Nduduzo Makhathini – “The Myth We Choose” review

Nduduzo Makhathini is a 42 year old pianist & philosopher from Umgungundlovu, Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa who dropped his first 7 studio LPs through his own imprint Gundu Entertainment prior to the greatest jazz label of all-time Blue Note Records signing him for Modes of Communication: Letters From the Underworlds as well as In the Spirit of Ntu & uNomkhubulwane. All of which have elevated his spiritual afro-jazz sound & went into his 11th album expecting him to do the same.

“Kuzodlula” by Robin Fassie kicks things off with a vocal jazz intro encouraging everyone to relax for the reason of everything eventually passing whereas “Imvunge KaNtu” recruits bassist Dalisu Ndlazi & drummer Lukmil Pérez for a hard bop tribute to the Bantu philosophy. “Kwamabili” lets Lukmil take a backseat so Nduduzo & Dalisu can instrumentally shine together for a few minutes just before the 4th & final single “Unembeza” combines elements of gospel & South African music.

The 3rd single “Liyoze Line Nangakith” has flautist Shabaka Hutchings joining the pianist & bassist for a hymn to the blessings that accompany rain while “What People Say” by Nduduzo’s wife Omagugu takes the vocal jazz route once more mediating on the creation of myths. “Primordial Egg” enlists Ayanda Sikade on the cymbals for a rubato jam complimenting the keys & bass leading into “Ekuqaleni” reaching the halfway point with a composition themed around the Zulu creation using synths & a vocoder.

Muneyi takes the microphone for “Ḽiṅwalo ḽa Mubebi” embracing a vocal jazz vibe again describing fatherly love while “Umbono” brings guitarist Keenan Ahrends on board so Nduduzo himself can sing about our 6th senses. “Tethered” by Thando Zide succeeding the “Ḽiṅwalo ḽa Mubebi” reprise experiments with neo-soul pitting the inevitability of love against the inability to gauge our emotional entanglement when somebody’s deeply in love.

“Ongaphesheya” gets the 4th quarter of The Myth We Choose going by having these calming piano chords predominantly taking the spotlight with some bass licks from Dalisu backing them but after Black Coffee’s stunning remix of “What People Say” that I’d consider equal to the original & the “Kuzodlula” reprise, “Zimthilili” sends off the album by bringing Ayanda Sikade back on drums so Nduduzo can vocally perform 1 last time singing about love over hypnotically rich instrumentation.

All 3 of Nduduzo Makhathini’s previous full-lengths that he’s dropped under Blue Note Records over the course of this decade have individually elevated his spiritual jazz sound & although I’d consider In the Spirit of Ntu to be his magnum opus, The Myth We Choose wouldn’t be too far behind for a close 2nd. He’s challenging the world to examine our individual background taking further inspiration from afro-jazz, spiritual jazz, cape jazz, vocal jazz, hard bop & neo-soul with the help of his son Thingo even if I could’ve done without a couple of the reprises.

Score: 4/5

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