In 2005,
Breakestra, the
Miles "Om" Tackett-led band, released their full-length debut,
Hit the Floor, an album praised for its loyalty to preserving the sound of the funky breaks later sampled in hip-hop. Four years passed between
Hit the Floor and
Dusk Till Dawn, but despite (or perhaps because of) the time elapsed, their sophomore follow-up lacks cohesion, feeling instead like it's been cobbled together from songs
Tackett's been working on in fits and starts since the last album was completed. He is far and away the driving force behind the record, and the band (while they tour with an eight-piece,
Tackett plays guitar, bass, keyboard, cello, and percussion on
Dusk Till Dawn, sings on a handful of songs, and produced, wrote, and recorded everything), which perhaps explains this, but unfortunately doesn't help the fact that the album often feels as if it's dragging on far past where it should have stopped. It's not that
Dusk Till Dawn is slow: it is a funk album, in fact, full of fast-paced songs that are quick and light on the beat, with plenty of horn and guitar riffs, and so tracks move along at a good clip. But because many of the songs are instrumental and structurally simple, when they stretch past the five- and six-minute marks, which they often do, it's hard to stay focused on what's going on. It's also not to say there aren't some bright spots here: "'Posed to Be," featuring
Chali 2na and the late
DJ Dusk (
Tackett's old DJ partner) should have been a
Sugarhill Gang hit, and "No Matter Where You Go," with vocals by
Mixmaster Wolf, is a fun namecheck of contemporary soul and funk bands worldwide (the
New Mastersounds, the
Dap-Kings,
the Bamboos, etc), and an acknowledgement that they know they're not doing anything new, that they're part of a scene. But this is also the problem with
Breakestra: they are just part of a scene, and not at the top of it, so reminding listeners of the other bands also reminds them what those bands do better (vocals, hooks, choruses, etc), and ultimately, makes the weak parts of
Dusk Till Dawn more memorable than the highlights.