Dunni Olanrewaju & Golden Voices - Ayo Re Mbo
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 1 comments
Labels: Gospel, Nigeria, Nigerian Female Vocalists, Yoruba
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 3 comments
Labels: Congo, Congo to East Africa, Kenya, Les Hi-Fives, Lingala, Swahili
The dramatic plunge in the value of the Ghanaian currency, the cedi, has thrown up some stories. One of the most heartbreaking is the virtual death of the Ghanaian recording industry. The price of imported basics, like guitar strings or vinyl, has killed off virtually every full-time touring professional band. Some put the number of survivors as low as three.
One man who has survived all this and a lot more is A.B. Crentsil, the 36-year-old singer whose mid-1970s band Sweet Talks was a germinating ground for some of the strongest talents to emerge out of Ghana during the last ten years - the Sunsum Band, Eric Agyemang and Thomas Frempong among them. But the figures even he throws out so casually are terrifying. He starts off talking about how his second band the Lantics were stolen away from the Atlantic Hotel by an extra 25 cedi a month - "100 cedi a month was a lot and we were happy to go!," he chuckles. Now he talks about paying his bus driver 10,000 cedi a day, a week, a month, whatever it takes to keep him.
Even more scaring is his account of the break-up of Sweet Talks in 1979 and the court battle to get money out of the manager of the Talk of the Town Hotel who owned the band's instruments and in a lot of ways seemed to own their souls as well. "In court we heard that Phonogram had paid him 5.4 million cedis. Out of that we had seen 68,000 cedis." Needless to say there were dark doings in the background and A.B. is not a rich man - but her survives.
And away from the numbers, back to the music. Throughout the 1970s A.B. played in the best hotel bands in Ghana - first the El Dorados, performing funk, reggae and James Brown material, the usual songs known as "copyright." The there was the Lantics, again tied to a top hotel but this time getting away to record the first album, Adam & Eve [as the Sweet Talks] in 1975. They had been spotted playing in the hotel by Phonogram MD Arthur Tay who swept them off to the 16-track EMI studio in Lagos which was quite a jump from the two-track they had used for three 45s earlier.
The 75-venue tour of Ghana which followed built Sweet Talks into one of the biggest bands in the land. Throughout the string of LPs that followed - Kusum Beat, Spiritual Ohaia, Osode - it was all up and up, closer to dangerous temptations that lay in wait when Phonogram Holland took them to Los Angeles' Total Experience studio to record the best-selling Party Time [Hollywood Highlife Party]. It was then that they discovered that their manager was using their money to send a Thunderbird back to Ghana. It was when they got back they discovered they were broke, and broke up....Which brings us up to 1984, and Tantie Alaba, recorded with Mr. Crentsil's reorganized Super Sweet Talks International, and the first of his albums to receive modest international distribution. Here's a nice video someone made of the title track, utilizing footage that apparently has nothing to do with the song itself, but, I'm sure you'll agree, matches up very well indeed!
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 0 comments
Labels: A.B. Crentsil, Ghana, Highlife
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 0 comments
Labels: Augustin Kouassi, Côte d'Ivoire, Highlife, Soukous
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 3 comments
Labels: Kenya, Les Wanyika, Swahili, Tanzania
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 4 comments
Labels: Djelimady Tounkara, Mali, Rail Band
Posted by John B. at 6:05 PM 11 comments
Labels: Juju, King Sunny Adé, Nigeria, Yoruba
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 1 comments
Labels: A.B. Crentsil, Ghana, Highlife
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 3 comments
Three nights a week 20 Kenyan soldiers take a break from the rigorous routine that defines their military life from sunrise to sunset. On these nights they let another side of their personalities take over as they mingle with civilians through music. Hands trained to hold weapons hold guitars, trumpets, drumsticks and microphones. Feet accustomed to marching in formation and jumping in and out of trenches tap lightly, keeping beat to the music.
Voices conditioned to bark out orders in military drills croon words that have entertained generations. And the faces that seldom crack the faintest of smiles soften and become warm. During the two hours on stage there are no ranks, no obligatory salutes. During this rehearsal, united by their common love of music, they are all equal.
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 5 comments
Labels: Kenya, Maroon Commandos, Rumba, Swahili
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 1 comments
Labels: Casamance, Senegal, Touré Kunda
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 10 comments
The musical roots of zouglou lie in the local Ivorian musical styles tohourou and aloucou from western Côte d’Ivoire, which became popular in the urban centres in the 1960s and 70s. The direct musical base of zouglou music grew out of what is known as ambiance facile or woyo: chants to percussive music on improvised instruments such as metal scrapers, glass bottles and of course drums. This music grew out of the songs that accompanied sports competitions in Côte d‘Ivoire‘s schools during the 1980s. Groups of students that called themselves “supporters committees” would accompany sports teams to the games and make up songs to encourage their teams. As school teams and their supporters committees travelled to matches against other schools across the country, they picked up new melodies and rhythms along the way.The musical group Zougloumania, founded by the duo Poignon and Bouabré in 1990, was the biggest of the "First Generation" of zouglou groups. Its first and apparently only release, Zomammanzo (EMI E028991-4, 1991), hit the scene like a bombshell, becoming the greatest hit of the zouglou era, exceeded only by Magic System's "Premier Gaou," released in 1999. Listening to it, it's not hard to understand why - every track on Zomamanzo is a scorcher!
Ambiance facile and woyo music sessions also became a popular past-time in Abidjan’s working class (popular) neighborhoods. In these multi-ethnic neighborhoods, children and teenagers would teach each other songs from their home regions. This mostly unrecorded leisure music is still popular across Côte d’Ivoire. Through the sports matches and neighborhood sessions, ambiance facile drew on rhythms and melodies from many different regions of Côte d’Ivoire. Zouglou music also drew on these rhythms and melodies and thus became the first musical style that was considered to be multi-ethnic and nationally representative of Côte d’Ivoire.
In 1990, zouglou was invented first as a dance among university students residing in the Yopougon student accommodation at the University of Cocody in Abidjan, now known as Felix Houphouet-Boigny University. This dance consisted of throwing one’s arms in the air with angular movements, mimicking an imploration to God to help the university students that were suffering under the budgetary cuts in the education sector (fewer scholarships, inadequate student housing, catering and transport, etc.)...
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 1 comments
Labels: Côte d'Ivoire, Zouglou, Zougloumania
We kadogo nakupenda
Nikuone uwe wangu
Na mimi sina mwingine
Nimpendaye kama wewe
Usingizi siupati, Nikifiki ulivyo
Fanya hima tuonane, tuelewane pamoja
We kadogo..
Waniacha mi naponda, kwa kufikiri wewe
Moyo wangu wateseka, vile nakupenda you
We kadogo..
Kadogo I love you
I want to marry you so you'll be mine
I don't want anyone else
That I love as I love you
I can''t sleep thinking about you
Try we meet so we come to agreement
We Kadogo...
I yearn for you in my thoughts
My soul suffers for loving you
We Kadogo...
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 2 comments
Labels: Chakacha, Swahili, The Pressmen Band
Posted by John B. at 11:38 PM 2 comments
Labels: "Bubblegum Music", Brenda Fassie, Condry Ziqubu, Johnny Clegg & Savuka, Kaputeni, Lumumba, Mara Louw, Rex Rabanye, Sankomota, South Africa, Supa Frika, The Winners, Thetha
Posted by John B. at 11:59 PM 12 comments
Labels: "Igbo Blues", Igbo, Igbo Traditional Music, Nigeria, Nigerian Female Vocalists, Obi Wuru Otu Dance Group
Posted by John B. at 1:00 AM 2 comments
Labels: Dayo Kujore, Juju, Nigeria, Yoruba
Posted by John B. at 2:27 AM 4 comments
Labels: Côte d'Ivoire, N'Gosséré Ballo
Posted by John B. at 12:01 AM 4 comments
Labels: "Igbo Blues", Igbo, Igbo Traditional Music, Nigeria, Nkelebe Brothers
Posted by John B. at 12:49 AM 4 comments
Labels: Côte d'Ivoire, Le Wassiato