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Christian aTunde Adjuah

Christian aTunde Adjuah
Christian Atunde Adjuah.jpg
Studio album by Christian Scott
Released 25 June 2012 (UK), 31 July 2012 (US)
Recorded Recorded July 20–22, 25–27, 2011
Studio Sear Sound, New York City
Genre Jazz
Length 119:06
Label Concord Music Group
Producer Chris Dunn and Christian aTunde Adjuah
Christian Scott chronology
Yesterday You Said Tomorrow
(2010)Yesterday You Said Tomorrow2010
Christian aTunde Adjuah
(2012)
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 75/100
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars
The Guardian 4/5 stars
All About Jazz 4/5 stars

Christian aTunde Adjuah is a studio album by American jazz trumpeter Christian Scott released on 31 July 2012 by Concord Records.

John Fordham of The Guardian wrote "The double album Christian aTunde Adjuah broadens the themes further: to his family's African ancestry, contemporary inequality and racism, globalisation and war. It isn't a lecture, but a courageous and ambitious experiment. The proclamatory purity of Scott's trumpet sound could carry much of the set's message on its own, but guitarist Matthew Stevens' raw chords and churning vamps make effective contrasts with the leader's silvery double-time passages". Chris Ray of All About Jazz noted "Extra-musically, too, aTunde Adjuah is a manifesto for change. Scroll down the track listing: the titles reference issues such as the rape of 400 African women in the Sudanese town of Rokero by Janjaweed militiamen ("Fatima Aisha Rokero 400"), the killing of an innocent black teenager in Florida earlier this year ("Trayvon"), the demonization of the homeless in the US ("Vs. The Kleptocratic Union: Mrs McDowell's Crime"), the trafficking of women for the sex trade ("Away: Anuradha And The Maiti Nepal"), conflict in the Middle East ("Jihad Joe"), the legacy of slavery in the US ("Dred Scott"), police killings of innocent people in New Orleans in the wake of hurricane Katrina ("Danziger"), and HIV/AIDS ("The Berlin Patient: CCR5")... Scott's music is instrumental rather than vocal, so he addresses these issues not with words, but with attitude and vibe; track titles and liner notes are the only words you get. His message is no less coherent for that, and, while it may not have the narrative literalism of "conscious" rap music, it has the same relevance, accessibility and immediacy".

All tracks are written by Christian Scott unless otherwise indicated.

10.

Dred Scott (4:29)

11.

Danziger (10:38)


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Wikipedia

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