1 Los Desterrados – Esta Noche (Enkalador)
Album: Dos Amantes
Los Desterrados
(The Exiles) are a six piece from London who draw their inspiration from Sephardic
music, with all its multiple sub-categories arising in places where the
Sephardic Jews moved to after their expulsion from Spain – Greece , Turkey , the Balkans and North Africa .
That was “Esta Noche”, sang in Ladino, the Latin-based language of the Sephardic
- it seems to be some kind of tarantella.
2 Canzoniere Grecanico Salentino – Tira Cavallu
(Puglia Sounds/Discovery)
Album: Pizzica Indiavolata
Speaking of
tarantella, more from Canzoniere Grenanico Salentino (check out August 2013). They from the Puglia region of southern Italy and play a style called pizzica – similar
to the tarantella and sung in the Greek dialect called Griko. The new album, “Pizzica Indiavolata” is
making waves, and it’s not difficult to see why. Obtain forthwith.
3 Moussu T e Lei Jovents – Mon drapeau rouge (Le Chant
du Monde)
Album: Artemis
The Marseilles based
group with sounds inspired by the melting pot of 1930s Marseilles when blues
and jazz rubbed shoulders with music from Caribbean, North Africa and Brazil
and folk songs in Occitan and Provencal. There’s also heavy does of ragamuffin in
there – they are after all an offshoot of the Massilia Sound System. “Mon
drapeau rouge” is a tribute to Marseilles socialist tradition: “Pass me the red
flag, let me hang it from the shutters, pass me the red flag and the black one,
while you’re at it”.
4 Didier Laloy & Fabian Beghin – Ambriose’s Forest
Party (Homerecords.be) (Fabian Beghin)
Album: CryptoniqueHeading to
5 Radio Cos – Sete Cuncas (Fol Musica)
Radio Cos is from Galicia , North Western Spain, and essentially two
singer-pandeireteiros, Henrique Peon and Xurxo Fernandes. Henrique Peon is in fact Mercedes Peon’s
brother, and just as enthusiastic as learning from and recording musicians in Galicia ’s villages as her. He draws on a rawer, old sound on this CD and
is joined by accordionist Xan Pampin, violinist Nikolay Velikov and Pedro Lamas
on various reeds and bagpipes.
6 Ilaiyaraaja – Aa Kannula
Aa Kunnula
I was totally
blown away when I found this old track by Ilaiyaraaja, the great composer for
the Tamil film industry based in Chennai.
Rather than in Tamil, this song appears to be in Telugu, the speakers of
which live just to the north of Chennai in Andhra Pradesh state. It’s sung by SP Balasubrahmanyam Janaki.
Here’s clip from
the related movie:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8iC-MV7Ivo
7 Shankar Jaikishan / Rais Khan – Raga Bairagi (EMI)
Album: Raga Jazz Style
Shankar Jaikishan with
the sitar player Rais off their ground breaking 1968 album which helped invent
the subgenre Indo Jazz. Shankar
Jaikishan is in fact a duo – Shankarsingh Raghwanshi and Jaikishan Dayabhai
Panchal - who composed a mass of music for the Hindi film industry between 1949
and 1971.
Album: Who’s gonna get the ball from behind the wall
We have sort special mini-focus on Beirut now, starting with something ultra-current – Paris-based and schooled classical pianist and percussionist, Bachar Mar-Khalife, the son of renowned Lebanese oud player, Marcel Khalife, and his radical interpretation of one of his father’s songs.
Here’s a clip of
Bachar with his father, Marcel, on oud, brother, Rami, piano, and Bachar, on
percussion doing the same tune: http://vimeo.com/51993055
9 Fairuz – Marreit Beil Shawari (Voix De L’Orient) (SACEM)
The most legendary
of Beirut musicians is singer Fairuz, who’s been
going since the 50s. “Marreit Beil
Shawari” is unbelievably from the early part of her career. She was part of the three-person team (“the trinity”)
with the Rahbani brothers, Mansour who wrote the lyrics and Assi, who became
her husband, composed and arranged the tunes.
A brilliant streamed
podcast on Afropop Worldwide about Fairuz can be found at: http://www.afropop.org/wp/hipdeep/
10 Ziad Rahbani – Chirak (Voix De L’Orient)
Album: Bil Afrah
Fairuz’s son Ziad
Rahbani also started coming in on the action in the 70s. As well as a lyricist and composer, Ziad is
also a playwright and political commentator.
“Chirak” is something he put together in 1972, based on an Armenian folk
song. He plays the accordion on the
song.
11 Yasmine Hamdan – Shouei (Crammed Records)
Album: Ya NassYasmine Hamden is another Beirutian now based in
Album: Thin Air
Leaving Beirut … some
of might have been lucky enough to see Dutch pianist Jeroen van Vliet play with
Carlo Mombelli and Kesivan Naidoo at the Mahogony Room in Cape Town in July or
indeed other venues around the country.
If not (or even you did), check out this clip capturing their the
Jo’burg stint of their tour.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DnXGhZsWAOA&feature=share
Van Vliet is a
fantastic player and composer who’s actually been to South Africa quite a few times since the 90s. “Al-Kirbah” is he put together with a group
called Sikeda for the North Sea Jazz Festival in 2008. Sikeda is a six piece which includes Iranian
born percussionist Afra Mussawisade.
Album: Gnawa London
London-based
Moroccan Simo Lagnawi with his arrangement of a traditional Gnawa tune on which
he plays all the instruments – the gimbri, qaragebs (castanets), and
clapping. It’s from a superb album of
basically stripped down traditional Gnawa, called “Gnawa London” out on Waulk
Records.
Album: Baba et sa maman
One of the sources
of Gnawa is the music of the Senegambia region, and I’m not sure we can get more authentic
than the music of Djeli Mah Damba Koroba, a veteran singer from the Bamana
areas of Mali , and her son, Baba Sissoko, who now lives
in Italy .
15 Amadou Diagne – Aida (Waulk Records)
Album: YakarSenegalese singer, songwriter and guitarist, Amadou Diagne’s, who now lives in
16 Dieuf-Dieul de Thies – Aling Na Djimbe (Taranga
Beat)
Album: Aw Sa Yone Vol 1
Mbalax is probably
Senegal ’s most well known musical export, and a
new Dakar-based label, Taranga Beat, has been exhuming forgotten gems from the
dawn of mbalax in the 70s, especially from the city of Thies .
Their latest find is the band Dieuf-Dieul de Thies.
17 The Garifuna Collective – Alagan (Cumbancha)
Album: Ayo
The Garifuna Collective, located in
18 Celia Cruz – Chango (Soul Jazz)
Album: Mirror to the Soul: Staying in the
19 Chicha Libre – Juaneco en el Cielo (Barbes/Crammed)
Album: Canibalismo
Chicha Libre are a
Brooklyn based group who take chicha, the music that developed in the slums of
Lima in Peru in the late 60s and 70s that combines surf guitar with Andean
folk, as their point of departure. All
kinds of samples and sequencers are deployed on the fine 2012 album,
“Canibalismo”.
Album: Eleganci Tropical
Bomba Estereo have
taken things to even trashier dance spaces building on the Afro-Caribbean
tradition of their home city, Barranquilla , on Colombia ’s Caribbean coast. Some of
you might have been lucky enough to see them in South Africa and Swaziland earlier this year. “Rocas” is with Brazillian rapper MC B
Negao. Singer Liliana Saumet is the
group’s irrepressible front person. Wish all dance music was this good.
21 Congo Nutty feat Rebel MC, Tenor Fly, Daddy Freddy
& Nanci Correia – Get Ready (Ninja Tune)
Album: Jungle Revolution
Congo Nutty used
to be Michael West aka Rebel MC and started this life as mover and shaker in
the UK rap and hip hop scene. Later he was a pioneer in London ’s jungle scene. After converting to Rastafarianism he dropped
out of music and went to go and live in Ethiopia .
Luckily he’s back now and firing on all five, bringing all his musical
legacies together with the great Adrian Sherwood behind the mixing desk.
22 The Jamaican’s – Ba Ba Boom (Heartbeat)
Congo Nutty’s “Get ready” draws heavily on a classic rock-steady track by The Jamaicans.
23 John Holt –
Ali Baba (Treasure Isle)
Album: Pleasure Dub
Errol Brown’s quite fantastic 1974 dub remix of John Holt’s 1969 classic Ali Baba. The dub version is called “I shave the barber” and credited to the great Jamaican sax player Tommy McCook and one of his backing bands, The Supersonics.
25
Staying in Jamaica … well sort-of … Clinton Fearon started
his career playing bass and guitar and supplying his wonderful baritone in one
of the great reggae bands of the 70s – The Gladiators. He now lives in Seattle and has recently taken to doing stripped
down versions of songs he wrote for The Gladiators. Here’s a fine example from his latest album,
which I promised a few months ago.
26 Alex McMurray – All my rivers (Threadhead)
Album: I will never be alone in this land
Alex McMurray is
singer songwriter living in New Orleans and steeped in its various
traditions. “I will never be alone in
this land” really oozes this tradition.
You’ll see in action on the Season 2 of the HBO series Treme.
27 Mavis Staples – Far Celestial
Shores
(Anti-)
Album: One True VineSpeaking of singer songwriters steeped in
28 Bill Frisell – A Beautiful View (Okeh/Sony)
Album:
The inestimable Bill Frisell from his really great suite of new tunes that he wrote at Glen Deven Ranch on the
Album: Kvite fuglar
Norwegian Unni Boksasp started singing traditional songs, but has moved on to write her own songs which are very much in the tradition.
Album: Outstairs
From composer, pianist and harmonium player Christian
Wallumrod with his usual startlingly beautiful combinations of Norwegian folk,
early church music, modern classical, improv and, here, Indian devotional
music.
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