Ya-Ka-May

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Ya-Ka-May album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 41:27

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Wayne Robins

eMusic Contributor

Wayne Robins has been a journalist specializing in music for more than 40 years. Since his first paid assignment, reviewing the Rolling Stones 1969 Oakland show...more »

02.09.10
A career-defining album from the loud and proud New Orleans band
2010 | Label: Anti/Epitaph

You may have been wondering if Galactic, the New Orleans band together since 1994, would ever get around to making its historic, career-defining album. Ya-Ka-May is that record, and it may be as representative of New Orleans music as Dr. John’s Gumbo was when released in 1972. That record — still arguably the Doc's best — updated and introduced to a wider constituency the indigenous R&B of Professor Longhair, Huey “Piano” Smith and a host of other regional favorites. Galactic’s album of all-original material, created collaboratively with the guest performers on almost every track, spreads the word about the still-implausibly entertaining and accomplished variety of styles happening in New Orleans today. R&B and Mardi Gras roots are represented by Rebirth Brass Band (“Boe Money”); rock ‘n’ soul queen Irma Thomas, still in full, fine voice on “Heart of Steel”; Big Chief Bo Dollis on the aptly named “Wild Man”; and pianist Allen Toussaint playing against type, his distinctive gentlemanly grooves integrated into the inspirational, nuclear-powered “Bacchus.” It’s a little like hearing Art Tatum with the Beastie Boys, but does it ever work.

The new generation is highlighted by “Katey vs. Nobby,” a machine gun spray of dancehall featuring Katey Red, the… read more »

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Damn

KVON

Variety RULES!

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That special something

Schproing

I stumbled across Galactic and this album. Great groove, up tempo, and just enough New Orleans to give it original flavor.

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Count Me In

El Raptor

I'm bouncin round with this album more often than I expected to. Could do w/o the cursing on track 10, but the band rocks! Agree with "frethepig" that this will grow on you. I like "Speaks His Mind" on 'head'-phones.

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Hooked

aneviltrend

Never heard of Galactic before but I'm hooked. This album is wild and awesome. Reminds me a little bit of Propellerheads.

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Let bands be bands

GurnBlanston

This is some their best work! It brings to mind the infectious grooves that made "Hello Nasty" by The Beastie Boys an iconic album. Those who say this is not good, are the same people who are afraid of change. Every band must evolve to stay fresh. To those who don't like this latest masterpiece, I say "Do not fear change."

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I'm a used2be

dramoscordova

It's an awful experience to listen to this one. I know, it makes me a old stuck in the mud fogey, but I find this one to be the worst of all in their catalog. Like another reviewer here, I think I am officially through with this band. I will, however, treasure anytime I get to see Ellman play with NOKAS.

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Grows

frethepig

Took a couple of listens for me, but this is a fantastic record!

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damn fine

sphere777

a great great album. it jumps and jives like there's no tomorrow.

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Not the Galactic I know

scott.whigham

This just is too far removed from the Galactic that I like - I think I'm done with them now.

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When Galactic released From the Corner to the Block in 2007, they fully embraced hip-hop as an inseparable element in their sound for good. That said, Ya-Ka-May’s 15 tracks (named appropriately enough for an Afro-Orleanian soup of Asian origin that can be made with any meat you have around, noodles, hardboiled egg, green onion, and any array of spices) are more rooted in the diverse musics of post-Katrina New Orleans than on any record they’ve previously issued. There are more vocals than on any previous Galactic record — but the album is better for it. Such Crescent City institutions as Big Chief Bo Dollis, Irma Thomas, Walter “Wolfman” Washington, Allen Toussaint, Trombone Shorty, Corey Henry, and the Rebirth Brass Band are present alongside more modern — and lesser-known but no less talented — singers like John Boutté and Glen David Andrews. Hip-hop touches everything here — even Boutté’s bluesy “Dark Water,” which is flavored with bowed cellos and popping snares. Same with Thomas’ performance on “Heart of Steel,” where skittering hip-hop and breakbeat funk grooves are sampled against her trademark deep soul vocal, as enormous electric guitars vamp over a snarling, rumbling bassline and a lonesome blues harmonica that flits through the mix. Bone-crunching bounce hip-hop is represented by the pantheon of the New Orleans gay/drag underground sissy rap scene (their term) with Cheeky Blakk’s wild, anthemic gay rap “Do It Again,” “Double It” by Big Freedia, and Katey Red and Sissy Nobby on the dirty bounce of “Katey vs. Sissy.” The bounce tracks are simply brutal; Galactic fold themselves musically and inventively into the extremely repetitive rhythm tracks, and play them live while adding samples for atmosphere to highlight the raps and extend the tunes into other realms. On “Bacchus,” Toussaint’s voice and piano are layered with reverb amid gospelized soul, second line, and R&B in the sampled horn charts. “Boe Money,” with the Rebirth Brass Band, carries within it hints of post-bop jazz, second-line strut, and funky butt groove. Yet Ya-Ka-May is not merely a collaborative amalgam of tracks, but rather a unified whole reflecting NOLA’s musical vitality and reveling in it all simultaneously; it’s the sound of a musical community being itself for itself, while screaming — in full party mode — into the world that it’s alive and evolving. – Thom Jurek

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