*Announcing* Asher Gamezde - Turbulence & Pulse // LP/CD/Digital album out 5/5/23

*announcing*
IARC0057

Asher Gamedze
Turbulence & Pulse

2xLP, CD, Digital album out May 5th, 2023

Cape Town, South Africa-based drummer Asher Gamedze explores relationships of time between music and history on his new album Turbulence and Pulse, out May 5th, 2023 and released in collaboration with Johannesburg-based label Mushroom Hour Half Hour.

Though this is Gamedze's first record with International Anthem as a leader, fans of Angel Bat Dawid's debut, The Oracle, might recognize his name from their epic first-meeting-turned-song: "Capetown" or from his drumming on Angel & Tha Brothahood's LIVE.


*Lead Single*

"Wynter Time"

 In Gamedze's words: 

Alienation of the dispossessed: Multinationals, neocolonialism and cold concrete. Transformative movement: Indigeneity, collectivity and new methods of struggle. Black Metamorphosis: New Natives in a New World. One time for Sylvia Wynter.

Learn more about resistance to Amazon's development here:


((( photo by Dylan Valley )))

About Asher Gamedze

Gamedze’s critically-acclaimed debut album Dialectic Soul was released at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic in July 2020. Around the release of that record, with friend and writer Teju Adeleye he organized and participated in a joint online discussion “Poesis,” with historian Robin D.G. Kelley and others. One of the notable comments made in this session was by the poet and scholar Fred Moten, who described Gamedze’s drumming as an “amazing interplay between turbulence and pulse. Pulse is supposed to regulate and also be regular, but the turbulence underneath it and on top of it, it’s just extraordinary.” Moten added that this concept is a fundamental element of the percussive approach in Black music more broadly.

Turbulence and Pulse takes its title from this moment of synchronicities. Inspired by this description, Gamedze developed the metaphor further, expanding the concept of turbulence and pulse through the lens of history. “Time in music is a metaphor for thinking about time in history and how time moves,” he says. “The way we’re taught history is generally in a way that robs people of agency in imagining themselves as part of history and how it unfolds. It is something that happens to us. I think there's a productive metaphor in that because the sense of time in music is created by musicians playing together. If we can use that to think about history and time in history, you can see that, actually, history is created by people in a whole range of ways. At the heart of it, historical motion is created by people organized and acting together, whether for progressive or reactionary ends.”

For Gamedze, the underlying message of Turbulence and Pulse is “to claim a form of historical agency and realize that the future is not a foregone conclusion. As people we can organize, to transform our world in small and big ways.” This concept comes out of Gamedze’s involvement in radical cultural work and political organizing. He adds: “One of the ideas that I've had for a long time is to unsettle the way that people think about culture as something static or as something fixed. There’s this tension in Africa, because of the way that the colonists have constructed visions of African culture, where people speak about this need to conserve culture and document it. I think that's important, but you also have to understand that these things are moving. And we are the people who have to participate in that movement.”

((( Photo by Dylan Valley )))

While Dialectic Soul reached new audiences across the globe in 2020, Gamedze was in isolation at home in Cape Town. He couldn't travel and there were no gigs, so this meant spending a lot of time at home, writing and working on his history research, and working on music. The first opportunities to perform Dialectic Soul live would not come until 2022, so he used the time to compose music and prepare for a new album. “I got a piano just before lockdown. I had wanted one for a long time and I wrote most of Turbulence and Pulse on piano during the time that followed.”

He was initially meant to record at the end of 2020, but due to the difficulty of getting all the band members together and constant pandemic regulations changing, there were delays. Turbulence and Pulse ended up being recorded in two days of May 2021 at Sound and Motion Studios in Retreat, Cape Town, with sound engineer Carl Roberts.

For the new record, Gamedze worked with the same musicians as Dialectic Soul, wanting to develop the sound further with those players. Joining Gamedze is Thembinkosi Mavimbela on bass, Buddy Wells on tenor saxophone, and Robbin Fassie on trumpet. Vocalist Julian Otis guests on a track - a good friend whom he met through Angel Bat Dawid’s band. “I chose these musicians specifically because I know that they’re open to understanding and interpreting the music from my perspective and my way of working.”

Describing some of the compositions, he says: “For this collection of songs on a musical level, each establishes a paradigm of motion, which draws on various traditions of music. Some songs are dedicated to individuals who have had a particular set of ideas around these concepts, or historical actors who've had particular kinds of impact on progressive politics.”

The album opener “Turbulence’s Pulse” is somewhat of a manifesto read by Gamedze, expressing the ideas and notions of time that inform the record. “Wynter Time” is dedicated to Black Caribbean radical intellectual Sylvia Wynter, in particular the book that she wrote called Black Metamorphosis. There is also a song dedicated to the late great South African saxophonist and philosopher Zim Ngqawana called “Out Stepped Zim.” Gamedze says “it's about his perspectives on the relationship between a sense of culture and tradition that you inherit, and are maybe at odds with, in various ways... It’s about being part of that living and changing tradition and figuring out your own orientation to that.” “Alibama” is based on a traditional folk song or ghoemaliedjie from the Cape Klopse musical tradition. “Daar kom die Alibama” is a song about the CSS Alabama, a Confederate Raider steam ship, which sailed to the shores of the Cape of Good Hope in 1863. “It’s a song that's from Cape Town. It tells us a range of stories about Cape Town as a place, Cape Town in the world, connections between all of the places in the world, Cape Town as a port city, and working class Black culture in Cape Town.”

The LP, CD, and digital download versions of Turbulence and Pulse feature three additional tracks – alternate versions of “Melancholia,” “If It Rains. To Pursue Truth,” and “Out Stepped Zim” – all recorded in December 2020 on a rooftop in Cairo, Egypt, by Gamedze with his Another Time Ensemble featuring Cairo-based musicians Maurice Louca (synthesizers), Adham Zidan (bass), Alan Bishop (alto saxophone, voice), and Chérif El-Masri (guitar).


*Deluxe Vinyl Package*

One Drop color vinyl

For the album artwork, Gamedze extends the visual aesthetic of his previous release with a hand-drawn illustration. “I feel like my drawings represent the inside of my mind. It’s very free and improvisational,” he says. Friend and designer Naadira Patel worked with Gamedze to design the final cover layout, which includes liner notes penned by his sister, writer and artist Thuli Gamedze.

Turbulence & Pulse comes on two limited edition "One Drop" color vinyl LPs inside a heavyweight gatefold jacket with obi strip and custom IARC/MH3 printer inner-sleeves. Lacquers cut by Daniel K at SST and pressed at Pallas in Germany. And as always, we will have a limited edition color vinyl option for the first pressing only, available via our Bandcamp page only.



Distribution via RedEye for
US, Canada, North & South America

Retailers in the United States or Canada or anywhere else inside of North, South, and Central America... Please reach out to your sales rep at RedEye Worldwide if you are interested in making wholesale purchases of this album, or any other album in our catalog. Don't yet have a RedEye rep? Please just reach out to us and we'll get you hooked up!


Distribution via !K7 for
Europe, UK, Australia, and ROW

We are distributed by our good friends at !K7 Music and their various territory partners in Europe, UK, Australia, and everywhere else in the world outside of North & South America.

If you are a retailer or store with questions about wholesale or are just looking to get some of our records... we'd like to make things as easy for you as possible, please do not hesitate to contact us!


((( Photo by Dylan Valley )))

Previous
Previous

Tom Skinner on his Favourite International Anthem Titles

Next
Next

Ben LaMar Gay EU Tour Dates Announced // Certain Reveries + Open Arms to Open Us stocked & ready to ship