Intentar ORO - Gratis
Sampha's Circle of Life
New York magazine
|August 28 - September 10, 2023
His first album tackled loss and made him a star. On his follow-up, he writes from a happier place: fatherhood.
SAMPHA SPEAKS in sketches, drawing out the general idea he’s angling at and circling back to add color and texture. You quickly understand how it could take this person years to locate the perfect sequence of words to encapsulate a complicated feeling, as his debut album, Process, does: “A nemesis, an enemy / You’re the crack inside the screen”; “Smashed this window in my heart / And I blamed you.” He’s a details man. Walking along Central Park West at the end of a balmy Juneteenth weekend, he was taken with the sound of an ice-cream truck’s jingle wandering off the correct key.
The English singer-songwriter and producer was in town for Satellite Business, bringing the concert series that began with two intimate gigs at London’s Hackney Church to the States, where he had not headlined a show in five years. He was anxious and feeling a bit rusty. “It’s been a long time since I performed my own music with a band,” he said as we circumvented the park the day before he took the stage at Red Hook’s Pioneer Works for the first of three consecutive nights. “I wanted to create a space that felt free, to try stuff out without the expectations of a huge headline show.” The objective was to introduce a new band, new songs, and thoughtful reconstructions of jams from his 2013 debut EP, Dual, and its more accomplished follow-up, the 2017 full-length Process, whose release, and Mercury Prize win, changed his life. That album was the realization of teenage dreams.
Esta historia es de la edición August 28 - September 10, 2023 de New York magazine.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE New York magazine
New York magazine
THE LOVE STORY THAT BROKE THE BECKHAMS
After his marriage to Nicola Peltz, the wayward Brooklyn Beckham disavowed his superstar family for his billionaire in-laws. He may never go back.
23 mins
April 6–19, 2026
New York magazine
'This Is My Sistine Chapel'
Simon Kim arrives in midtown with a martini bar, sushi counter, Korean steakhouse, and Ninja Tunnel.
2 mins
April 6–19, 2026
New York magazine
Fancy Some Stargazy Pie?
The fish-head-forward British dish gets its spotlight at an elegant downtown pub.
1 min
April 6–19, 2026
New York magazine
The Greenhouse Above Two Bridges
The loft of the architectural designer Nick Poe is a hot spot for houseplants.
1 mins
April 6–19, 2026
New York magazine
Country Music's Middle Road
As MAGA grows more unpopular, the genre once perceived as redder than ever is moving to the center.
5 mins
April 6–19, 2026
New York magazine
Wall Street's Eyes on the Strait With markets wobbling an analyst deploys to the war zone.
Citrini Research's founder-recently famous for causing a $200 billion market meltdown with a grim paper about the post-AI economy-has been desperately trying to figure out how Donald Trump's war on Iran will affect financial markets.
5 mins
April 6–19, 2026
New York magazine
This Electric-Green Stream Is Actually a Good Thing
The city is belatedly getting to the bottom of a mystery stink.
1 mins
April 6–19, 2026
New York magazine
Playing the Diplomat
Ambassadors Clubhouse is a high-energy, high-priced toast of London. Can it find its fans here?
3 mins
April 6–19, 2026
New York magazine
WANT TO BE FRIENDS WITH A D-LISTER?
That'll be five grand.
8 mins
April 6–19, 2026
New York magazine
License to Act
A highly watchable, genre-bending show asks whether Riz Ahmed could play Bond.
5 mins
April 6–19, 2026
Translate
Change font size

