Black Messiah
BLACK MESSIAH: A FUNK RECKONING, A SPIRITUAL UPRISING Some albums arrive quietly. Others arrive like a reckoning. Black Messiah did not knock. It broke the door down — unannounced, urgent, necessary. Released in 2014 after a fourteen-year silence, it did not feel like a comeback. It felt like a transmission. A message carried through time, heavy with history, trembling with the present. D’Angelo did not return to reclaim a throne. He returned because the world was burning. And he had something to say. THE SOUND OF FIRE: FUNK, SOUL, AND DISSONANCE From its opening moments, Black Messiah feels different. The grooves are thick, almost murky — basslines that don’t just sit in the pocket, but stretch it, bend it, redefine it. Drums lag just behind the beat, creating tension. Guitars shimmer and stab. Keys swirl like smoke. This is not polished neo-soul. This is funk in its rawest, most unfiltered form. The influence of Sly Stone, Parliament-Funkadelic, and Prince i...