Great dance music albums – albums that sound as good on headphones and home speakers as they do on club soundsystems – aren’t easily made. In a form whose primary aims have been to move dancefloors and to move on, full lengths that thrill the head, heart and the feet with equal power are few and far between. We believe Romare has made one.
Projections is a heady mix of homage and fresh approach, a statement from a young artist unafraid to revel in his influences, and confident in his own originality. The songs on Projections are homages to elements of American/African culture in the USA – which Romare studied academically.
“Rainbow” is a homage to gay rights via disco in the 70's, and “Work
Song” to the great American work song tradition. Opener “Nina’s Charm”
sets out the stall for the album. A tiny, near spoken snippet of Nina
Simone’s voice is set against a hypnotic synth riff and a dislocated
gospel-choir chant. The result is something utterly fresh; a tone setter that
worms through the ear and floods the brain in soothing catharsis. “Motherless
Child” opens with a shuffling jazz swing, allowing its sample of the
African-American spiritual
from which it takes its title to shine in full. When a simple, riff-like melody
arrives, the song transforms into a sultry, glorious slow-dance workout.
“Lover Man’s” striking, cut-up synth riff is set up against chiming stabs
and slurred chords, a snatched, swing vocal enticing us in to the wonkiest of
grooves.
Romare reimagines the profound cultural impact of the collage technique for a new generation of music listeners. With his signing to Ninja Tune, coming hot on the heels of his excellent 12”s on underground institution Black Acre, and compilation inclusions by Tiga, Bonobo and Brownswood, the stage is set for Projections.