All is Yes

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (25 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 45:02

eMusic Review

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Nick Southall

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Portishead associates' wildly eccentric jazz-not-jazz odyssey.
Label: Candid Productions / IODA

As if the identikit suits weren't anonymous enough, Bristolian jazz-riffers the Blessing have also taken to wearing paper bags over their heads for press shots. Maybe they're telling us “it's all about the music, man”? They could be right; boasting a rhythm section that's done time with both Portishead and Roni Size and influences that include “North African cuisine,” Morphine (the band rather than the painkiller) and Elvis Costello, the Blessing play jazz, dude, but not as we (used to) know it. Unless you came across Mahavishnu Orchestra before you did Dave Brubeck.

Walking a path similar to the more electrified members of London's F-ire Collective, most obviously Acoustic Ladyland, All Is Yes is far from the politely pretentious image some might have of jazz clubs; the Blessing rock a damn site more than a lot of supposedly ‘rock'bands do, they just do it with a trumpet and a saxophone rather than a guitar.

Just get a load of “Cake Hole,” where spiralling horns, accelerating drums and grinding electric bass power an otherwise simple tune to a frenetic climax, while things get a little drum ‘n'bass on "Thermos." Album centrepiece “Loubia” reaches a restrained ecclesiastical apex after… read more »

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owlmerlyn

After an initial listen, I must I am really enjoying this album. Yes, there are elements of Portishead, but I think its entirely its own thing, and rate it. Cool, modern, rythmic and musical. If you like a bit of the jazz tip, download it.

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Awesome

herofix

Though I wouldn't exactly call this "free jazz", it certainly has some loose and funky elements that lean in that direction. These songs frequently swing hard thanks to virtuosic drumming and minimalist arrangements. I found it to be akin to the Whitest Boy Alive record (though jazzier) and the dub/jazz/rock hybrids of The Eternals (though sans vocals).

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From 17dots

MiDoJo

BIG NAME ALERT! The Blessing is actually two people from Portishead (neither of whom is named Beth Gibbons), and is a bit of an instrumental free-jazz record, with some soul/funk tinges as well. It hasn’t blown me away, but definitely intriguing. By Yancey

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