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Ezra Collective & Yazmin Lacey

God Gave Me Feet For Dancing (Instrumental)

Ezra Collective & Yazmin Lacey

1 SONG • 4 MINUTES • JUL 23 2024

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God Gave Me Feet For Dancing (Instrumental)
04:01
℗© Partisan Records

Artist bios

The groove-laden, genre-bending British jazz-funk outfit Ezra Collective are one of the more ubiquitous groups on the dynamic London jazz scene. While their wildly energetic live gigs brought out people in droves, it was the wide release of their debut album, 2019's You Can't Steal My Joy, that helped break the jazz mold. They toured England and Europe for the next couple of years. In March 2022, the group issued the bumping "May the Funk Be with You" followed by "Victory Dance" in June. In November, the quintet released its sophomore full-length, Where I'm Meant to Be. They became the first jazz band to win the Mercury Prize for their efforts. The band toured in 2023, playing clubs across the globe. In September 2024 they released Dance, No One's Watching, inspired by the dancers in those clubs.

Formed in London in 2016 by Femi Koleoso (drums), his brother, TJ Koleoso (bass), Joe Armon-Jones (keys), Dylan Jones (trumpet), and James Mollison (saxophone), the group first made a name for themselves on the underground London jazz scene. Using elements of Afrobeat, hip-hop, grime, R&B, and jazz, the five-piece delivered their debut EP, Chapter 7, in 2016. A follow-up, Juan Pablo: The Philosopher, appeared a year later and was picked up by Gilles Peterson and awarded "Best Album" at his own Worldwide Awards.

With the London jazz scene going through a renaissance, the Ezra Collective, along with the likes of Kamaal Williams, Sons of Kemet, and the Comet Is Coming, quickly became a hot ticket in the capital, playing sold-out shows across the city and also the country. 2018 saw them pick up gongs for "Best UK Jazz Act" and "Live Experience of the Year" at the Jazz FM awards, and also found them recording their full-length debut. Released in 2019, You Can't Steal My Joy saw the group breathing new life into the jazz scene, with an eclectic mix that drew on all their influences and saw them collaborating with Loyle Carner, Jorja Smith, and Kokoroko. Just before the end of the year, Armon-Jones issued the solo album Turn to Clear View on Brownswood.

The reaction to You Can't Steal My Joy from England's nu-jazz scene was immediate, and it caught on with funk, R&B, and even some EDM DJs and got substantial radio play. Ezra Collective toured Great Britain and some European venues. While the musicians all did session work. Femi worked with Smith, Nubya Garcia, and Sarah Tandy, while Armon-Jones played with Tony Allen and Hugh Masekela, and Seed Ensemble, while Mollison played in the keyboardist's solo group and Cykada. Jones also played in Armon-Jones' quintet, and with Ashley Henry.

At the end of 2020, the Collective's "Quest for Coin II" EP, in collaboration with JME and Swindle (it earned the designation "hottest record of the year" from BBC Radio 1 DJ, Annie Mac), was released. In 2021, they resumed playing live gigs and did some very limited touring. Just before the year's close, they delivered "More Than a Hustler" in collaboration with rapper Novelist. Ezra Collective re-established their prime role on the club scene in 2022, though the venues were often a lot larger. They also played summer jazz festival stages in Europe. In November, Ezra Collective released their sophomore full-length, Where I'm Meant to Be, on the Partisan label. The 14-song set crisscrossed Afrobeat, jazz, funk, and hip-hop; it featured guest spots from Kojey Radical, Emeli Sande, Nao, and Sampa the Great on first single "Life Goes On." The video for the latter was shot alternately in London, England, and Lusaka, Zambia, by director Nathan Miller. Met with almost unanimous critical acclaim, steady airplay, and excellent sales, Where I'm Meant to Be was awarded the annual Mercury Prize in September 2023, naming it the best album released in the United Kingdom in 2022. It marked the very first time a jazz recording won the prize.

They toured the globe for the rest of 2022 and much of 2023, playing large clubs from Lagos to Sydney, from Chicago to London. The dancefloor punters directly inspired new music from Ezra Collective. In September 2024 they released the long-player Dance, No One's Watching. While recording the 19-song set at Abbey Road Studios, they were visited by friends, colleagues, and family. They enlisted some of those visitors on the singles "God Gave Me Feet for Dancing" (feat. Yazmin Lacey), "Streets Is Calling" (feat. M.anifest & Moonchild Sanelly), and "No One's Watching Me" (feat. Olivia Dean). ~ Rich Wilson

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Yazmin Lacey synthesizes classic R&B, jazz, and reggae with a modern approach and relates her journal-like songwriting with a conversational voice. The Nottingham native started performing informally with friends and had no other artistic ambition until she was invited to take part in BBC DJ Gilles Peterson's Future Bubblers program. She established herself with Black Moon, When the Sun Dips 90 Degrees, and Morning Matters, EPs released from 2017 through 2020, before stepping forward in 2023 with her first album, Voice Notes, made in close collaboration with Dave Okumu.

Growing up in East London, Lacey wrote extensively and sang in choir but had no musical ambition. Interested more in acting, she was involved in youth theater. In her twenties, she was working for a children's charity when music took sudden precedence, encouraged after jamming with friends to pursue her new creative outlet. Extended an invitation to be part of Future Bubblers, an incubator for unsigned developing talent, Lacey accepted, and in 2017 debuted with her first EP, Black Moon, issued on Running Circle, a label named after her backing band. Later in the year, she led off the Future Bubblers 1.0 compilation with another new song, "Marie," and performed at Gilles Peterson's Worldwide Awards ceremony. When the Sun Dips 90 Degrees followed on First Word in 2018, by which point she had gained additional support from a wide swath of BBC DJs and other outlets.

Lacey then set up Own Your Own Records, launched in 2020 with her third EP, Morning Matters, recorded with Moses Boyd (drums, production), Sarah Tandy (keyboards), and Ezra Collective's Femi Koleoso (drums) and Ife Ogunjobi (trumpet). Three years later, Lacey delivered the headier and typically warmhearted Voice Notes, establishing a tight link with the likes of multi-instrumentalist producers Dave Okumu and Melo-Zed, and drummer Dan See. Okumu also served as executive producer. ~ Andy Kellman

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