NEW YORK â How do you top a five-time Grammy Award-winning album that had critics applauding its rich blend of R&B, hip-hop, swing, jazz and pop? If you're Jon Batiste, you go even higher and wider.
The singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist returns this month two years after his triumphant album âWe Areâ with the complex âWorld Music Radio,â a collection he calls an âexpansive, genre-less, popular music concept record."
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âWorld Music Radioâ is conceived like a timeless radio broadcast from a sort of interstellar DJ, gradually taking the listener from a hip-hop, pop and dance party to soul, Latin, folk and gospel. It's like moving from a rave to church.
âI wanted to have that effect where youâre traveling from Saturday night to Sunday morning and youâre slowly moving towards this state of bliss, in this state of feeling this ultimate humanism and togetherness with everyone and feeling connected to the universe,â Batiste says.
âWorld Music Radio,â out Friday, isn't just a sonic trip, it's also a mesmerizing way to dial into Batiste's eclectic and wide musicality, with songs switching sounds midway and lyrics layered with symbolisms and multiple languages seeping out. Few albums can boast a Duke Ellington vocal clip, the Muslim call to prayer and a Kenny G sax solo.
âFor me, playing is always a form of dreaming. And Iâm constantly creating based on thoughts or conversations that Iâve had, words that have resonated with me or people who have helped me to be who I am today,â he says.
The album begins with a salutation â âHello everybody, Iâm Billy Bob Bo Bobâ â as Batiste sets the listener up for a spin of Earth's sounds, from the Afropop of âBe Who You Are,â Johnny Cash-like âMaster Powerâ to the Michael Jackson-esque âCall Now (504-305-8269).â
Water, so vital to the planet and so dangerous to his hometown of New Orleans, is a theme â from the super pop of âDrink Waterâ featuring Jon Bellion and Fireboy DML â to the exuberant âRaindanceâ to the restrained, distorted ballad âWhite Space,â where he sings âSaved in the water/Iâm saved.â
It was all a struggle at first. The singer-songwriter had amassed a massive 3 1/2 hours of new music but wasn't able to figure out a through-line. Its working title was âWorld Music.â
âIt wasnât about making a world music album, but using that as a prompt because itâs really a horrendous term, if you think about it for many reasons,â he says. âI went to bed kind of discouraged, not really having the sense of what it was.â
That's when an odd muse visited. Batiste had read about an unusual radio signal that some attribute to a being called B4, hence Billy Bob Bo Bob. What âWorld Musicâ was missing, he realized, was a DJ. He worked feverishly through the night.
âI canât explain to you how it just struck me like lightning. It was just so quickly a part of the fiber of my being in a way that I just saw it,â Batiste says. "It took so long for it to reveal itself. And I was almost at the point where âMaybe we need to scrap this.ââ
The album's collaborators â which include Lil Wayne, K-pop girl group NewJeans and Lana Del Rey â didn't always know about the alien DJ stuff or the high concept behind the album.
âI try to make it where someone can step in and do their thing without having to understand the greater concept,â he says. âI didnât tell them. None of the collaborators knew what I was building, but I knew that if I casted them properly, they would shine.â
âWorld Music Radioâ comes after Batiste untethered himself from late-night television â he was the bandleader for "The Late Show With Stephen Colbert for seven years.
Louis Cato, another multi-instrumentalist who he recruited to join Colbert's band and who succeeded him as bandleader, calls Batiste a âtranscendental musicianâ who gave him a front-row seat to learning on the job.
âI feel really lucky and grateful for that,â Cato says. âThis was nowhere in in the cards for me, you know. I think thereâs something really powerful about learning through a relationship.â
In addition to his Grammy success last year, Batiste also earned a best original score Oscar alongside Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross for his work on Pixarâs âSoulâ in 2020.
The scion of New Orleans musical royalty, Batiste started life as a video gamer/classical music student/jazz pupil and he refuses to recognize any boundaries in music. The first four albums he ever bought attest to that â Michael Jackson's âDangerous,â Bjorkâs âVespertine,â Common's âLike Water for Chocolateâ and âLed Zeppelin IV.â
The roots for âWord Music Radioâ were planted about a decade ago when Batiste released his album âSocial Music,â what he called âa statement of intention, a manifesto. And âWorld Musicâ is really a realization of that." He adds: âNow Iâm just at a point in life where I can create this kind of thing more effectively.â
Batiste thinks the album may be a roadmap for the future as Latin, K-pop and African sounds influence pop.
âWe have to liberate ourselves as artists, and I think the public is ready for that. Global influence has just seeped into popular culture more and more every day. Everybodyâs ready for the chains to be broken and for things to be expanded. The Grammys have expanded categories,â he says. "More and more communities want to be recognized. Itâs just going to continue.â
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Mark Kennedy is at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits
