    of Art Ensemble of Chicago records, especially
    
        A Jackson In Your House, Message To Our Folks, Certain Blacks, Go Home,
    
    and Chi-Congo. Yes, Gay is an active member in the AACM and a
    resident of Chicago, but there’s much more to it: AEOC bent and shaped
    jazz, funk, poetry, lyricism, and skronk all into their unique and
    still-relevant sound. Gay’s songs are just as varied, raw, polychromatic,
    and addictive. And so while folks have knowingly cited Reich as the
    influence for “Music for 18 Hairdressers: Braids & Fractals,” there’s
    been less attention paid to the keen way Gay has inverted early tape
    experiments, like “Come Out.” Taking Reich out of the concert hall, Gay
    flips the script, layering a dense collage of loops, flute, tenor sax, and
    wordless vocals.
“Music for 18 Hairdressers: Braids & Fractals” flows brilliantly into
    “Jubilee,” one of the finer examples of how this collection of tracks from
    seven different albums quilt together successfully. The vibrant experiments
    of tracks like “Jubilee” and “Galveston” push against the song-like
    recitations like “A Seasoning Called Primavera” and “7th Stanza.”
    Interestingly, although it’s Muhal Richard Abram who gets an eponymous
    tribute—the ridiculously catchy “Muhal”—Joseph Jarman and Lester Bowie seem
    to me like more apt citable influences. Like Bowie, Gay fearlessly embraces
    his own curious nature. The result is strange and exciting. The most
    surprising thing, possibly, is how little of Gay’s cornet one hears on the
    album. If you know Gay from albums like Mike Reed’s Flesh & Bone, you
    may want to jump to the riotous final track, “Oh no… not again!” which
    features Gay, drummer Tommaso Moretti, tubaist Joshua Sirotiak, and
    guitarist Will Faber.
Now, when I first drafted this review, I closed out with some thoughts
    about whether we would ever hear Gay’s previous seven albums. And I did, in
    fact, wonder what we’d gain from hearing these songs in their original
    formats. Since, International Anthem has in fact started releasing the
    albums, beginning with 500 Chains, an excellent narrative about an
    escapee prisoner, and Grapes, the experimental avant pop album
    that originally featured “Vitis Labrusca,” “Muhal,” “Music for 18
    Hairdressers: Braids & Fractals,” “Me, JayVe & The Big Bee,” and
“Uvas.” If I’m not mistaken, Grapes songs make up most of    Downtown Castles Can Never Block the Sun, while also providing its
    title. As such, it does feel a bit like a Rosetta Stone for cracking the
    code of the final compilation.
In truth, this is the type of album that can be very difficult for a
    reviewer, because describing its depth and thoughtfulness can come across a
    bit esoteric. But that would strip away the absolutely joy to be found
    within. And while each successive release provides an additional context
for taking in each track, the whole of    Downtown Castles Can Never Block the Sun retains its vitality and
    remains a necessary snapshot of a thrilling artistic voice.

3 comments:
This is an insightful and excellent review of an excellent album. I'm also hoping that International Anthem (a great label) get around to releasing all seven individual albums.
If you get a chance to see LaMar Gay live jump at it. The quartet mentioned in this review took the roof off Cafe Oto a couple of weekends ago
Man, I'm glad you reviewed this, what an album! Great piece Lee!
Thanks, Nick!
MJG, they started releasing the unreleased albums a few weeks ago. 500 CHAINS features that group throughout, and the playing is excellent.
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