Andra Koyate plays
the ngoni, an ancient fretless lute from West African Bambara tradition. He’s
the younger brother of Bassekou Kouyate, who is the probably the world’s most
famous ngoni player, having taken the instrument from the background to right
up front through virtuosic playing and innovative arrangements (with his band
Ngoni Ba). Andra is no slouch, and he’s also
taken ngoni-fronted arrangements to a new place. His wonderful backing band includes balafon
ace Lassana Diabate. “I Yele” has some
stunning interplay between ngoni and kalabash and features the jelimousso (or
woman griot), Salimata Kouyate.
2 Super Djata de Bamako – Konadou (Musique Mondiale)
Super Djata de Bamako is one of the great innovating groups in the Bambara tradition of southern and central
3 Zani Diabate & Les Heritiers - Ni Zani Mana
(Sterns)
From Zani Diabate’s
last release, “Tientalaw”, recorded just before he died and which got a European
release this year. He’s backed by “Les
Heritiers”, “The Heirs”, made up this own son, the sons of the singers from
Super Djata, Flani Sangare and Alou Fane.
4 Ballake Sissoko – Badjourou (No Format/Universal)
Ballake Sissoko is one of the great kora players and composers in other musical tradition of the southern
5 Vinicius Cantuaria –
The ultra-relaxed samba-based sounds of Brazilian singer/songwriter Vinicius Cantuaria off his album “Indio de Apartamento”.
6 Caetano Veloso – O Leaozinho (Nonesuch)
Cantuaria is often compared that veteran of Brazillian music, singer/songwriter Caetano Veloso, who started out in Tropicalia movement of the 1960s and was forced into exile in the 70s by the military government in Brazil. This is a stripped down version of one of his all-time classic songs from a concert he gave with David Byrne at the Carnegie Hall in 2004, that was only released this year.
7 Cachimbinho & Geraldo Mousiho --- Se trava a Lingua e assim (
Cachimbinho and Geraldo Mousiho play a Brazilian style called “Coco-de embolada”: two tambourines and two voices trying to out-compete each other with speed, word plays and tougue-twisting dexterity, much like rap. It’s from a record called “Cantar Coco e Assim”.
8 Leilia – A voz das EVAS (Fol Musica)
9 Yasmin Levy – Shoef K’mo Eved (World
Village )
Isreali singer Yasmin Levy is known for combining Sephardic music sung in Ladino with flamenco, tango and fado. On new her album, “Libertad”, she’s introduced more middle-eastern sounds, thanks to a wonderful Istanbul-based string section. That veteran of the restrained world music production, Ben Mendelson, and I only used that term “world music” because he helped invent it, does the knob twiddling and mic placement on “Libertad”.
10 John Zorn - Back to Bokhara
(Tzadik)
John Zorn has been
extended the oeuvre of Jewish music in all kinds of directions and for decades
now – as the owner of the Tzadik label, a composer and through his own sax
playing. He recently released a set of
compositions called “The Concealed Esoteric Secrets and Hidden Traditions of
the East” for a combination of the Nova Quartet, a piano and vibe lead quartet,
with cellist Erik Friedlander and violinist Mark Feldman.
11 Elina Duni Quartet – Ere pranverore (ECM)
Albanian born and
raised and now Swiss-based, singer, Elina Duni, with her quartet creating the
most amazing fusion of impressionistic and subtly detailed jazz with music from
her home country. It’s from her very
fine new album just out on ECM, “Matane Malit”.
12 Otaak Band – Ogbil (Self-released)
The Bejan people
from eastern Sudan, parts of Eritrea and southern Egypt are not well known, and
neither is their music and I doubt Ahmed Said Abuamna from Sudan and his American
collaborator, Miguel Merino, together Otaak Band, will change that – but in an
ideal world, they would. Abuamna plays a
masankop, an ancient type of lyre related to the Ethiopian krar. But it’s his singing that really
fantastic. Miguel Merino is on bass and
percussion. Their album, “Bejawiya”, is
self released. “Ogbil” is a love song:
“O god, let me see this beautiful creature”.
13 Krar Collective – Ende Eyerusalem (Riverboat)
Speaking of the
Ethiopian krar, the London-based trio, Krar Collective started out playing at
weddings in the Ethiopian community and over the years developed their own
style driven by electric, acoustic and bass krars.
14 Dub Colossus – Tringo (Real World Music)
We’ve played Dub Colossus on this programme many times. Some months back part of the Ethiopian core
of the band released an EP of undubbed and unplugged azmari versions of stuff
from “Addis through the looking glass”.
An azmari is a traditional
Ethiopian singer-musician, like the griots of West Africa . “Tringo”
features the massinqo (an old single stringed bowed lute), krar and handclaps.
15 King Tubby – 95 North Dub (Roots Records)
A King Tubby and
Scientist mix of a Jah Thomas produced rhythm track made by the Roots Radics
Band and recorded some time in the early 80s.
It’s out on the collection “King Tubby’s Classics: The Lost Midnight Rock Dubs Chapter 3”.
16 Delroy
Speaking of lost
dubs, 2012 saw another effort by Pressure Sounds to make rare recordings from
Lee Perry’s sessions in the Black Ark available to the public. This year’s collection is called “The Sound
Doctor: Black Ark singles and Dub Plates (1972-1978)”.
17 Ondatropica –
Last month we
heard a tune by the Columbian collective, Ondatropica, which recorded an epic
tribute to classic Afro-Caribbean music of the 60s and 70s in the historic Discos
Fuentes studio. “Libya ” is from the same collection also called
“Ondatropica”.
18 Quantic y Su Conjunto Los Miticos De Ritmo – Cumbia
de Mochilla (Strut)
Will Holland aka Quantic was one of the producers
behind the Ondatropica project. He’s
pretty active in the Columbia cumbia revival scene. This is something he put together for a 2011
collection of gritty tropical dance sounds compiled by the DJ collective,
Sofrito, called “Tropical Discoteque”.
19 Hot 8 Brass Band – Ghost Town (Tru Thoughts) --- Jerry Dammers
One of the relatively
new stalwarts New Orleans marching brass band music with the tune that the
British ska band, the Specials, put out in the 80s”.
20 Mama Rosin – Parait Qu’y a Pas l’Temps (Moi
J’Connais/Proper)
21 Iris DeMent – The Kingdom has already come
(Flariella)
Iris DeMent has
come up with one of my favourite Americana albums of 2012 called “Sing the Delta” –
her first one of original songs in 16 years.
She plays some wonderful rolling piano on this track.
22 Kelly Joe Phelps – Goodbye Sorrow (Black Hen/Planet)
Another favorite of 2012 is Kelly Joe Phelps’s “Brother Sinner and the Whale” – his stripped-down, voice and guitar only mono recordings of traditional and self-penned gospel songs based on the Old Testament Book of Jonah.
23 Koo Nimo – Owusuwaa (Riverboat/World Music Network)
In his late 70s now, Ghanaian Koo Nima, one of the last veterans of Highlife and Palm Wine music wrote this beautiful song for his wife, who died in 1973 shortly after giving birth to and losing a child. It comes off an album recorded recently by Ben Mandelson in Nimo’s backyard in
24 Peacocks International – Awu Adada Mi (EMI)
Peacocks International Band where a Nigerian band active in the 70s and heavily influences by Ghanaian Highlife. Their leader, Raphael Amarabem had spent quite a few years playing in
25 Tunji Oyelana – Omoba D’eru Ri (Soundway)
Tunji Oyelana is an institution in
26 Bellowhead – Old dun Cow (Navigator)
Having peddled big-band interpretations of the English folk canon for around 10 years now, for their fourth album called “Broadside”, Bellowhead ratchet up the amps and deliver even punchier sound than usual. I think this might actually be their best album.
27 The Big Eyes Family Players – Farewell Lovely Nancy
(Static Caravan)
Scottish singer James Yorkston with Sheffield-based experimental
instrumental band off their second collective effort called “Folk Songs II”.
“Farewell Lovely Nancy” was first collected by Cecil Sharp and published as
sheet music in 1909. There’re a bunch
guest singers in there too.
28 Eivind Aarset – The Beauty of Decay (ECM)
Norwegian guitarist Eivind Aarset is aided and abetted by Jan Bang on samples, dictaphone and programming. Aarset builds on trumpeter Jon Hassell’s sort-of ambient, global fusion sound – what Hassell calls “