Bheki Mseleku - The Best of Bheki Mseleku (2005)

Artist: Bheki Mseleku
Title: The Best of Bheki Mseleku
Year Of Release: 2005
Label: Sheer Sound
Genre: Post-Bop, Contemporary Jazz, Cape Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 01:18:38
Total Size: 524 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: The Best of Bheki Mseleku
Year Of Release: 2005
Label: Sheer Sound
Genre: Post-Bop, Contemporary Jazz, Cape Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 01:18:38
Total Size: 524 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Angola (7:26)
02. Home at Last (feat. Winston Mankunku & Feya Faku) (5:08)
03. Vukani! (Wake Up) (8:42)
04. Nants' Inkululeko (feat. Feya Faku & Ezra Ngcukana) (5:45)
05. Melancholy in Cologne (7:18)
06. Mbizo (feat. Winston Mankunku & Ezra Ngcukana) (5:13)
07. Blues for Afrika (6:18)
08. Closer to the Source (feat. Courtney Pine) (6:00)
09. Monk the Priest (feat. Herbie Tsoaeli) (5:15)
10. Beauty of Sunrise (feat. Ravi Coltrane) (5:36)
11. Celebration (7:51)
12. Spirit Ascending (feat. Sibongile Khumalo) (8:06)
There is a zen-like sense of repose with Bheki Mseleku. It’s not just his piano playing, or when he manages, quite extraordinarily, somehow to play a saxophone and accompany himself on the piano at the same time; it’s his persona, the Zulu in his soul, the meditative aura that is central to everything he stands for. The South African was relatively unknown beyond the local jazz community until the late 1980s and the breakthrough album Celebration on World Circuit. Mseleku then quickly became a celebrated part of the UK jazz scene, promoted and encouraged by the perspicacious producer Russell Herman, who sadly died prematurely in 1998 aged just 44. He recorded Mseleku on the Samadhi label before Verve signed him and a new higher profile phase of his career began. A breakthrough in the States then seemed to be the logical destination as he toured and recorded with Joe Henderson, but Mseleku’s star waned inexplicably and he is only now coming out of a long reclusive period, undertaking a small UK tour.
This compilation has all that is good about Mseleku, the joyous flute driven lines, the pulsating Tyner-ish energy, the sense of a dynamic spirit behind the keys, and a mix of the progressive jazz of the 1960s fused with the kwela and township flavours of his native land that have made such a distinctive contribution to the new global language of jazz. All the compositions are by Mseleku and most of them cry out to be covered. Go straight to track eight, ‘Closer To the Source’ to hear the essence of Bheki’s sound and one of Courtney Pine’s most enthralling narrative solo performances. Samadhi, the name of Herman’s old label, is a Buddhist and Hindu term that refers to the state of consciousness induced by complete meditation. Mseleku goes that deep.
This compilation has all that is good about Mseleku, the joyous flute driven lines, the pulsating Tyner-ish energy, the sense of a dynamic spirit behind the keys, and a mix of the progressive jazz of the 1960s fused with the kwela and township flavours of his native land that have made such a distinctive contribution to the new global language of jazz. All the compositions are by Mseleku and most of them cry out to be covered. Go straight to track eight, ‘Closer To the Source’ to hear the essence of Bheki’s sound and one of Courtney Pine’s most enthralling narrative solo performances. Samadhi, the name of Herman’s old label, is a Buddhist and Hindu term that refers to the state of consciousness induced by complete meditation. Mseleku goes that deep.

