Given her Japanese heritage, the revered, Brooklyn-based composer,
vocalist, shamisen player, and educator Emi Makabe was drawn to her
native language’s unique iteration: ekō. Makabe explains: “It shares the
English pronunciation, but it means praying for people who have passed
away.” Which resonated deeply with her, as her father passed away in
2021. “It was during the pandemic, so nobody could visit,” Makabe says.
“I watched him as he was taken to the hospital in a wheelchair, and I was
praying that he might turn around just once. He didn’t turn back — and
that was the last time I saw him.”
Yet a soul refraction still transpired — one poignantly documented on
Echo, Makabe’s second album, due May 16 via Sunnyside. Featuring a
masterful band in bassist and backing vocalist Thomas Morgan; pianist,
accordionist and Wurlitzer organist Vitor Gonçalves; and drummer, percussionist,
vibraphonist, and electronicist Kenny Wollesen, Echo also features
the estimable talents of guitarist Bill Frisell, MC Meshell Ndegeocello, and
pianist Jason Moran.