Otis Mensah’s Mystical, Existential “That Mouth Of Rainfall” is an Avant-Downtempo Hip-Hop Exploration of Identity, Depression and Dreams

Otis Mensah, photo from cover of WINTERSKIN

Otis Mensah, the first Poet Laureate of the City of Sheffield in the UK, free associates spiritual imagery and experiences with those more earth bound throughout “That Mouth Of Rainfall” (featuring contributions from Rituals of Mine). In the music video we see Mensah walking through a church and the streets of Berlin captured on Super 8 which suits well the soft, soulful, pulsing synth and hushed, downtempo production and Mensah’s sentiments with each line of lyrics. Mensah navigates issues of perception and reality, of identity and aspirations and how those intersect with a life that can seem to throw you setbacks and opportunities at seemingly perversely random intervals. Mensah is open about an extended depression and contemplating surrendering to what seems inevitable and pulling back and finding vitality in new experiences and contemplating possibilities. In the soulful vocals of Terra Lopez aka Rituals of Mine (some may know Lopez for her tenure writing and performing music as Sister Crayon) we hear an emotional clarity as a companion to Mensah’s flow of existential sketches, an architecture of the song that reflects Mensah’s seemingly dialectical narrative with self. The effect of all these elements working in perfect sync with each other brings a great dimensionality to the song musically, thematically and emotionally all while pulling you into its gorgeously lush layers of melody and gentle rhythm. All in all a fine example of the kind of music we’ve come to expect from Sheffield in terms of being incredibly experimental and forward thinking and accessible in ways that aren’t immediately predictable. Watch the video for “The Mouth Of Rainfall” on YouTube and follow Otis Mensah at the links below. The album WINTERSKIN dropped on October 4, 2023.

Otis Mensah on Facebook

Otis Mensah on Instagram

Author: simianthinker

Editor, primary content provider for this blog. Former contributor to Westword and The Onion.