1 Preservation Hall Jazz Band – That’s it! (Sony)
Album: That’s It!
The newly revived
Preservation Hall Jazz Band from New Orleans under the directorship of bassist and tuba
player Ben Jaffe carrying on the legacy of his parents who co-founded the band
50 years ago.
2 Fats Domino – Bo Weevil (Proper Records)
Album: The Cosimo Matassa Story vol 2
The cultural and
musical blender that is New Orleans is not only the birth place of jazz, but
also probably rock n roll, and one of the midwives was surely Cosimo Matassa,
who died in September 2014 at 88. Since
the 40s Matassa owned a number of small recording studios and was the sound
engineer on a huge volume of sides bearing that very unique NOLA sound. This is one from 1955.
3 Dave Bartholomew – Shrimp and gumbo (Proper Records)
Album: The Cosimo Matassa Story vol 2
Another from
1955. Dave Bartholomew was more than a
singer and songwriter; he also ran a very influential band at the time and had
links with Imperial Records, which released a good deal of the stuff recorded
by Matassa. He was also central in
kicking of Fats Domino’s career, and co-wrote a bunch of songs with him,
including “Bo Weevil”
4 Earl King – Street Parade (Soul Jazz)
Album: New
Orleans Funk Volume 2
The guitarist and
songwriter Earl King recorded a bunch of stuff with Matassa. Here’s something he did a bit later on, in 1972, with Allen Toussaint and the Meters also in the mix, which is clearly a
celebration of the second line parades which occur before Mardi Gras. The tune is pretty typical of New Orleans ’s own distinctive funk sound, with its laid back
jazzy swagger.
5 T. P. Orchestre Poly-Rythmo - Alissa We Dje Gbe (Badmas)
Album: Single: BB118
Funk of a slightly
more urgent kind than Earl King – more like James Brown. From the Beninese band we love to play here. It’s from a series of singles recorded in the
Ivory
Coast in 1976 on the Badmas label.
6 Aby Ngana Diop – Yaye Penda Mbaye (Awesome Tapes
From Africa )
Album: Liital
Turning forward
the dial to mid 90 and heading north to Dakar – a top griot in Senegal at the time, Aby Ngana Diop recorded the
first fusion of taasu and mbalax – taasu
being a form of praise poetry performed by Wolof woman during family events
like naming ceremonies. She did this
with backing singers, a battery of pounding percussion and synthetic marimba sounds
courtesy of the Yamaha DX7 and brought it out as cassette-only release destined
for obscurity. And the blog now label,
Awesome Tapes from Africa , have reissued it. One of the only tracks thankfully without the
DX7 marimba.
7 Orlando
Julius with The Heliocentrics – Jaiyede Afro (Strut)
Album: Jaiyede Afro
Julius with his
brand of highlife infused Afrobeat aided and abetted by a very on-form
Heliocentrics, who hail from Blighty, and some very spacey production.
Julius has been going since the late 60s, evolving the fusion on r’n’b
and funk with Nigerian music, and giving Fela Kuti a few ideas apparently.
8 Ibibio Sound Machine – Got to move, got to get out!
(Soundway)
Album: Ibibio Sound Machine
Stripped down
Afro-electro funk from Britain.
9 Thiago Franca
/ Meta Meta
and Tony Allen – Sao Paulo
no shakin’ (Mais Um Discos)
Album: Compacto
This tracks bares
the unmistakable drumming of one of the inventers of Afrobeat, Nigerian Tony
Allen. He teams up with Sao Paulo based
group Meta Meta for this outing, alluding to his tune from 2006, “Lagos no
shaking”. Although they live in Sao
Paulo Meta Meta draw their style from the state of Bahia , further to the north.
10 Morena Veloso – Um Passo a Frente (Quito
Ribeiro/Mereno Veloso) (Luaka Bop)
Album: Coisa Boa
Morena Veloso, the
son of Cataena, was so taken with the music of the Bahia that he relocated to Salvador , its capital. Most of his new album, “Coisa Boa”, was
recorded there too. A samba that turns
into mini carnival.
11 Dona Onete – Moreno
morenado (Mais Um Discos)
Album: Role: New Sounds of Brazil
Dona Oneta is from
the state of Para, quite a lot further north of Bahia in the heart of the
Amazon, and is known as the diva of carimbo chamegado which she invented,
adding “spice”, as she puts it, to the traditional rhythms of Para. Besides being a singer, Oneta has also been a
professor of Amazonian Studies and the municipal secretary of culture in her
hometown. She’s 75.
12 Mia Doi Todd – Memina, Amanha de Manha (Tom Ze)
(City Zen)
Album: Floresta
Mia Doi Todd, from
Los
Angeles ,
does a mean Portuguese accent. Here she plays with Maurico Takara, the
drummer/percussionist from the Rob Mazurek Octet amongst other Mazurek outfits,
and 7-string guitarist, Fabiano do Nascimento.
The tune is by Tropicalia veteran Tom Ze, and from Todd’s somewhat too
tasteful 2014 album.
13 Aurelio – Funa Tugudirugu (Unborn Child) (Real
World)
Album: Landini
Aurelio Martinez
is a great preserver of the Garifuna tradition, a Carribean tradition descendent
from shipwrecked slaves. “Unborn Child”
is his kind-of warning song about teenage pregnancy. It’s from his 2014 album dedicated to his
mother, Maria, who always wanted to be a professional singer and used to write
her songs based on community events and personal experience in the Garafuna
tradition. “Landini” means landing.
Here are three
flamenco hybrids:
14 Ramonet y sus Rumberos - Bacalao Salao (Soul Jazz
Records) (Derechos Reservados/Ramon Reyes) (Sonoplay – 1966)
Album: Gipsy Rhumba The Original Rhythm of Gipsy
Rhumba in Spain
65-74
This first one is
cut heavily with Caribbean music.
The style is often called gipsy rhumba and came out of the Catalan
region of Spain .
Ramonet or Ramon Reyes was one of pioneers and inventors of the style of
playing called “ventilador” – basically strumming with palms drumming the
rhythm on the body of guitar. This is
his 1966 tune.
15 Aynur – Tobedar Im (Network)
Album: Hevra/Together
Turkish Kurd or
Kurdish Turk, Aynur, together with Spanish composer, producer and flamenco
guitar whiz, Javier Limon from Aynur’s 2014 album.
16 Adnan Joubran – Signs of Madness (World
Village )
Album: Borders Behind
Adnan Joubran is
probably most well known as one the three brothers in the Palestinian power
folk string band, Le Trio Joubran, with lots of ouds to the fore. For his 2014 release he links up with Prabhu
Edouard on tabla, Valentine Moussou on cello, and Javier Sanchez on cajon and
palmas
17 Paolo Angeli – Athena Mina (Angeli) (ReR)
Album: Tessuti: Angeli plays Frith & Bjork
Paolo Angeli on
something he calls prepared Sardinian guitar, a giant guitar which is bowed
for the lead part, plucked on the bass strings and tapped for percussion and
has something like 14 different direct outputs.
Angeli, who grew up in Sardinia, but went off to avantguard music
school in Bologna, ended up taking lessons with Giovanni Scanu, a very
old traditional player in Northern Sardania.
18 Bessie Jones (and The Georgia
Sea
Island
Singers) – O Death (Global Jukebox)
Album: Join the band
Sticking to island
music, here’s something from the other side of the world, the Georgia Sea Islands,
off the coast of the State of Georgia in Uthe S.
The Georgia Sea Island Singers was formed in early 1900s, a group of
freed slaves and their descendents aimed at preserving the islands’ special brand
of gospel hymns and field songs. This
recording was made by Alan Lomax in about 1960, when Bessie Jones, one of the
top singers and song collectors of the Georgia Sea Islands Singers was in full
cry.
19 Pokey LaFarge – Day After Day (Third Man)
Album: Pokey LaFarge
Pokey LaFarge,
originally from Bloomington , Illnois, with his potent mix of ragtime, country, jazz
and swing. Off his and now, actually, their (go figure) 2013 outing.
20 Old crow medicine show – Mean enough world (ATO)
Album: Remedy
The Pokey LaFarge
album was co-produced by Ketch Sector from another great Americana revival band, Old Crow Medicine Show, and
they have a new album out in 2014.
21 Alice
Gerrard – Wedding Dress (Tompkins
Square )
Album: Follow the music
Alice Gerrard, has
been playing Appalachian music since 60s, often with Hazel Dickens. She turned 80 in July and has a great new
album out produced by MC Taylor from Hiss Golden Messenger. “Wedding Dress” is a traditional tune.
22 Rachael Dadd – The Distance (Broken Sound Records)
Album: Bite the Mountain
The wonderful
poly-rhythms of Rachael Dadd produced on voice, ukulele, prepared piano,
clarinet and very various kitchen sink percussive objects. Dadd is from Bistol but produced her 2011
album in Japan with a bunch of Japanese guest
musicians.
23 Rachel Newton featuring Adam Holmes – The Fairy Man
(Shadowside/Cadiz)
Album: Changeling
Harpist, viola and
fiddle player, and singer Rachel Newton has a new album out about fairies and
changelings. Adam Holmes, quite a fine
singer in his own right, guests brilliantly on her version of "The Fairy Man" based
on a poem by Sidney Goodsir Smith, a Scottish poet who died in 1975. There’s some musical saw in there too.
24 Naomi Bedford (with Alastair Roberts) – The Watches
of the Night (Dusty Willow/Proper)
Album: A History of Insolence
Naomi Bedford’s
fiery song off her new album. The seriously wonderful Scottish singer
songwriter, Alasdair Roberts, is the other singer there.
25 Brushy One String – Boom Bang Deng (Rise Up)
Album: The King of One String – Acoustic
Brushy One String
plied his singer-songwriter trade in Jamaica in the shadows for a long time,
discovering a string guitar style of playing along the way. Luckily the doccie producer, Luciano Blotta,
through his movie “RiseUp” exposed Brushy (whose real name is Andrew Chin) to
the world. RiseUp Entertainment has managed
to get an album of his stuff out.
26 Dubblestandandart feat Lee Perry Adrian Sherwood –
Chase the Devil (Echo
Beach )
Album: In dub
Lee Perry with his
classic song “Chase the Devil” – you might remember Max Romeo’s 1976 version,
which still sounds fresh actually. This
new version is backed by Dubblestandart, an Austrian band, and mixed by dub
guru Adrian Sherwood. If you're wondering
where you can find some recent Adrian Sherwood dubs (they seem to be quite rare
these days since On-U Sound went into abeyance), the Dubblestandard album “In
dub” has six of them.
27 The Rudamentals
– Sound Boy Killa (David Platz Music (Pty) Ltd)
Album: Blaze Up the Fire
28 Marcia
Griffiths – Steppin’ out of Babylon
(Penthouse Records)
Single
Marcia Llyneth Griffiths
is probably most well known has being part of the I Threes who backed Bob
Marley. But she’s also a fantastic singer and song writer in own right, as this
slice of roots reggae from 1979 bares testament to.
29 Daniel Lanois – Frozen (Anti/Epitaph)
Album: Belladona
Something from
ultra famous producer and guitarist Daniel Lanois 2005 solo album.
30 Maggie Bjorklund – Missing at sea (Bloodshot
Records)
Album: Shaken
Maggie Bjorklund
taking the pedal steel to exquisite new places on her tune. Bjorklund is from Denmark although she seems to be living in the US now and plays with a bunch of American
luminaries on her 2014 album, which is a fabulous thing it has to be said.
31 Building Instrument – Klokka Sju (Hubro)
Album: Building Instrument
Building
Instrument are a trio from Bergen , Norway , with the wonderful singer and
multi-instrumentalist Mari Kven Brunvoll probably their most famous member. They released an eponymous album in
2014. Apparently Brunvoll sings in
heavily accented Norweigan from her home region of Molde.
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