Jah Wobble
Umbra Sumus


Rock/Pop
CD, 17   Tracks, 72:49  Length
01 Il Je Vedro Il Oblačno Jah Wobble 05:36
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
02 Mehmeda Majka Budila Jah Wobble 03:10
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
03 Paternal Kindness Jah Wobble 03:32
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
04 Moon Slowbeat Part I Jah Wobble 07:24
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
05 Moon Slowbeat Part II Jah Wobble 02:14
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
06 Just A Prayer Jah Wobble 05:10
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
07 St. Mary-le-Bow Jah Wobble 04:04
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
08 I Offer You Everything Jah Wobble 05:08
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
09 Organ Meditation Jah Wobble 01:35
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
10 The Compound Jah Wobble 01:44
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
11 Chela Jah Wobble 01:37
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
12 Umbra Sumus Part I Jah Wobble 03:35
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
13 Umbra Sumus Part II Jah Wobble 03:27
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
14 4 Basses, An Organ, Jaki & A Train Jah Wobble 04:35
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
15 Mount Zion Jah Wobble 12:10
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
16 Limehouse Cut Jah Wobble 03:43
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
17 (untitled) Jah Wobble 04:05
✷  Recording Date   1998  ✷ 
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Bass Jah Wobble
Keyboards Mark Ferda
Trumpet Harry Beckett
Drums Jaki Liebezeit
Producer Jah Wobble
Engineer Mark Ferda
Personal Details
Index # 3854
Owner Dave
Tags Dub, Synth Pop, Downtempo, Ambient
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
The strange, spiritual album that is Umbra Sumus is one of the more interesting items released in 1998. Bassist and composer Jah Wobble creates strangely compelling soundscapes that draw textures from a variety of ethnic traditions without explicitly evoking any one of them. The first cut, "Il Jevedro il Oblanco," sets the pace with a duet for what sounds like a toy music box and fuzz bass, but suddenly becomes a lush electronica-pop track as vocalist Amila Sulejmanovic begins singing in Bosnian. Elsewhere, Natacha Atlas croons in Arabic over a texture not of ouds and doumbeks, but of synthesized percussion, keyboards, and Wobble's own throbbing bass, and it sounds perfectly natural. "I Offer You Everything" blends reggae percussion, piano, and B.J. Cole's wonderful pedal steel guitar to create something that should have been a crossover pop hit. At times, Jah Wobble's music verges on art-jazz, at times electronica with melodic sound effects, and at times it is in territory that doesn't have a name because nobody else sounds quite like this. Whatever you call this music, it is interesting throughout. Though styles shift continuously, there isn't a dud track on Umbra Sumus, and it's a must-have for those who like intelligent and highly textured pop. The name of this album translates as "We Are Shadows," but many listeners will find that this music sheds welcome light on the possibilities of musical fusion. -- Richard Foss allmusic.com