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Tag Archives: afropop

Fela Kuti

18 Sunday Mar 2012

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afropop, breakbeat, Fela Kuti, house, trance, World Music

Listening to Fela Kuti, a.k.a. Fela Ransome Kuti, a.k.a. Fela Anikulapo Kuti.  My mind wanders through the record store.  I don’t see why we don’t file this in the dance bins with the breakbeat, house, and trance records, but you will never find it anywhere but the whirled music bins.

Fela wants you to dance.  And he offers endlessly repeated syncopated patterns and vamps, taken right out of those thumpy funky bumpy beats that Fela heard when he visited America in 1969 and over which he honks and serenades with his sax, and the reverbed trumpet humms and stumbles, and the electronic piano bobbles and bubbles, and Fela sings and growls and cries and if you understood the pidgin of his words you would know that he is dancing blowing strumming beating and singing truth against power.  “Let’s start what we have come into the room to do!”

Fela Ransome Kuti.  Vol. 1 & 2.  M.I. L. Multi Media LLC/Esperanto, Esp 8502 (1995, 1996).  Album Design – Not Credited.

Lapiro de Mbanga

10 Saturday Mar 2012

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afropop, Cameroon, Lapiro de Mbanga, Paul Biya, World Music

Lapiro de Mbanga from Cameroon.  Frantic desperate as if he is trying to get every note out before it’s too late.  Guitar arpeggios spilling forth like marbles on a drum skin, and drum skins slapped like the snap of a string.  He sings like there is no other choice, if he didn’t sing he would explode.

And do you know why?  He had to!  He had to be as quick to scold as he was to sing.  Because he sang truth to power.  Cardinals, imams, and especially Grand Pablo, his name for Paul Biya, president of Cameroon since 1982 – no enemy of democracy escaped Lapiro’s lashings.   And for his truth, Grand Pablo and a kangaroo court buried him in prison for three years.  Listen!  Dance!  Rare is the courage that drives a musician to pay such a price for his art!

Lapiro de Mbanga.  Ndinga Man Contre-Attaque: Na Wou Go Pay?  Label Bleu/Indigo, LBLC 2506 (1992).  Artistic Direction – Frank Tenaille; Graphic Design – Jacques LeClercq-K.

Maryam Mursal

01 Thursday Mar 2012

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afropop, Maryam Mursal, Somalia, World Music

Courageous refugee from the torments of Somalia.  This album recounts the journey from the baleful world from which she escaped with her five children.  Canorous layers of luminous sound from a large ensemble of rock instruments, traditional percussion, string orchestra, many vocalists supporting the ancient quartertone inflections of her amazing voice.

Maryam Mursal, The Journey, Real Word Records/Caroline Records, CAR 2370-2 (1998).  Graphic Design – Tristan Manco; Art Direction – Michael Coulson; Photography – Marcelo Benfield, Soren Kjaer Jensen.

Ray Lema

01 Thursday Mar 2012

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afropop, Ray Lema, World Music

Ray Lema - NangadeefIs this jazz, funk, fusion, rock, afropop, trance, folk?  Western instruments applied to rhythms at once spacious and intricate.  Strange and surprising textures, pizzicato violin, furious guitar, grand piano.  Vocals harmonizing punctuating and surfing above it all – are the lyrics Swahili, Kikongo, Lingala?  I do not need to know.

Ray Lema, Nangadeef, Mango Records, CCD 9829 (1989).  Sleeve Design – Island Art; Photography – Richard Haughton.

Omar Ait Vimoun

01 Thursday Mar 2012

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afropop, Cherif Kazem, epic poems, Imazighen, Moor, North Africa, nuba, Omar Ait Vimoun, stekhvar, World Music

Listening to Maestro Omar Ait Vimoun.  So familiar, and yet so distant in time and place from this room in which I sit.

Omar is of the Imazighen, the indigenous people of North Africa, living today primarily in Algeria and Morocco, but also other North African nations including Mauritania and Tunisia.  They were the Berbers of Ancient Rome, and were among the aggregate of peoples we now call Moors who conquered Spain.  Through the centuries they were entwined with Arab culture and Islamic beliefs.  The influence on Western European culture of the Berbers, from scientific and mathematical discoveries, to the origination of musical instruments and artistic forms, cannot be underestimated.

Omar describes the songs on this record as stekhvar.  They are preludes to traditional suite-like compositions called nuba.  A nuba can last for up to seven hours and I wonder if they are musical arrangements of epic poems – a Berber Gilgamesh or Iliad or Lusiads.  The poems Omar sings are by great Algerian poets including verse called “Ghrib” (“The Dollar”) by Cherif Kazem:

How come we need tons of you?  We seek and follow you.  Blame not the restless, they never gambled and they never won.

He sings his own words as well, including a tender elegiac “Ode to Mother”:

My destiny had to intermingle with yours, my mother, my parent.  With hardships and burdens you raised me.  From you I wish forgiveness.

The word assaru, from the title of this album, refers to a woman’s knotted belt.  Knotted chords from the most ancient times were used to count and keep records and jog memories.  Here the assaru is the collection or anthology of preludes performed by Omar.  But I wonder if, in the Berber culture, it was the women who, with these knotted belts, were the counters of value, the keepers of memory, and the guardians of history.

Ancient Moorish modalities, extended improvised overtures on the mandol, the wandering fioriture of his singing voice . . . . sublime!

Cherif Kazem, trans. Omar Ait Vimoun, “Ghrib,” no publisher (1999); Omar Ait Vimoun, trans. Omar Ait Vimoun, “Ode to My Mother,” no publisher (1999).  From Omar Ait Vimoun, Assaru u Stekhvar, Gargoil Records, Gar 70110 (1999).  Graphic design – Chris Caswell & Omar Ait Vimoun; Photography – Christine Segrue.

Vieux Diop

29 Wednesday Feb 2012

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Africa, afropop, Senegal, Vieux Diop, World Music

Warm blithesome textures, exquisite vocal harmonies, melange of traditional instruments – kora, xalam, talking drum – with synthesizers, guitars, and electric bass.  He wonders if he “can still hope for a better world.”  Such music promises a better world here and now.

Vieux Diop, Afrika Wassa, Triloka LLC/Gold Circle Entertainment, TR 8069-2 (2000).  Art Direction – Lisa KIng; Photography – Kvon.

Busi Mhlongo

29 Wednesday Feb 2012

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afropop, Busi Mhlongo, South Africa, World Music

She is exuberant, crazy, sweet – how can she sound so happy when she sings “My money is all gone“?  Listen!  She is so tough, insouciant, and completely inspiring!

Busi Mhlongo, Themba Ngcobo, Mkhalelwa Ngwazi, “Yaphel’Mali Yami,” M.E.L.T. 2000 Publishing Ltd. (2000).  From Busi Mhlongo, Urbanzulu, EMI Records, 7243 5 35130 2 3 (2001).  Sleeve Design – Swifty; Photography – Peter Williams.

Baaba Maal

29 Wednesday Feb 2012

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Africa, afropop, Baaba Maal, Missing You, Senegal, World Music

Beloved Baaba Maal. Collaborating with dozens of musicians. Warp and weft of guitars and voices and drums interweaving exquisite peaceful beauty.

Baaba Maal, Missing You (Mi Yeewnii), Palm Pictures, LLC/Rycopalm, PALMCD 2067-2 (2001).  Design – Michael Nash Associates; Photography – Eddie Monsoon.

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