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Aethiopes is a studio album by American rapper Billy Woods, released April 8, 2022, by Backwoodz Studioz.[3] The cover art is taken from the Rembrandt painting Two Moors, and the album name comes from an ancient European name for African people.[4] The album came along with the announcement of a US tour running May through October 2022, and an appearance at the Dutch music festival Le Guess Who? in November.[5]

Aethiopes
Studio album by
Billy Woods
ReleasedApril 8, 2022
GenreHip hop[1][2]
Length39:09
LabelBackwoodz Studioz
ProducerPreservation
Billy Woods chronology
Haram
(2021)
Aethiopes
(2022)
Church
(2022)

Style and reception


Aethiopes ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic80/100[6]
Review scores
SourceRating
Beats Per Minute88%[7]
Pitchfork8.0/10[2]
Spectrum Culture80%[1]
Sputnikmusic4.0/5[8]

Aethiopes received positive reviews from critics noted at review aggregator Metacritic. It has a weighted average score of 80 out of 100, based on 4 reviews.[6] Per Pitchfork's Dean Van Nguyen, the "maverick" Woods needs "a collaborator draped in enchantments and silk; an eclectic crate digger who shares his phosphorescent tendencies" and Preservation is suited for that role, crafting an album that "skids across eras, countries, and cultures", such as opener "Asylum" which contains "swirling sounds of piano keys, delicate guitars, and snaking brass riffs that appear sourced from old North East Africa or Middle Eastern music."[2] Spectrum Culture's Thomas Stremfel notes a similarity with fellow New York rapper Ka which "isn't a complete coincidence considering Preservation's work with Ka under their Dr. Yen Lo project." The beat on fourth track "Sauvage" is "a Rube Goldberg machine with every percussion hit triggering another in a sparse, unending loop as Woods spins a handful of tales with rarely clear beginnings or ends." Woods' storytelling is "unmatched even relative to his own past material" and his "star-studded feature onslaught [of] the New York underground's best" never phone it in, but after a string of feature-heavy tracks, the featureless closing two feel like "tonal whiplash, tuning back into your regularly scheduled program." But ultimately, it is a "slight distraction" with Preservation "mak[ing] the most of each artist's potential set against Woods' consistent production aesthetics."[1]

Beats Per Minute's Rob Hakimian notes that "with the title Aethiopes being an ancient word for African, the cover image borrowed from the 1661 painting Two Moors by Dutch master Rembrandt, and a song called "Haarlem" after the Dutch city near Amsterdam that would eventually give name to the multi-cultural area of New York City, there is evidently a grander narrative about slavery, historical immigration and the Black diaspora at large at play." Woods "is drawing from pockets of African and European history" while Preservation "is pulling obscure samples from geographical sources that perfectly interlock with the tone and concept." The producer is "tuned into the rapper's heady concepts and is dreaming up the vision right alongside him from first thought to last" with a "symbiosis between producer and rapper [which] is key to the album's unmitigated success." Pres "arms the rapper with the perfectly-sourced sounds and samples for each of his forays" including a "drone of African horns" on "No Hard Feelings" whose "shifting pitch pushing Woods' bars to greater, more exasperated lengths as he flits from one African's horrific demise to the next", "Wharves" which "features whispered percussion that is dominated by the glassy echoes of mbira – a usually joyous sound that becomes hollow and cold when combined with the rapper's words about shipwrecked German colonisers turning to cannibalism to survive", and "The Doldrums" with an instrumental "so stutteringly atmospheric that it feels zombified, while Woods shifts between times and settings with hallucinogenic fluidity; images of horses being thrown overboard mingle with snapshots of dirty urban corners, all interspersed with unsettling lessons." Woods and Pres have "made an album that lures you in with rhymes and tones that are perfectly attuned to each other, augment each other and make it clear that there is something important being told here", comparing their narrative-building work to "heavily stylised comic strips – though these are more Alan Moore than weekend funnies." Aethiopes "overwhelming atmosphere invites you to pore over the tracks, to take in each detail the light reaches, then comb over them again for everything you've missed", with details which "will still be getting discovered, decoded and debated in a few generations' time."[7]


Track listing


All tracks are written by Billy Woods and Preservation. All tracks are produced by Preservation, with co-production by Glow in the Dark Flowers on track 6 and Woods on track 9.

Aethiopes track listing
No.TitleLength
1."Asylum"2:42
2."No Hard Feelings"2:16
3."Wharves"3:08
4."Sauvage" (featuring Boldy James and Gabe 'Nandez)3:07
5."The Doldrums"3:41
6."NYNEX" (featuring Elucid, Quelle Chris, and Denmark Vessey)4:17
7."Christine" (featuring Mike Ladd)3:31
8."Heavy Water" (featuring El-P and Breeze Brewin)2:24
9."Haarlem" (featuring Fatboi Sharif)3:19
10."Versailles" (featuring Despot)3:08
11."Protoevangelium" (featuring Shinehead)2:24
12."Remorseless"2:50
13."Smith + Cross"2:22
Total length:39:09

Personnel



References


  1. Stremfel, Thomas (April 18, 2022). "Billy Woods: Aethiopes". Spectrum Culture. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
  2. Van Nguyen, Dean (April 11, 2022). "Billy Woods: Aethiopes Album Review". Pitchfork. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
  3. Minsker, Evan (March 13, 2022). "Billy Woods and Preservation Announce New Album Aethiopes". Pitchfork. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
  4. Breihan, Tom (April 13, 2022). "Billy Woods & Preservation's New Album Is a Disorienting Masterwork". Stereogum. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
  5. Sacher, Andrew (May 13, 2022). "Billy Woods Announces Aethiopes Tour". BrooklynVegan. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
  6. "Aethiopes by Billy Woods Reviews and Tracks". Metacritic. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
  7. Hakimian, Rob (April 12, 2022). "Album Review: Billy Woods - Aethiopes". Beats Per Minute. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
  8. "Review: Billy Woods - Aethiopes". Sputnikmusic. April 21, 2022. Retrieved July 19, 2022.



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