


daoud - ok
With âokâ, his new album and ACT debut, French trumpeter daoud offers a quiet manifesto - a record shaped by contrast and contradiction, by collapse and the stubborn act of beginning again.
Built around the idea of accepting what cannot be changed.
He explains: âThe whole record is built around the concept of reluctant acceptance of things that you canât control. All right, fuck it, fine, I guess.â
The album explores failure, loss, repetition and the soft absurdity of pretending everythingâs fine. Across 14 tracks, daoud weaves tragedy and humour, chaos and tenderness, melody and noise into a rich and emotionally charged soundscape.
At its core, âokâ is a jazz record treated like anything but a jazz record.
The foundation of the music was created live in the studio, together with keyboardist Leo Colman, double bassist Louis Navarro, drummer Silvan Strauss, electric bassist / guitarist / keyboardist Jules Minck and keyboardist Kuz.
The editing of these recordings was more akin to a pop production, yet the sounds, pads and textures added afterwards are subtle and refined.
The elaborate production is topped by a striking line-up of international musical guests who lend the music even more facets and emotions: corto.alto (trombone / GB), Rosie Frater-Taylor (guitar and vocals / UK), Mehdi Nassouli (guembri / MOR), Ludivine Issambourg (flute / FR), Teis Semey (guitar / NL), Kuba WiÄcek (alto saxophone / PL) and Julien Fillion (tenor saxophone / CA).
The result sounds organic and immediate, as if you feel the production more than hear it.
The album blends jazz, hip-hop, rock, disco, Afrobeat and drum & bass - not as genres to explore, but as emotional textures in a broader narrative.
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Description
With âokâ, his new album and ACT debut, French trumpeter daoud offers a quiet manifesto - a record shaped by contrast and contradiction, by collapse and the stubborn act of beginning again.
Built around the idea of accepting what cannot be changed.
He explains: âThe whole record is built around the concept of reluctant acceptance of things that you canât control. All right, fuck it, fine, I guess.â
The album explores failure, loss, repetition and the soft absurdity of pretending everythingâs fine. Across 14 tracks, daoud weaves tragedy and humour, chaos and tenderness, melody and noise into a rich and emotionally charged soundscape.
At its core, âokâ is a jazz record treated like anything but a jazz record.
The foundation of the music was created live in the studio, together with keyboardist Leo Colman, double bassist Louis Navarro, drummer Silvan Strauss, electric bassist / guitarist / keyboardist Jules Minck and keyboardist Kuz.
The editing of these recordings was more akin to a pop production, yet the sounds, pads and textures added afterwards are subtle and refined.
The elaborate production is topped by a striking line-up of international musical guests who lend the music even more facets and emotions: corto.alto (trombone / GB), Rosie Frater-Taylor (guitar and vocals / UK), Mehdi Nassouli (guembri / MOR), Ludivine Issambourg (flute / FR), Teis Semey (guitar / NL), Kuba WiÄcek (alto saxophone / PL) and Julien Fillion (tenor saxophone / CA).
The result sounds organic and immediate, as if you feel the production more than hear it.
The album blends jazz, hip-hop, rock, disco, Afrobeat and drum & bass - not as genres to explore, but as emotional textures in a broader narrative.

















