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This collaborative album of Pino Palladino and Blake Mills is inspired by funk, West African, and Cuban music. Pino Palladino is possibly the most famous working session bassist. Notes With Attachments is the first album released under Palladino’s own name, co-headlining with producer and instrumentalist Blake Mills. The 34-year-old Mills is also known as a supporting player, producing for artists like Perfume Genius .

Notes With Attachments is an elusive instrumental album. The songs are based around repeating chord changes inspired by , West African, and Cuban music, but the continuously shifting arrangements mean that no one instrument carries the melody for long. It’s the sound of consummate collaborators imagining a world where there’s no such thing as a lead performer.

On “Ekuté,” Palladino’s and guitar lines bounce off each other in a syncopated rhythm. As fuzzy, distorted yawns of guitar give way to squealing saxophone and bass clarinet, the players match intensities so that they sound almost like the same instrument at different ends of its range. The song started out as a Fela Kuti-inspired one-chord jam. “We were trying to figure out all the different places that one beat or bassline could take you,” Mills said in a statement.

Many songs here seem as if they were already in the air, just waiting to be captured in final form: “Man From Molise” began as a Palladino composition inspired by Brazilian musician Hermeto Pascoal and recorded with a New York ensemble. Mills played it at half-speed, and from there the duo created an entirely new song—though a sluggish feeling lingers, exacerbated by the lopsided 7/8 time signature. “Soundwalk” was written around a horn arrangement extracted from a fully mixed demo that Palladino and saxophonist Jacques Schwartz-Bart recorded while snowed in at a Chicago hotel during D’Angelo’s 2000 Voodoo tour; its lurching rhythm is reminiscent of another D’Angelo collaborator, J Dilla. The percussion drops in and out while the saxophones drag the music ahead, as if the players were exchanging glances, unsure whether to keep playing but carrying on anyway.

Compared to neo-soul or blues-rock, the melodies are fleeting, the grooves more intricate and less dependent on the downbeat. Running contrary to expectations is part of Mills’ M.O.; “My favorite musicians are people who have a certain dissatisfaction with the sound of their own instrument,” he told Pitchfork in 2018. The few exceptions are hard to miss: a monster riff played in unison by bass, sax, and drums midway through “Djurkel” looms over the entire album. A sax solo on the title track briefly glitters with sentimentality before the song shifts to something more dissonant.

Notes With Attachments was stitched together in the studio from multiple performances, yet effectively mimics the chemistry of a live ensemble. On Stardust, Damon Locks’ recitations burst from a bullhorn to be heard through the noise, but here the shifting arrangements don’t even bother to make space for vocals. (A human voice would only diminish the majestic unfurling of “Just Wrong,” or the eerie atmosphere that Sam Gendel generates with sampled saxophone on closer “Off the Cuff.”)

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