Before Sons Of Kemet take to the stage at Londonâs Roundhouse for their biggest headline gig to date, the bandâs poet and collaborator Joshua Idehen has a few words for the crowd. During an animated introduction, he asks three favours. Enjoy yourselves, respect those around you, and, as a necessary aside, never vote Tory.
The effervescent performer-turned-compere then goes on to tell the room to expect a performance as surprising and delightful as Tupac Shakur showing up at your door at midnight, dripping in honey. Itâs a truly visceral metaphor that sets the tone for a night full of giddy energy and loosening inhibitions.
On Sons Of Kemetâs last album, 2021âs âBlack To The Futureâ, the jazz virtuosos hit new heights as they reflected on the summer of 2020 and the Black Lives Matter protests that swept across the globe. With help from collaborators like London grime MC D Double E, the genre-blurring Kojey Radical, neo-soul artist Lianne La Havas, they painted a wounded but hopeful portrait of a summer gone by and the future ahead, all set above generational musical talent.

Idehen is the only one of the albumâs guests to make an appearance tonight, but his evocative, deeply passionate contributions on album highlight âField Negusâ provides the setâs most blistering moment as he asks: âHow can we expect the dungeon keeper to make the rules and play fair?â
The four members of Sons Of Kemet are intertwined like few other bands manage. On drums, Tom Skinner (also of Radiohead side-project The Smile) and Eddie Hick duel together as they roll out increasingly complex rhythms, always captivating in the way they interconnect. In front of them, bandleader and saxophonist Shabaka Hutchings has the same effortless to-and-fro with giddy tuba player Theon Cross, the pair trading criss-crossing melodies and showing off a striking telepathic connection.
Yet even in a band so interconnected, Hutchings remains the transfixing focal point. Through Sons Of Kemet and his other projects (Shabaka and the Ancestors, The Comet Is Coming and beyond) heâs become a vital cog in the London jazz scene, and is taking it to a whole new level of mainstream visibility. The success is for good reason, too. His sax melodies are both catchy and impossibly complicated. Without dialling back his endless musical wizardry, it still manages to pull the sound towards something youâll be whistling on the tube home. Itâs a balance he and his band strike perfectly.
âI think the music speaks for itself, but take the energy you have in this room home with you,â Hutchings tells the crowd before the encore, in his only speech across the night. The frenzy these four players whip up ensure both their melodies and message will have a hell of an impact.
Sons Of Kemet played:
âIn Memory of Samir Awadâ
âThroughout the Madness, Stay Strongâ
âThink of Homeâ
âHustleâ
âFor The Cultureâ
âPick Up Your Burning Crossâ
âIn Remembrance of Those Fallenâ
âGoing Homeâ
âMyth Scienceâ
My Queen Is Ada Eastmanâ (with Josh Idehen)
âField Negusâ (with Josh Idehen)
âMy Queen Is Harriet Tubmanâ
âAfrofuturismâ
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