I was all ready to post today's selection - Baba Gaston's wonderful 1983 release Condition Bi-Msum (ASL ASLP 971) - when I realized that Stefan Werdekker had made it available on his blog WorldService a while back. Should I or shouldn't I, I wondered? Then I decided to go ahead with it. If you missed it before, here's your chance to enjoy some of the sweetest soukous the '80s managed to produce.
I've written about Baba Gaston before. He's one of many Congolese musicians who made their way to East Africa during the '70s and '80s. Coming from Lubumbashi in the southern part of then-Zaïre, where Kiswahili was already the lingua franca, it wasn't a difficult transition for Gaston and his Orchestre Baba Nationale to settle down in Dar Es Salaam in 1971, relocating to Nairobi a few years later. Here the band gave rise to many offshoots and a distinctive East African iteration of the classic Congo rumba sound. It all came crashing down in 1985 when foreign musicians were ordered to leave Kenya under President Daniel Arap Moi.
Enjoy Condition Bi-Msum. And for more information about Baba Gaston and other Congolese musicians in East Africa, read Alastair Johnston's essential Congo in Kenya.
Baba Gaston - Ekelekele
Baba Gaston - Hello Hello
Baba Gason - Rudi Nyumbani Africa
Baba Gaston - Condition Bi-Msum
Download Condition Bi-Msum as a zipped file, complete with album and label art, here.
3 comments:
Thanks, John. My wife and I were in fact doing some traveling this last weekend, and I played another Gaston album in our car. We both greatly enjoyed it.
I am glad you reminded me of this record. As glinka21 rightly pointed out this is fantastic travelling music.
(Note to self: must do more travelling..)
A very interesting entry. I like this.
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