The Council of The Gods Delivers Their New “Trilogy” Album

The Council of The Gods - Trilogy

The Council of The Gods drop off their new “Trilogy” album.

The culmination of three emcees and three producers, Trilogy is the latest full-length missive from The Council Of The Gods, Jamaica’s foremost Hip-Hop collective. Vocalists Five Steez, Nomad Carlos and The Sickest Drama of The Council consistently blur the lines between true school knowledge dropping and the latest wave of experimental sonics running Hip Hop, representing not only for their Kingston home, but for a generation of heads at the margins.

Production comes from Time Cow, Sawandi and Son Raw, with A&Ring by Equiknoxx Music. 

Trilogy is the group’s most recent statement yet, alternating between screwface ready bar work, sinister street tales and abstract ruminations on contemporary life, all over a sonic tapestry covering everything from skippy jazz to repurposed dub to electronica-tinged soul.

Through 8 tracks of breakneck, roughneck rap, Trilogy welcomes listeners new and old to a Kingston Hip-Hop scene where emcees switch in and out of patois mid bar and where international influences are refracted and transformed by long-lived musical practices.

Opener Drunk Samurai roars out the gate courtesy of a clipped, rhythmic jazz loop, a half second snippet that worms itself into your ear while providing the perfect backdrop for the Gods to get busy. What Goes Around and Homage to Her, meanwhile, showcase the group’s ability to tackle both nocturnal street tales and romantic missives with equal gusto. This eclectic toolkit is the group’s secret weapon, as Carlos, Steez and TS bounce off each other’s bars, all while fleshing out their individual personas.

Featuring mixing by Jan Kwapisz, mastering by Mario Lawrence, and artwork by Gavsborg, Trilogy sees The Council step to their biggest and brightest stage yet, taking full advantage of the opportunity to not only drop a Jamaican classic, but also an album that will introduce the wider world to their artistry. Taking DJ Kool Herc’s artform, born of reggae sound system traditions and American funk, full circle, the album features bass heavy enough to shatter glass but also words real enough to stop headphone listeners dead in their tracks. Nuff’ said.

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