1 DakhaBrakha – Sho Z-Pod Duba (DakhaBrakha)
Album: Yahudky
DakhaBrahka from
Ukrainian capital, Kiev , have been going since 2004 starting out as a
theatrical project. They use the vocal
traditions of the Ukraine as a departure point, and build things
from there using cello, concertina and percussion. From one of their early albums.
2 Forabandit – Mum Olduk (Buda Musique)
Album: Port
Something from
another bunch fusionists. Forabandit are
Sam Karpienia from Marseille and Ulas Ozdemir from Istanbul who both explore the troubadour traditions
of their home regions, Karpienia singing in Occitan. They are also great string players – on
mandocello and baglama. Joining them is
Iranian percussionist, Bijan Chemirani, who lives in Marseille. Something from their 2014 release.
3 Avi Avital – Bucimis (Bulgarian Traditional)
(Deutsche Grammaphon)
Album: Between Worlds
The virtuoso
mandolin player with a traditional Bulgarian tune.
4 Sondorgo – Drago Kolo (Riverboat)
Album: Tamburocket Hungarian Fireworks
Sticking in that
neck of the woods, here’s a tambura brother band from Hungary .
The tambura is a mandolin-type instrument and in band on the three
Eredics brothers and their cousin - the
bass tambura player being the only non-family member. Here’s a traditional dance tune, a duet with
only two of the members one of them on some kind of whistle – so only one
tambura in evidence here, originally collected quite a long time ago by the
great Hungarian composer, Bela Bartok.
5 Rachid & Fethi – Habit en Ich (Sublime
Frequencies)
Album: 1970s Algerian Folk and Pop
One of the great
Algerian pop bands of the 70s and 80s, who were also brothers. Rachid was murdered in 1995, and the story
goes that his brother has never performed again.
6 Hijaz – Desert Dancer (Zephyrus Records)
Album: Nahadin
Hijaz seem to be a
Belgium based group centred on the interplay of
the oud played by Tunisian Mofadhel Adhoum and piano by Niko Deman. On their 2014 outing, they’re joined by
Italian Carlo Rizzo on percussion. .
7 John Zorn/Rashanim – Zidon (Tzadik)
Album: Masada
Rock
Rashanim is a trio
with Jon Madof on guitar, and that was their version of the John Zorn
composition. It’s from their CD called Masada
Rock which came out in 2005 – one of a number released to mark the label
Tzadik’s tenth anniversary.
8 Majid Bekkas – Bania (Igloomondo / Igloo Records)
Album: Al Qantara
Moroccan Majid
Bekkas has been playing the guembri for 40 years, plying his special kind of
gnawa jazz fusion. On this new album, he
plays with Khalid Kouhen on percussion and Manuel Hermia on flutes and saxophones.
9 Abana Ba Nasery – Omwana
Wa
Mberi Nesiekhoira (Globe Style)
Album:!Nursery Boys Go Ahead! The Guitar and Bottle
Kings of Kenya
Abana Ba Nasery or
Nursery Boys were around first in 60s and 70s in Kenya , and whose career was revived in the early
90s by the British label Globe Style via a collection of their pre-90s
material. Globe Style went onto the
release of an album of new stuff We heard the tune “Omwana Wa Mberi
Nesiekhoira”. In the mix are number of
members of the 3 Mustaphas 3 and the Oysterband, believe it or not.
10 Malawi
Mouse Boys – Zochita Zanu (Your Deeds) (IRL)
Album: Dirt is good
With the same kind
of exuberance as Abana, but with a more DIY feel are the Malawi Mouse Boys, who
also have a great, almost mythological back-story – they came to the attention
of semi-famous American producer Ian Brennan when he passing through a Malawian
truck-stop at which they were playing guitars and singing while flogging their
principle wares, grilled mice on sticks.
Here’s Zochita Zanu from their second album “Dirt is good”.
11 Tabu Ley Rochereau, Afrisa International - Aon Aon
(Stern’s Music)
Album: The Voice of Lightness 1961-1977 –Congo
Classics
Album: The Voice of Lightness 1961-1977 –
One of the
absolute greats of Congalese Rhumba, singer and songwriter Pascal-Emmanuel
Sinamoyi Tabu or as he’s known Tabu Ley Rochereau, and the band he lead for
many year, Afrisa International. Tabu
Ley died late in 2013. Over his 5 decade career he sang with all the other
greats like Le Grand Kalle and Franco.
He’s said to have written 3000 songs and produced 250 albums.
12 Kasai
Allstars – Down and Out (Crammed Discs)
Album: Beware the Fetish
A more
contemporary great of Congolese Music is the Kasai All Stars who concoct something
radically different from rhumba or soukous.
They’re collective of 5 different musical groups from the Kasai Province in the DRC – 15 musicians altogether
representing 5 different ethnic groups who have not tended to play together in
the past to put it mildly.
Their second album
“Beware of the Fetish” is a double CD out on Crammed Disc and is seriously
wonderful and quite epic – there’re an extra 24 guest musicians, and producer
Vincent Kenis does an incredible job of burrowing deep into the wall of voices,
drums, guitars, marimbas and electrified likembes or mribas.
Sheer Music is
bringing Crammed Discs into SA, so you’ll be able to get the Kassai All Stars
and other Crammed Discs disks in good Music Stores
13 Family Atlantica – Manicero (Soundways Records)
Album: Family Atlantica
It’s the night of
the fusionists – this time from Hackey, London .
Family Atlantica Family exist somewhere between Europe , South America and Africa . At
the core of the band is Heliocentrics member Jack Yglesias (we’re heard the
Heliocentrics here a few times) and his Venezuelan wife Luzmira Zerpa. Their tune “El Manicero” which is definitely
hovering over Latin
America .
14 Chancha Via Circuito – Jardines (ft Lido
Pimienta) (Crammed Discs)
Album: Amansara
Heading to Argentina for some digital cumbia. Chanca Via Circuito is basically Pedro
Canele. Lido Pimienta is on vocals on
this track.
15 Las Hermanas Caronni – Chiche Pempe (Snail Records)
Album: Baguala de la Siesta
We’ve had a couple
of brother bands tonight, here’s a sister band from Argintina. Laura and Gianna Caronni are both classically
trained – on cello and clarinet – and play folk songs with some refinement.
16 Los De Abajo – Cicatrices (Flowfish Records GbR)
Album: Mariachi Beat
Los de Abajo
started out as a four piece Latin ska band in Mexico City in the early 90s, but they’ve more than
doubled in size with constantly changing personnel and broadened their sound a
lot since then. Their latest album draws
heavily on traditional Mexican music.
17 Petrona Martinez
– La Petronica Martinez (Tambora Golpia) (ft Martina Camargo) (Chaco
World Music)
Album: Las Penas Aleges
A living legend of
Colombian folk music, Petrona Martinez, is well into her 70s now. The style she plays is called bullerengue and
it’s from the Caribbean coast of Colombia . A
lead singer or cantadora improvises the verses while a choir responds – and it’s
driven by drumming and clapping. The
particular rhythm here is tambora, and the tune was kicked off by Martina
Camargo, with Petrona Martinez coming in later.
Martinez covers a lot of musical bases and we’ll be
more in the future. Thanks to Fred
Salles for showing the way on this on.
18 Frente Cumbiero Meets Mad Professor – Cumbietrope
(Dub) (Vampi Soul)
Album: Frente Cumbiero Meets Mad Professor
The band Frente
Cumbiero is an innovative force in Colombian cumbia at the moment. One of its members is Eblis Alvarez, the guy
behind the Meridian Brothers. In 2009
they teamed with the Mad Professor, one of the great second generation British
dub producers, in Bogota .
The album Frente Cumbiero meets Mad Professor resulted.
19 Althea and Donna – Uptown Town Ranking (Virgin
Records/Music) (A Forrest/D Reid)
Album: Freedom Sounds (A Celebration)
Like all
musicians, reggae musicians often have conversations across songs and decades
with a fair amount of musical scavenging and cannibalism taking place in the
process. One of the great examples of
this is the evolution of Althea and Donna smash 1978 hit “Uptown Top Ranking”
20 Alton
Ellis – I’m still in love
Album: I’m still in love
Uptown Top Ranking
has its roots in one of the great innovators of rocksteady, the singer Alton
Ellis. The song is “I’m still in love
with you” which dates from the early 70s.
In this version Ellis duets with his sister Hortense Ellis.
21 Trinity – Three Piece Suit (Belmont
Records)
Album: Three Piece Suit (Special edition)
That was Trinity’s
Three Piece Suit drew heavily on Anton Ellis rhythm – Uptown Ranking was Althea
and Donna’s direct response to this tune.
22 DJ Dawn and the Ranking Queens
– Peace Truce Thing (Soul Jazz Records) / Jamrec Music
Album: Studio One Dancehall – Sir Coxone in the Dance:
The Foundation Sound
At the dawn of
what became known as Dancehall– the sub-genre that gained dominance after
reggae in the late 70s – DJ Dawn and the Ranking Queens did a disco remix of
Uptown Top Ranking.
23 Jah Wobble presents PJ Higgins – Inspiration (Sonar
Kollectiv)
Album: Inspiration
A couple of
month’s ago we listened to something off Dub Collossus’ latest album “Addis to
Omega” and mentioned their current
singer, PJ Higgins, was on a roll and on some kind of a career high and that
I’d be playing more. This is a
collaboration with Jah Wobble – the title track of their album,
Inspiration. PJ Higgins has been around
for ages – she started out in the mid 90s singing another of Wobble’s
collaborators, Natasha Atlas. There’s
more of her stuff out worth listening to, and we’ll be doing that …
24 Nancy
Kerr – The Priest’s Garden (Little Dish Records)
Album: Sweet Visitor
Sticking in
Blighty, the traditional fiddle player, Nancy Kerr, has just released her first
solo album. It’s called “Sweet Visitors”
and all the tunes on it are her own.
25 Martin and Eliza Carthy – The Queen of Hearts
(Topic)
Album: The Moral of the Elephant
Eliza Carthy is
another great English trad fiddle player, and she’s actually played with Nancy
Kerr – they have album together. A trad
tune from a 2014 release with her father Martin Carthy.
26 Richard Thompson – Beeswing (Beeswing/Proper)
Album: Acoustic Classics
Richard Thompson
has a new album out – a collection of some of his great songs played anew in
utterly stripped down form by Thompson alone.
It’s embarrassment of riches.
27 Gambangan, Gamelan Semar Pegulingan (Smithsonian
Folkways)
Album: Music for the gods: The Fahnestock
South
Sea
Expedition, Indonesia
We don’t often
listen to Indonesian gamelan music here, but recent fusionist explorations
reminded about how great it can be.
Let’s start with something old – field recordings made in 1941 in Indonesia archipelago by Bruce and Sheridan
Fahnestock and available on a Smithsonian Folkway’s release.
28 Glenn Kotche 7 Gamelan Galak Tika – The Travelling
Turtle (Canteloupe)
Album: Adventureland
Glen Kotche, the
drummer from Wilco, with a gamelan collective from his new album.
29 OOIOO – Jesso Testa (Thrill Jockey)
Album: Gamel
The Japanese
experimental psych collective
Gjendines Badnlat (Gjendine’s Cradle Song) (Ozella
Music)
Album: Hjemklang
Norwegian singer Gjertud
Lunde with trumpeter, Arve Hendriksen, guesting.
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