Strut are  proud to present the brand new studio album from West Coast jazz  mavericks, The Pyramids, led by their inspirational bandleader, Idris  Ackamoor.  Alto saxophonist Ackamoor first met Margo Simmons (flute) and Kimathi  Asante (electric bass) whilst students together at Antioch College,  Yellow Springs, Ohio where one of their teachers was renowned pianist,  Cecil Taylor. After founding the band in Paris in 1972, performing in  Holland and embarking on a “cultural odyssey” across Africa, the group  recorded three independent albums (Lalibela in 1973, King Of Kings in  1974 and Birth / Speed / Merging in 1976) and became renowned for their  striking live shows, mixing percussive, spiritual and space-age jazz  with performance, theatre, and dance. After migrating to San Francisco  to perform on the Bay Area arts scene, they disbanded in 1977 after a  final show at the UC Berkeley Jazz Festival. 
 
 Almost 30 years later, The Pyramids reunited unexpectedly following  growing demand for their music from vinyl collectors and jazz fans and  embarked on the first of many European tours featuring original members,  as well as a fresh line-up including renowned percussionist Kenneth  Nash. In 2012 the group signed to German label Disko B who released a  new album, the freeform Otherworldly and all three albums from their  rare back catalogue. Idris was presented with a Lifetime Achievement  Award by DJ Gilles Peterson at his Worldwide Awards and The Pyramids  were back, gaining a whole new legion of fans. 
 
 For their new album, We Be All Africans, the group traveled to Berlin to  hunker down in Max Weissenfeldt’s analogue Philophon studio. The result  is a sparkling set of Afro- jazz-funk fusions, from the infectious  chants of the title track to the reflective “Epiphany” and the yearning,  mournful future single, “Silent Days” featuring the brilliant vocals of  Bajka. Weissenfeldt released the first fruits from the sessions,  ‘Rhapsody In Berlin’ as a limited 45 during 2015 and the album features  the full unedited version. 
 
 ‘We Be All Africans’ is a message of survival. A message of renewal. A  message that we are all brothers and sisters. We are all one family, the  human family and we need one another in order to survive on this planet  that we all share. 
 – Idris Ackamoor