1 Tony Allen – Ewa (Jazz
Village )
Film of Life
Tony Allen’s
utterly enthralling drumming – the definition of funk – relaxed and groovy, and
at the same time tightly wound looking for release where ever possible. Allen helped launched Afrobeat on the world
in the late 60s with Fela Kuti, taking highlife-jazz to next level with large
dollops of added funk. “Ewa” is a minor
instrumental perhaps, but it makes for a killer opening track for this show.
One of those album
highlights of 2014 that in the January show I promised we’d continue to look at
in March. There’re a bunch more we’re
going be listening to.
2 Aziz Sahmaoui and University
of Gnawa
– Mazal (World
Village )
Album: Mazal
Like Tony Allen,
Moroccan Aziz Sahmaoui lives in France .
He’s been exploring the connections between gnawa and chaabi music from
this homeland, and Senegambian music with his band of mainly Senegalese
musicians, The University of Gnawa, for a few years now. The connections are far from
speculative. Gnawa was developed by the
descendents of slaves from the Senegambia region.
3 Simo Lagnawi – Sahara
Wiya (Riverboat Records/World Music Network)
Album: The Gnawa Berber
Simo Lagnawi, like
Aziz Sahmaoui is a Berber, plays the three string bass lute, the guembri, and
lives away from his country of birth, in Simo’s case, in London . Simo
also does this wonderful combo of castanet playing and aerobic dancing that be checked
out on youtube.
4 Mattis Kleppen – Tamatant Tilay/Nordafjells (Ora
Fonogram)
Album: Resjemheia
And speaking of
bass playing rooted in West Africa, fretless acoustic bass player Mattis
Kleppen was a guest of Derek Gripper in December last year at “Straight No Chaser”. Mattis talks about noticing a striking
similarity between touareg music and the hardanger fiddle music of his home
town in Norway . And he puts this down to the harsh
conditions in both of these areas, and the rugged determination of their
people. The similarity also has a lot to
do with repetition and quarter tones.
5 Kasse Mady Diabate – Toumaro (Six Degrees Records)
Album: Kirike
Veteran griot Kasse
Mady Diabate backed by crack musicians on the traditional Malian instruments – the
ngoni, balafon and kora, - the kora is played by one of greats, Ballake
Sissoko. Cellist Vincent Segal produces
and adds his otherworldly cello into the mix.
From another great record from 2014.
6 Djessou Mory Kante – Fakoly (Stern’s music)
Album: River Strings – Maninka Guitar
Another fabulous
album of 2014 was the purely instrumental record by Guinean session guitarist
Djessou Mory Kante. The whole thing is very clean and open, with Kante’s guitar
buoyed by some very subtle rhymic interplay between backing guitars and
ngoni.
7 Noura Mint Seymali – Tzenni (Glitterbeat)
Album: Tzenni
Mauritanian Noura
Mint Seymali, the step daughter of the great singer Dimi Mint Abba, put out one
of the great albums of 2014. The
scorching guitar supplied by Seymali’s husband, Jeiche Ould Chighaly. The thing was recorded in Brooklyn , New York , by Tony Maimone, an ex-member of the
great Cleveland rock band, Pere Ubu.
8 Martha Tilston – Lovely on the water (Squiggly
Records)
Album: The Sea
In January Show, I
promised something off English singer and guitarist Martha Tilston’s fine
traditional 2014 album, “The Sea”.
“Lovely on the water” is a duet with her step mother, Maggie Boyle who
died shortly after the album came out, who also supplies the flute.
9 The Furrow Collective – Wondrous Love (Cadiz )
Album: At our next meeting
The hymn “Wondrous
Love” is sometimes called a folk hymn and was published in Virginia in 1811.
From yet another great release from 2014. Alasdair Roberts is the main voice. The other group members are also quite famous
– Emily Portman, Lucy Farrell and Rachel Newton.
10 Peter Rowan – Restless Grave (Omnivore)
Album: Dharma Blues
Here’s some
non-religious spiritual country blues off Peter Rowan’s latest. On backing vocals is Gillian Welch, and Dave
Easley’s on that terrific pedal steel.
11 Anais Mitchell – Young man in America
(Wilderland Records)
Album: Xoa
Anais Mitchell
from her 2014 album of stripped down new versions of her songs from throughout
her career. “Young man in America ”, originally off an album of the same name
she says is about Americans being like orphans.
12 Chris Smither – Train Home (Signature Records)
Album: Still on the levee
Chris Smither, of
a much older generation than Anais Mitchell, (he turned 70 recently) produced a
similar sort of album in 2014 – new versions, sometimes much fuller than the
original, though, of songs from his 45 year old career. The album is called is “Still on the levee” –
he is from New Orleans – and we’re going to listen to is “Train Home” with the
legendary New Orleans musician Allen Toussaint on piano.
13 C W Stoneking – We gon’ boogaloo (Caroline)
Album: Gon’ Boogaloo
All way from
Melbourne 2014 that was C W Stoneking from my favorite records of 2014. Compared to his 2008 release, “Jungle Blues”,
a terrific record as well, he’s ditched his horn section, turned up Fender’s
amp and broadened out his palette from his obsession with 1940s calypso. He still has one toe in the Carribean though,
like the boogaloo.
14 Lord Cobra and Pana-Afro Sounds – Rocombey
(Soundway)
Album: Panama !
Latin, Funk and Calypso on the isthmus 1965-75
A wonderful
calypso singer from Panana, Lord Cobra, with his stone classic
15 Rodrigue Milien et Sound Groupe Combite Creole –
6eme Lecon (Strut Records)
Album: Haiti
Direct: Big Band, Mini Jazz & Twoubadou Sounds, 1960-1978
One of the many of
wonderful tracks on one of the best and most diverse collection of vintage
tunes that came out in 2014.
16 The Lions Meet Dub Club – Easy Dub (Stone’s Throw)
Album: The Generation in Dub
One of my
favourite dub albums of 2014 was by the Los Angeles 12 piece reggae band The Lion. It a dub version of their 2013 record “This
Generation”. Produced by Tom Chasteen of
the Dub Club, who dubbed it live with mixer, old school stylee.
17 Kalbata & Mixmonster – Echo Minott – Outta
Road (Freestyle Records)
Album: Congo
Beat the Drum
Some of the most
compelling new dancehall you’ll hear: Kalbata and Mixmonster, who are actually
from Tel Aviv, with veteran Jamaican toaster Echo Minott, who’s been around
since the dawn of dancehall.
18 Dub Gabriel feat PJ Higgins – Silent Warrior
(Destroy all concepts)
Album: Raggabass Resistance
Over the last few
months we’re listened quite a bit of the fabulous reggae and soul singer and
toaster PJ Higgins. Here she is again
with producer Dub Gabriel with something from 2013
19 The Bombay
Royale – Hooghly
Night Patrol (Hope Street
Recordings)
Album: The Island
of Dr Electrico
Another bunch for
Melbourne “The Bombay Royale” with their take on Bollywood – brass and old
school synth (if there is such a thing these days) to the fore. Yes, it’s also from 2014.
20 Susheela Raman – Sharabi (World
Village )
Album: Queen Between
Susheela Raman
nearly always comes up with something arresting. Her 2014 record has come nifty
stuff including this clash between the Rizwan-Muazzam Qawwali group, who are
basically Nusfrat Ali Khan’s nephews, and Kutle Khan Rajasthani folk
group. You’ll also hear Vincent Segal’s cello
in there.
21 Ros Sereyothea – Jas Bong Ju Am (World Music
Network)
Album: The Rough Guide to Psychedelic Cambodia
One of the greats
of Cambodian music from any era.
22 Hayvanlar Alemi – Hadron Collider Twist (Unrock)
Album: Twisted Souvenirs
Something
seriously psychedelic from Turkey . Hayvanlar
Alemi hail from Ankara and have been going since 1999. “Twisted Souvenirs” is another great release
from 2014. Check out their website for
some pretty wonderful free downloads.
23 Forabandit – Dil (Buda Musique)
Album: Port
Forabandit, with
Ulas Ozdemir from Istanbul on baglama, Sam Karpienia from Marseilles on the mandocello, and Bijan Chemirani,
from the great dynasty of Iranian percussionists. From Forabandit’s 2014 album.
24 FatDog – Terre Neuve/Isdalen (Riverboat Records)
Album: New Found Land
Sticking with the
transnational and transgenre fusions, FatDog draws its members from Sweden , Norway and England and from across the jazz-folk divide –
their name being an amalgam of Fattigfolket, a jazz trio, and Doggerland, a
folk trio. And they have no straight
percussion – although the hurdy-gurdy, concertina and cittern play
percussively. Here’s their version of
“Terre Neuve/Isdalen”
25 Piers Faccini & Vincent Segal – Mange Pou Le
Coeur (No Format)
Album: Songs of Time Lost
English painter and songwriter, Piers Faccini and cellist Vincent Segal, again (for the third time tonight, in case you’re not counting) with their recent version of Alain Peters classic tune “Mange pou le ceour”. Although Alain Peters died quite young, in his 40s, he had long career in Reunion starting out with pop music, and then Maloya, before washing up on the streets of Marseilles in the mid 80s and dying there in mid 90s. He seems to have written this song just before moving to
26 Terje Isungset & Arve Hendriksen – Looking
Through (Icemusic)
Album: World of Glass
Norwegians,
percussionist Terje Isungset and trumpeter Arve Hendriksen playing something on
all glass instruments created by glass art students at the Estonian Academy of
Art.
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