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1 Jaojoby – Anareo Vaiavy (Buda Musique)
Eusebe Jaojoby is
one of the most popular singers in Madagascar and the Indian Ocean islands, and he helped invent one of its
most popular styles in the 1970s – selegy.
It’s a combination of “antsa” music of NW Madagascar (a lively
percussive style based on choral church music (polyharmonic choral over highly
syncopated multi-rhythmic percussion, mainly handclaps)), guitar styles that are
inspired by traditional valiha and marovany playing from other parts of the
island, Congolese rhumba, and Western pop styles. “Anareo Vaiavy” is off his brand new album,
“Mila Anao”.
2 Solorazaf – Sool repercussions (Acoustic Music Records)
3 Solorazaf – Fleurs delices (Acoustic Music Records)
Sticking in the NW
of Madagascar, Montpellier-born but now Madagascar-based guitar wizard Solo
Razafindrakoto (AKA Solorazaf) developed his style by linking refined acoustic
folk, jazz and blues guitar styles with traditional music from the Madagascan
highlands where he grew up. He plays
this on some very fancy bespoke guitars which include a 7th string
for added bass. He actually started
playing in rock groups and sessioned on many recordings in 60s & 70s,
playing guitar, bass and drum. The two
tunes are off his new album “Solonaives/Sculptures with GAD”.
4 Christine
Christine Salem and
her band Salem Tradition are from Reunion , and play a local style called maloya - rooted in
slave music, and until a few years ago, the preserve of men. Playing a kayambe – a flat box-shaped shaker
- she infuses maloya with rhythms from
the African mainland and sings in a bunch of languages – Reunion creole, Malagasy, Comoran and
Swahili. Veteran musician Danyel Waro,
also known for expanding maloya and for his secessionist ideas, is her musical
hero. “Camelia” is off her new album,
“Salem Tradition”.
5 Mokoomba – Yombe (Igloo)
6 Staff Benda Bilili – Mutu Esalaka (The brains are
OK) (Crammed Records)
Staff Benda Bilili from Kinshasa also garnered universal praise for their
2012 album, “Bouger le Monde”.
7 Caetano Veloso – A Bossa Nova
Last month we listened to a classic tune by a veteran of Brazillian music. Here is something off his very latest album, “Abrocaco”, produced by his son, Moreno Veloso, together with Pedro Sa.
8 Tim Maia – Ela Partiu (Luaka Bop) (Beto Cajueiro/Tim
Maia)
Like Caetano
Veloso, Tim Maia is one of founding members of the Tropicalia movement, but
unlike Veloso, Maia burnt himself out by 55 and died in 1998. After misspending his late teenage years in
the NYC, he return to Rio de Janeiro in mid 60s and started infusing American
soul, r’n’b and funk into Brazilian music.
Things really took off for him in the 70s, when he starting channeling the
music of Sly and Family Stone and Curtis Mayfield. From the 2012 retrospective collection “Nobody
can live forever: the existential soul of Tim Maia”.
9 Dennis Brown – Blessed are the men (the pill)
(Auralux / Essential Records)
I’m pleased to
report that the great reggae producer of the 70s, Niney the Observer, is having
a revival of sorts thanks to, of all people, PJ Harvey. More about that story next month. Dennis Brown was one of a number of the
singers he often worked with in 70s and early 80s. From “Sufferation – The Deep Roots of Niney
the Observer”
10 Willy Mason – Restless Fugative (Polydor)
Wunderkind Willy
Mason, who 8 years ago and barely out of his teens was bringing out indecently
mature middle-age albums, has returned after a break of four years with another
lovely offering – “Carry On”.
11 Anais Mitchell – He did (Wilderland)
I liked quite a
lot of Anais Mitchell’s second album “Young man in America ” which came out in 2012. It was dedicated to her father, and has the theme
of children-parent relationships running through it. This is one is especially fetching. Ricky Lee Jones eat your heart out.
12 Cahalen Morrison and Eli West – Our lady of the
tall trees (Cahalen Morrison and Eli West)
Cahalen Morrison
and Eli West put an album of guitar, banjo, mandolin and bouzouki interweavings
in 2012 and very fine thing it is too. “Our
lady of the tall trees” was written by Morrison.
13 Ryan Francesconi and Mirabai Peart - Kalamatianos (Bella Union)
Guitarist Ryan
Francesconi and violist Mirabai Peart, both of whom play in Joanna Newsome’s
backing band, have just brought out an album of tunes inspired by their visit
to the island of Lesbos off the coast of Greece , called “Road to Polios”. It has a Mediterranean feel, although I think
this piece starts off with a Scandinavian flourish.
14 Ahmad Zahir – Tu Barayem Moqadasi (Pharaway Sounds)
From pre-revolutionary
1970s Afghanistan , Ahmad Zahir, with one of his psychedelic ballads
steeped in Bollywood and production values from a new collection on Pharaway
Sounds called “The King of Afghan Pop”. Zahir, who was actually the son of the
Minister of Health and royal doctor at the time, sings in Dari and Pashto bases
his songs on old Persian poems and ballads.
15 Googoosh
– Digeh Gereyeh Delo Va Nemikoneh
(Finders Keepers)
The legendary
singer of pre-revolutionary Iran with tune on the magnificent collection
brought out by Finders Keepers called “Googoosh”.
16 Natasha Atlas – Taalet (Zab Spencer Radio Edit Mix) (Six Degrees Music)
16 Natasha Atlas – Taalet (Zab Spencer Radio Edit Mix) (Six Degrees Music)
Belgium-born
Natacha Atlas put out a lovely album about 2 years ago – “Mounqaliba”. Something off its remixed version,
“Mounqaliba – Rising: The Remixes”. Named to chime with the April Spring in Eqypt in 2011.
17 Hannah James & Sam Sweeney– On yonder hill there sits a hare (Root Beat)
Clog dancer and
accordionist Hannah James and fiddle, viola, nyckelharpa and Hardanger fiddle
player, Sam Sweeney, with their version of “On yonder hill there sits a hare”.
You might remember we listened to Sam Lee’s recent version of the same song a
few months ago. Both James and Sweeney
play in a number of other bands, Sweeney playing in the famous English trad
band, Bellowhead. It’s off their second
album as a duo, “State and Ancientry”.
18 Hladowski & Joynes – The pretty ploughboy (Bo’
Weavil)
Paring things down
even further, the ultra-stark sounds of singer Stephanie Hlodowski and
guitarist Chris Joynes off a new album, “The wild wild berry”.
19 Wu Man and Master Musicians from the
The pipa is a
heavily fretted Chinese lute and Wu Man its most famous player. She’s teamed up with a bunch of the finest
Uyghur, Tajik and Hui traditional players to explore the Central Asian roots of
the pipa. The tune features only the Hui
singer, Ma Ersa. It’s from volume 10 of the
Smithsonian Folkway Series, “Music of Central Asia”, called “Borderlands”.
20 Geomungo Factory – Movement on silence (Synnara)
The Geomungo is a
six string traditional Korean zither, either plucked or struck with a short
bamboo stick, apparently dating back to the 4th centuary. Geomungo
Factory are a group of four young Korean musicians on a mission to take the
geomungo to new and bracing levels of playing.
“Movement on silence” is from their album “Metamorphesis”.
21 Burnt Friedman – Riku Ro (Nonplace)
Berlin-based experimentalist Burnt Friedman off his new album, “Zokulen”. On this track he plays with Takeshi Nishimoto who’s on the sarod.
22 Adachi Tomomi Royal Chorus _ Prelude & Fugue
(Tzadik)
Fasten your seat
for Adachi Tomomi’s punk-style choir and his composition “Prelude & Fugue”.
23 Mari Kvien Brunvoll – Joanna (Jazzland Recordings)
Norwegian singer
with many voices. It’s from a performance
recorded at the Clusone Jazz Festival in Italy in 2010, and is off her pretty wonderful
new album out on Jazzland Recordings titled with just her name “Mari Kvien
Brunvoll”.
The great Finnish
traditional fusion group, Varttina were 30 years old in 2012, and although
they’ve there’ve been a bunch of line up changes over the years, the three
piece vocal core of Mari Kaasinen, Susan Aho and Johanna Virtanen has remained
intact and firing on all five. They put
out a new album in 2012 called “Utu”.
25 Elin Furubotn – Stillheten (Ozella)
From Furubotn’s
new album “Heilt Nye Vei (Brand New Path)”.
26 Food – Freebonky (Feral Records)
Food is basically
Norwegian percussionist Thomas Stronen and English sax player Ian Bellamy. The
tune “Freebonky” is off their second album, “Organic and GM Food”, on which they
enlisted the help of trumpeter Arve Hendriksen and bassist Mats Eilertsen.
27 Carsten Dahl, Arild Andersen, Jon Christensen –
Nariman’s Mood (Storyville)
Tonal jazz by three giants of the Scandinavian jazz scene Carsten Dahl, Arild Anderson and Jon Christensen, off their 2012 album, “Space is the Place”.
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