Legacy! Legacy! – Jamila Woods: New Music Review

Chicago born poet and singer-songwriter Jamila Woods dedicated her second album to twelve of her heroes. Each of the tracks is named for one of Woods’ role models, and are intended as self-portraits of these ground-breaking creative forces. Legacy! Legacy! features musical portraits of:
– funk musician Betty Davis
– author Zora Neale Hurston
– poet Nicky Giovanni
– poet Sonia Sanchez
– artist Frida Kahlo
– singer Eartha Kitt
– jazz trumpeter Miles Davis
– blues musician Muddy Waters
– artist Jean-Michel Basquiat
– jazz musician Sun Ra
– author Octavia Butler
– author James Baldwin

Woods has covered Rage Against The Machine’s ‘Killing In The Name Of’ live, but it’s not hard to connect her music to previous generations of soul and R&B. She grew up listening to Stevie Wonder, and her smooth grooves and political conscience connects her to the previous generation of neo-soul stars, Erykah Badu and Lauryn Hill.

The music’s great – classy and organic R&B – but it’s the theme that makes Legacy! Legacy! stand apart. Each luminary has a song titled after them. Given that she also has a successful career as a poet, Woods has a lot of great lines on Legacy! Legacy!

I like you better when you see me less
I like me better when I’m not so stressed
Can we do it like Frida? We could build a bridge then
I could come see ya, just not where I live

Frida, Jamila Woods

‘Frida’ refers to the bridge that married couple Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera constructed between their separate homes. Woods grew up in the only black family in an Irish neighbourhood in Chicago, and she related to Zora Neale Hurston’s line “I felt most colored when I was thrown against a sharp white background.” In standout track ‘Zora’, Woods sings “Must be disconcerting how I discombob’ your mold/I’ve always been the only, every classroom, every home.”

Legacy! Legacy! is an outstanding sophomore record from Woods, a masterpiece that works even without its thematic heft.

5 Comments

    • I have a big backlog of new music reviews to write at the moment so they’re a bit dominant at the moment – but also less interesting to most blog readers as they’re often a bit more obscure. I think this record is genuinely great though – one of the best from last year and hopefully it’s in future 1001 books.

Leave a Reply

Read about the discographies of musical acts from the 1960s to the present day. Browse this site's review archives or enjoy these random selections:

More review pages

Natalie Hemby Album Reviews

Natalie Hemby was born in Illinois, the daughter of a...

Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers Album Reviews

Rock and roll’s perpetual underdog, Thomas Earl Petty was born...

The Velvet Underground Album Reviews

1960s New York band The Velvet Underground have been cited as...

Neil Diamond Album Reviews

I was a teenager during the 1990s but I never...

The Cars Album Reviews

Boston quintet The Cars were arguably the quintessential New Wave...

The Chills Album Reviews

The Chills started on the legendary Flying Nun indie label...

I add new blog posts to this website every week. Browse the archives or enjoy these random selections:

More blog posts

Arcade Fire: Albums Ranked from Worst to Best

Canadian indie-rock band Arcade Fire formed in Montreal in 2001...

10 Best Eagles Songs

The four original Eagles played their first gig together at...

10 Best James Taylor Songs

James Vernon Taylor became the figurehead of the early 1970s...

10 Best Go-Betweens Songs

Robert Forster and Grant McLennan met at the University of...
Liberty Belle and the Black Diamond Express The Go-Betweens

10 Best Songs by Gram Parsons

1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die describes Gram Parsons...

Subscribe

Subscribe to receive new posts from Aphoristic Album Reviews.