Babatunde Lea - Suite Unseen: Summoner of the Ghost

Written by Mark Saleski
Published March 23, 2005

First posted on Mark Is Cranky:

Throughout the world, music is created and used for many reasons. Here in the west we tend to think of music not only as a form of entertainment but also as an acccompaniment to various celebrations of our life calendar signposts: "Auld Lang Syne" to start off the new year, "Happy Birthday" for marking everyone's start in life, "Pomp & Circumstance" for graduations, "The Wedding March" for that trip down the isle.

While these are not trivial events, we do tend to treat the music as something to be pulled off the shelf, used and then put away. That is to say, music is not an integral part of our society (I'm ignoring the commercial uses of music, a topic for another day.)

Before we talk about Babatunde Lea's music, we need to check out his philosophy, something just about as important as the actual notes. First stop: the concept album.

In pop and rock music, the 'concept album', has been both celebrated (when it works) and reviled (sometimes rightfully so.). In the latter case, the critique often centers around the artist's "pretentious" approach. This has always struck me as being somewhat unfair as the use of the word "pretentious" implies that the reviewer knows the artist's intent:

    I draw a lot from African culture, and one of the main things I've come to understand is that music is functional. In African cultures, music accompanies everything ... from birth ceremonies to funerals. The music is there to open people up to the deepest experiences of life. But once music opens you up, it doesn't control you after that. Music is a resource like oil or water, it does the bidding of those who control it.

True enough, it's more than entertainment.

    It is my express wish that my music will empower people to look within and to wake up to new possibilities; to become agents of positive change for themselves, for their families and for the world at large.

That is not an artiste puttin' on airs...that's a human being putting his fellow man first.

On Suite Unseen: Summoner of the Ghosts, Babatunde Lea pays tribute to his ancestors: musical, actual and spiritual via a suite of thematically-linked compositions. What's unusual about this record is that the individual suite entries are not played sequentially to form a whole. Instead, the suite is interspersed amongst several bandmate compositions, traditional and new chant pieces and even a reworked modern pop standard, James Taylor's "Fire and Rain." Lea's motivation for this construct:

    ...But I chose to space the compositions from the other bandmates inside the suite so that they would become part of it, creating a flow where the songs in each segment of the suite speak to that particular moment.

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Mark Saleski is a writer and music obsessive based out of the Monadnock region of New Hampshire. On his best day, he hopes to channel the ghosts of Lester Bangs and Jack Kerouac. He spends the hours of 9:32PM to 1:37AM carving out music reviews and essays for Jazz.com, Blogcritics.org and other publications.
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Babatunde Lea - Suite Unseen: Summoner of the Ghost
Published: March 23, 2005
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Section: Music
Writer: Mark Saleski
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