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robert takahashi crouch-jubilee cd (room40)

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rm4169

robert takahashi crouch: jubilee

On Jubilee, Los Angeles based artist Robert Takahashi Crouch conjures a profoundly personal vibrational landscape. The edition, which is a mediation on, and suture for experiences of conflict and violence, Jubilee merges longform low-frequency drone work against a reductive sense of harmony. It is a record of hushed intensity, punctuated with moments of ascendant dynamism. Jubilee, whilst innately personal at its heart, is ultimately invitational in that it affords a space in which the listener becomes paramount, their narrative and reflections in the moment as critical and valuable as those of the album's creator. Includes poster. From Robert Takahashi Crouch: "The three tracks that comprise Jubilee are deeply personal reflections on significant events in my life, joyful and traumatic, and the larger social contexts that inform my own understanding of these experiences. As much as my sexuality and ethnicity have positioned me as someone looking in from the margins, I am also cognizant of those spaces I occupy as a member of the dominant culture: I perform masculinity in a relatively traditional manner, and I am often presumed to be white . . . Two of the three tracks were refined over the course of a few years where they were performed publicly. The idea of a shared listening experience is embedded in how I thought of this record. At its core, the album is about creating a space for self-forgiveness. In 2021, this seems like an important element missing in larger cultural conversations. I remember during the 2008 U.S. recession seeing Hakim Bey's writing about the concept of the jubilee gaining increased visibility. Bey described the jubilee as a long-neglected Judeo-Christian celebration where 'all debts were cancelled, lands were returned to their traditional inhabitants, slaves and prisoners were set free, all taxes were suspended, fields lay fallow, gleaning rights were extended to all, people quit their labors and joined in all manner of feasting and revelry.' Originally written in 1992, his essay was also a call to collective action to reinstate the law of jubilee at a time when the fundamental instability of American capitalism was approaching a breaking point. While Bey's utopian vision of a 'grand jubilee' failed to materialize at that time, the concept of forgiveness, and by extension contrition, as a joyful and celebratory collective action has incorporated itself into an imagining of how we might reshape our understanding of community."


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