Accordng to this little trailer/documentary, 128 channels of audio recorded.
Technically this is a "live album," but as with all of Snarky Puppy's recordings, it's really more of a hybrid approach, one that I think is pretty much unique to them. They play the album in a live music venue (in this case the Deep Ellum Art Co.) in front of a crowd, but there's no PA system. It's done like a "silent disco" - that is, everyone wears headphones, both the musicians and the audience, which means there's no sound leakage between the PA or the instruments. As a result you get an album that is (ideally) the best of both worlds: the excitement of a live recording with the sonics of a studio recording.
These guys are one of my favourite bands of recent years, and I've touted them on here a number of times so I was incredibly excited to see this album getting the Atmos treatment. 2015's
Sylva (with the Metropole Orkest) and 2016's
Culcha Vulcha are amazing albums - I didn't like their last album,
Immigrance (from 2019) nearly as much, but
Empire Central is a real return to form, my ears.
This album is also notable that it features that last recorded performances of Bernard Wright, who came out of the same Jamaica area of Queens in the early 80s that produced Marcus Miller and Tom Browne (and whose 1981 album '
Nard spawned the jazz-funk classic
Haboglabotribin') and who was Snarky Puppy founder Michael League's mentor. He died in a car accident just a couple of months after this album was recorded.
If you like jazz-funk or jazz-fusion of the '70s and early '80s you must give this album a spin.