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On 'I Think I'm Good,' Kassa Overall Expands The Realm Of Jazz/Hip-Hop Fusion

Kassa Overall calls himself a "backpack jazz producer." He recorded his new album <em>I Think I'm Good</em> by capturing free-form jazz exploration and then chopping the recordings on his laptop.
Spencer Ostrander
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Courtesy of the artist
Kassa Overall calls himself a "backpack jazz producer." He recorded his new album I Think I'm Good by capturing free-form jazz exploration and then chopping the recordings on his laptop.

Kassa Overall thinks about sound the way hip-hop producers do: Anything can be transformed into a beat. With a background in jazz — he's played with Christian McBride, Ravi Coltrane and the late pianist Geri Allen — the songs on his new album, I Think I'm Good, also have moments that sound electric and improvisational.

Based in Brooklyn, N.Y., Overall calls himself a "backpack jazz producer," a cross between a jazz musician, a backpack rapper and a bedroom producer who uses his laptop as a mobile studio. Smashups between hip-hop and jazz have been happening for decades, but recent works by Kendrick Lamar, Flying Lotus and others suggest that the realm is maturing. Kassa Overall is accelerating that evolution, with sometimes-confessional observations and dramatic, unpredictable sonic landscapes.

"Show Me A Prison," a lament about the American prison system, is one of several songs that viscerally describe the experience of confinement. While studying music at Oberlin, Overall was hospitalized after a manic episode. He's only recently begun to talk about it, and he believes that his willingness to share led directly to some creative breakthroughs, like his haunting reworking of Chopin's Prelude No. 4 on "Darkness In Mind."

Kassa Overall recorded this album like a nomad. He'd show up at one of his talented jazz artist friends' house or rehearsal space — he recorded Sullivan Fortner at the piano in the kitchen of his studio apartment — and, without divulging much about the track, encouraged loose, free-form exploration. Then he'd go home and chop up the results, sometimes micro-editing beat by beat or phrase by phrase.

Despite all that detailed work, I Think I'm Good is alive with spontaneity and outcomes too wild to be scripted. It's not another jazz-meets-hip-hop scrum: It's the sound of whole new lanes opening up.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Tom Moon has been writing about pop, rock, jazz, blues, hip-hop and the music of the world since 1983.