Neil Spencer 

Nduduzo Makhathini: uNomkhubulwane review – entrancing South African jazz

This three-movement album from pianist and shaman Nduduzo Makhathini’s trio combines blues, bop and folk song to transcendental effect
  
  

Nduduzo Makhathini
‘A lighter touch’: south African pianist Nduduzo Makhathini. Photograph: Dart Photography/Arthur Dlamini

The title of this third Blue Note release from South African pianist Nduduzo Makhathini is the name of a Zulu goddess, “a regulator of nature, light and fertility”. It’s a name that isn’t evoked lightly – Makhathini, aside from being a startlingly original pianist, is a fully initiated sangoma, a shaman and healer, and his quest is spiritual.

His previous two albums, since landing on Blue Note in 2020, have been horn-heavy, suffused with the ecstatic spirit of 1960s Coltrane. Here he brings a lighter touch, playing as a trio alongside Cuban-born drummer Francisco Mela and bassist Zwelakhe-Duma Bell le Pere, an American of South African descent. The album is no less entrancing than its predecessors, its 11 tracks arranged as a three-part movement, moving from Libations to Water Spirits to Inner Attainment.

Omnyama opens the record in quiet reverence, with a vocal accompaniment that is part song, part prayer, while elsewhere the mood slides between contemplation (Uxolo) and exuberance (KwaKhangelamankengana), where Makhathini’s playing invokes comparisons to McCoy Tyner, and where blues, bop and folk song are entwined.

The Inner Attainment section is the most melodic and arresting, ending on a solo piece, Ithemba, that’s a celebration of tranquillity and transcendence.

Outstanding.

Watch a video for Ithemba by Nduduzo Makhathini, from uNomkhubulwane.
 

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