Bonobo – Fragments Live Tour – Tickets – College Street Music Hall – New Haven, CT – February 23rd, 2022

Bonobo - Fragments Live Tour
Premier Concerts and Manic Presents:

Bonobo

Jordan Rakei

College Street Music HallNew HavenCT
All Ages
‎with Jordan Rakei

This event is General Admission Standing Room on the Floor. There will be limited first-come, first-served seating available in the back.

COVID-19 Vaccination (14 days past second shot) OR proof of negative COVID-19 PCR test (received within the past 72 hours) required for entry. If vaccinated, please bring your vaccination card or clearly legible photo of your vaccination card on your phone and a valid photo ID. If unvaccinated please bring printed or digital proof of your recent negative PCR test. Masks are required for all ticket holders and staff despite vaccination status. You may pull your mask down when eating or drinking only. These policies will remain in place until further notice.

To present proof of vaccination and/or negative PCR test results on your phone, we’ve partnered with Bindle, a digital health platform that is secure, easy to use and completely anonymous; your personal health information is never shared and your biometrics are not required. Visit the App Store or Google Play Store and search for MyBindle. Set-up is free and simple. If you are unable to provide digital proof, physical proof is also accepted.

There is a strict 8-ticket limit per show. Additional orders exceeding the ticket limit may be cancelled without notice. This includes orders associated with the same name, e-mail address, billing address, credit card number, and/or other information.

BONOBO

Fragments is a huge event, destined to be one of the crossover electronic records of the year, and it might very well be Bonobo's masterpiece. Certainly for Si Green, the man behind it all, it was the most emotionally intense record yet to create, and it shows. Its electronic sounds are more powerfully hypnotic, the beauty of acoustic instruments is more exquisitely realised, the two are interwoven more totally -- and the songs are unforgettable. Its structures are full of tension and release on both an intimate and an elemental scale, it manages to touch on the most delicate and fleeting of emotions but also on existential terrors and an unabashed celebration of life in the face of fear and uncertainty. It's truly a record for our times. But there were times when it felt it would never happen: where previously Green had always written on the move, this time he had to fight to get it out, in isolation, as the world changed around him.

Of course these last few years have been a wild ride for everyone, but for Green, it was more a case of the rollercoaster suddenly stopping. It's now been over 20 years since he started Bonobo as a solo project, and over a decade since it expanded to include an arena-filling live band plus a parallel DJ and remixing schedule that puts Green up there with the biggest names in dance music. That expansion and acceleration has been constant, from a small town rural upbringing, through the small, funky clubs of Brighton on the English south coast, living in NYC then LA to working with Erykah Badu, Ólafur Arnalds and Jon Hopkins (plus remixes for Michael Kiwanuka, Gorillaz, George Fitzgerald and London Grammar). He has received three GRAMMY nominations, played huge arenas (selling out London's Alexandra Palace three times, as well as Denver's legendary Red Rock Amphitheatre, not to mention Glastonbury, Coachella, Lollapalooza, Primavera Sound and Fuji Rock) and most recently landing a top ten album in multiple countries, top five at home in the UK and a Billboard dance album number one in the US, with 2017's Migration.

This sounds dizzying, but the process of getting there was always so continuous, there was rarely any dramatic step change that made him take stock. His childhood was quietly cultured with his parents (his father a well regarded English folk musician) and sisters in Hampshire and Sussex. It was natural from there to gravitate to Sussex's party capital Brighton, where his eclectic tastes matched with the funky and exploratory club scene of the mid 90s, DJing jazzy, soulful global and electronic sounds in funky basements. Releasing on Brighton's own Tru Thoughts at the turn of the millennium led to signing to Ninja Tune, which gave him a global profile and let him build up a live band. And on it went... each step was logical and organic.

But as Green embarked on the Migration tour -- during which he and the band would play to two million people -- this constant acceleration combined with a feeling of the world in flux provided a feeling of uncertainty. He recalls the album dropping just as Trump took office in January 2017: heading to LAX for the start of the tour he saw it surrounded by protestors against the new travel ban. "It was deeply strange," he says, "There was very much a feeling of 'Oh well, here we go -- off into a weird new world,' not even knowing if we'd be allowed to come back." And touring was becoming gruelling. He had not long before had to deal with both his parents' passing, and that sense of "the madness intensifying out there in the world, especially in North America in that summer of 2017 -- it all got a bit much. I had a bit of a moment." He started to pull back into himself -- where previously he'd enjoyed and taken inspiration from the endless transit and crowds, now he felt like the constant cycle of cities and stop-offs was stifling. For the first time, crucially, he wasn't writing new music as he travelled.

And this sense of everything shifting and unravelling didn't abate when he got back: he arrived home after two years touring to find California on fire, and then the pandemic hit. His only way of processing this was to spend time in nature. Already on tour, he'd begun to take the scenic route. While the tour bus rolled on, he'd drive alone, and between cities "find the places that were alien and unique and awe inspiring, and just be there for a while, take pictures, get weird and be feral for a few days -- I'd literally walk into the venue to soundcheck in my muddy hiking boots." This continued: in 2020, his only escape from confinement was to go camping. He'd take a Jeep out into the Californian desert -- one time inadvertently visiting Death Valley on the hottest day in its history. With the temperature hitting 54.4°C, he found himself genuinely fearing he might not make it back to his vehicle, encountering a rattlesnake didn't help either.

Exhausted and wrung-out, Green was wrestling with feelings he found hard to express. He was unable to get home to the UK -- where formerly he'd been back and forth regularly -- but his vivid experience of heat and news footage of fires raging in California made him realise "the place I call home now might not be viable for life in the near future." The real and present danger of climate change was suddenly unavoidable. Yet at the same time, his abiding memories of the sheer scale of Canadian mountain ranges -- on tour, he'd driven solo through landscapes uninhabited for hundreds of miles -- was a reminder that life goes on, that nature is much bigger than any of us. Maybe in the green Utah valleys he camped in to escape the US election fever -- because as a Brit he couldn't vote -- he was harking back to his upbringing in rural England, yearning for the giddy innocence of teenagers drinking round bonfires. All of this was weighing on him: but with the need to make a new album looming, he was still struggling to get his ideas out.

The emergence of what would become Fragments from Green's psychic blank canvas came in phases. First was setting banks of modular synths in motion during lockdown in 2020. At first this was a diversion "from just pushing a kickdrum around on a computer screen, going off, making a cup of tea, then pushing it round some more" -- but then he became addicted to the complex undulations of sound that came from the machines. The fact that "it was chaotic but you could exert some degree of control over just how chaotic it should be" resonated with his deep feelings about elemental threats and human frailty: it was a way of interfacing with them and expressing them sonically. Also around this time, he dug out some recordings he'd made of harpist Lara Somogyi just pre-COVID, and found that these also fit his mindset.

The flowing, rippling tones of the modular synths and the harp working together set the tone of fluidity and cyclical patterns. Working with arranger and string player Miguel Atwood-Ferguson, musical themes began to rise out of the unconscious jamming and sample manipulation -- and recording orchestral musicians in actual studios helped bring the songs "out of the box" and into real, physical space. A rhythmic framework started to come together too: the structures of UK bass music and rave began to seep into beats that would become tracks like "Otomo" and "Sapien," some of the most hip-shaking grooves he's ever made. This was because Green, unable to return to the UK because of COVID and Visa issues, was obsessively listening to radio and DJ sets from back home and picking up on the future-retro rave, jungle and UK garage sounds he was hearing. Of course he retained his own connections to the UK scene -- notably overseeing the first in the prestigious fabric Presents DJ mix series in 2019, and launching his own dance-focused label OUTLIER in late 2020, writing a radio smash together with fellow Brit Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs (and later signing Damon Albarn protege Poté).

Still, though, this wasn't a complete record yet. There were musical and psychological themes, but it wasn't connected, and -- aside from the "old school, Detroity, Moodymann and Theo Parrish inspired" "Shadows," recorded with friend Jordan Rakei -- there weren't songs. Once COVID hit, the vocalists Green reached out to, it seems, were struggling as much with creative block as he was. But finally, well into 2020, "right at the end when I thought everything was off the table, and I'd ground to a halt," Chicagoan singer and poet Jamila Woods sent back her vocal parts.

Green listened to the vocal back in the studio after an evening out and it was a magic moment. The last creative blocks dissolved: "I knew I had a centrepiece for the album, I knew how it was all going to sound." The track became "Tides," and all of the themes of ebb and flow, of the cycles of nature, of the inexorable nature of the elements fell into place around it. That moment became a figurative turning of the tide. The US was opening up from lockdown, and other vocals started coming in thick and fast, bringing new collaborative energy to the album. O'Flynn's co-production contribution on "Otomo" -- he effectively remixed it, turning Green's sample of the haunting Bulgarian choir 100 Kaba-Gaidi into a dramatic breakdown and beat drop -- also gave the process a boost, reminding Green of the sense of dancefloor abandon and surging crowds that by now he missed with a burning passion.

So the album is the sound of both struggle and isolation -- personally and collectively -- and of a surging, joyous return. This falling-together of elements was rapid, and a huge relief, coinciding with a return to socialising and a return to dancing. While there is sorrow and introspection here -- see the beautiful melancholy of Joji's voice and the dense textures of the ballad "From You" -- there is just as much a sense of release, of going with the flow and freedom. It's about the dancefloor in many ways, about how "I remembered all over again how much I loved crowds and movement and people connecting with each other" -- but the positivity isn't just in the uptempo rhythms: even the most introspective and melancholic pieces have joy in them.

The beatless "Elysian," which follows "Tides," lets the fluidity of Somogyi's harp and Atwood-Ferguson's strings flow over the listener, enveloping you in bliss. And another ballad, the closing "Day by Day" with Kadhja Bonet -- the only vocal recorded in an in-person session -- glows with hope, with the sense that despite it all life goes on, and that even in small ways, individual action matters. Drawing all the threads together is the single "Rosewood" -- another nod to Detroit house, with a feeling of both celebration and a deep yearning, it both harks back to the small jazz, funk and soul clubs where Green cut his teeth but has the epic scale of the biggest festival stages too. Fragments isn't just a musical salve -- far from it, it has pain and fear and struggle shot through it -- but it is a gorgeous reminder of of how out of struggle and disillusionment, creativity and hope can emerge at the most unexpected moments.

Links: Official Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Spotify

JORDAN RAKEI

Multi-instrumentalist, vocalist, producer, and songwriter Jordan Rakei is back with his fourth studio album, What We Call Life, released via Ninja Tune.

What We Call Life is Jordan Rakei’s most vulnerable and intimate album to date. Its lyrics concern the lessons that the New Zealand-born, Australia-raised, and London-based artist learned about himself during therapy, a journey that began two years ago when he started reading about the ‘positive psychology’ movement. Rakei, already a practitioner of meditation and mindfulness, was curious about the potential of using therapy for further self-discovery. During the process, he began to learn more about his behaviour patterns and anxieties and addressed his long-standing irrational phobia of birds – a fear often associated with the unpredictable and the unknown, and something explored in the album’s creative direction and visuals.

“As we worked through it, it made me realise I would love to talk about the different lessons I learned from therapy in my music: about my early childhood, my relationship with my parents and siblings, becoming independent in London, being in a new marriage, understanding how my marriage compares to the relationship my parents had” Rakei says.

These themes manifest on songs like What We Call Life’s lead single, “Family”, which Rakei says is “the most personal” he’s ever been with his lyrics. “I wanted to hit my vulnerability barrier and be really honest. It’s about my parents’ divorce in my mid-teens but still having love for them no matter what,” he explains. On “Send My Love”, Rakei sends a dispatch from London (his adopted home since 2015) back to his family in Australia. “It’s a stand for my independence, like saying: I’m fine here, don’t worry about me, send my love back home.”

“Illusion” explores notions of determinism vs. free will. “The song is an argument about how much control I have over my mood, my attitude, or even my personality,” Rakei says. Similar ideas about nature and nurture, and the way one’s environment can affect the way they live, appear on “Clouds”, a song that Rakei wrote in light of the Black Lives Matter demonstrations that erupted around the world following the murder of George Floyd. The track sees Rakei reflect on his own mixed-race heritage (his father is a Pacific Islander, his mother white) and the privileges that his light skin has afforded him in western society. “That whole movement made me think about this a lot, and then therapy enabled me to write about it,” he says. “I’d never been that open about this in the past.”

With so many artists being influenced by his style, it would be very easy for Jordan to stay in the same musical lane; but, as in life, he is determined to move his music forward. Such introspective subjects are a departure from Rakei’s last album, 2019’s Origin. Raising big questions about the way that technology and social media interferes with our sense of humanity, Origin received praise from The Observer, Mixmag, Complex, and GQ, earned an unexpected shout-out from Elton John, led to a collaboration with rap legend Common, and saw Rakei give a show-stopping performance for NPR’s Tiny Desk Concert series. Rakei attributes his shift towards a more personal subject matter to listening to singer-songwriters like Laura Marling, Scott Matthews, Joni Mitchell, and John Martyn while writing What We Call Life. “Their lyrics are usually very honest, and sometimes not even ambiguous,” he says. “I was jealous of how open they were, when my staff in the past had been more like commentary.”

Besides being a lyrical step forward, What We Call Life expands Rakei’s sonic vocabulary too. While the heart of the record will be familiar to fans of his neo-soul and hip-hop-infused work, here Rakei dives deeper into his sound world, merging electronic with acoustic, and rugged grooves with ambient atmospheres, to create something richer, more detailed, and more textural than before. Unlike previous releases which were crafted from Rakei’s own demos, What We Call Life sees him work with his full band throughout the writing process for the first time. Rakei laid down the building blocks of the record with his collaborators over two writing and recording sessions in Wales, before finishing the album with a lengthy solo post-production process at his studio in London over lockdown. What We Call Life casts Rakei in the role of an old-school producer, working with a five-person team of core collaborators (Chris Hyson, Jim Macrae, Jonathan Harvey, Imraan Paleker, and Ernesto Marichales all joined him for the recording sessions in Wales) whose own unique musical sensibilities bring Rakei’s vision to life.

While Rakei has never brought in a full band for his studio albums before, he’s hardly a stranger to collaboration. His name is closely associated with friends and collaborators like Loyle Carner (including co-writing, producing, and performing on “Ottolenghi” and the Jorja Smith-featuring “Loose Ends”), Tom Misch, and Alfa Mist. There’s also his tight relationship with the South London dance music scene orbiting Bradley Zero’s Rhythm Section club night and label, with Rakei adopting the alias ‘Dan Kye’ to release an EP of house music in 2016. More recently he returned to the alias, offering an exclusive track for Bonobo’s Fabric presents Bonobo mix and releasing a Dan Kye full-length, Small Moments, in November 2020 while taking a break from producing What We Call Life.

He also covered Donald Byrd’s “Wind Parade” for the Blue Note Re:imagined compilation, and earlier this year showcased work from his creative community alongside some of his favourite tracks (including his own covers of Radiohead’s “Codex”, and Jeff Buckley’s “Lover, You Should’ve Come Over”) in his mix for the esteemed LateNightTales series. He continues to offer up production tutorials and behind-the-scenes insights into his creative process with his fan community on Patreon. This all follows shows from SXSW to Glastonbury, a support slot for Bonobo’s massive Alexandra Palace shows, and a sold-out date at London’s Roundhouse – not to mention co-signs and collaborations with some of his heroes (he joined Chic’s Nile Rodgers for a writing session and recorded with Terrace Martin, producer for Kendrick and Snoop Dogg, and Herbie Hancock).

What We Call Life’s artwork was created by Canadian-born, Los Angeles-based visual artist Justin Tyler Close, who resonated with the themes on Rakei’s album. The image was created in a remote photo shoot, with Rakei sending images over the internet that were projected onto a sheet and photographed by Close. The melancholic images reflect the title of the record, a question that Rakei would sometimes ask himself during a period of his childhood in which he suffered a great deal of anxiety: Is this what we call life? Rather than accepting defeat, the title is today a commentary on the more happy, confident, and assured person and artist that Jordan Rakei is today.

Links: Official Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Spotify

Venue Information:
College Street Music Hall
238 College Street

New Haven, CT, 06510

Parking Information