eMusic Review 0
Don't be fooled by first appearances with José James. Though he's presented on the cover as a sharp-suited practitioner of evening jazz — indeed, album opener "Code" echoes the laid-back pulse of his previous effort The Dreamer — there's a lot he wants to test out on you — specifically, exploring the point where jazz, hip-hop and electronica overlap.
Indeed, Blackmagic is a flighty album, touching only briefly on genres and eras, flirting with a variety of sounds but leaving before the night is over. It's an album equally in love with dusty decades of old (the piano tinkles of "Touch," the vintage horns sprinkled throughout) as the very modern present. The synthesized bass pulse and rigid beat of "Lay You Down," for example, wouldn't sound too out of place on a Four Tet album, and "Made For Love" is a fireworks display of studio trickery, digital buzzes and errant squeals ricocheting from left to right.
One of the album's most striking characteristics, though, is his vocal delivery. Take "Code," where softly spoken Gil Scott-like vocal fragments float independently round your head — spoken-word set to maracas shakes. In fact, James doesn't so much sing sentiments as fire his words as you.… read more »