Return of the Ankh was supposed to be issued earlier than March 2010.
It's just as well: 2008's stupefying 4th World War provided such a dense
concentration of charged lyrics over ceaselessly vein-melting
production work that Erykah Badu could have been forgiven for letting
five years pass prior to unveiling something else to soak up. Return of
the Ankh is a relief in that Badu does not attempt to trump herself with
a set that is even more intense and powerful than its predecessor.
Thematically, it's aligned with 4th World War's relatively lighter
songs, "Me" and "Honey," more personal than planetary, less challenging
sonically and lyrically. Most of it was actually recorded at the same
time as 4th World War. The list of collaborators, featuring Georgia Anne
Muldrow, Madlib, Shafiq Husayn, Dilla, James Poyser, Ahmir Thompson,
and Karriem Riggins, is similar, yet the makeup is drastically
different, designed for instant kicked-back enjoyment. A pause, deep
breath, and a "Here we go" is not required prior to putting it on.
Instead, we get Badu playing around, in the best possible way, with
sample-rooted songs like "Turn Me Away (Get Munny)" (a twist on Sylvia
Striplin's "You Can't Turn Me Away" and the 1995 hip-hop anthem that
sampled it, Junior M.A.F.I.A.'s "Get Money"), "Gone Baby, Don't Be Long"
(a slightly silly new-love song that reworks Paul McCartney's "Arrow
Through Me"), and "Umm Hmm" (its optimism reflected in that of its
backbone, Ndugu & the Chocolate Jam Company's Earth, Wind &
Fire-like "Take Some Time"). Though the album is so rich with
sample-reliant songs that it sometimes resembles a glorified mixtape, a
couple standouts were made from scratch. "Window Seat" should appeal to
those who have wanted Badu to revisit that lissome sound of Baduizm
songs like "On & On" and "Otherside of the Game," and it packs
stunning stomp-and-clap breakdowns that sync up with Badu's most halting
lines: "I need you to want me/I need you to miss me/I need your
attention/I need you next to me." "Out My Mind, Just in Time" is a
ten-minute finale that traces a trajectory of heartache across three
movements, beginning innocently enough with a devotional (if pained and
humorous) piano ballad that shifts into Muldrow's psychedelic,
slow-motion soul-jazz as Badu gets increasingly fragmentary and
tripped-out. By the end, she is renewed: "Finally I got a leading
role/Introducing Super Dope/Starring in her episode/Hello new world/Out
my mind." Actual next level, as always. by Andy Kellman
Tracklist :
1 20 Feet Tall 3:25
2 Window Seat 4:50
3 Agitation 1:33
4 Turn Me Away (Get MuNNY) 5:26
Bass – Stephen "Thundercat" Bruner
5 Gone Baby, Don't Be Long 4:54
6 Umm Hmm 3:52
7 Love 3:36
8 You Loving Me (Session) 0:55
9 Fall In Love (Your Funeral) 4:30
10 Incense 3:25
Featuring – Kirsten Agnesta
11 Out My Mind, Just In Time 10:21
{Universal Motown B0014023-02}
Sunday, March 6, 2022
ERYKAH BADU - Amerykah Part Two (Return of the Ankh) (2010) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
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