FUNKY FUZZY SOUNDS OF WEST AFRICA
VA - World Psychedelic Classics 3, Love's a Real Thin, The Funky Fuzzy Sounds of West Africa [2004]
Love's a Real Thing is an excellent introduction into the wild sound world of West Africa in the '70s. As Ronnie Graham points out in his superb liner notes, the '60s were a time of assimilation for much of the popular music of Africa. Many bands were playing a hybrid of Latin and African music typified by the Congolese rhumba of Franco & OK Jazz. The '70s were a different bag, though, with the heavy electric sounds of Jimi Hendrix, James Brown, Cream, and others seeping into the consciousness of a new generation of Africans who were also contending with their own emerging sense of identity. The results are raucous, exuberant melting pots of funky soul, psychedelic rock, and honey-sweet Latin horns mixed through the sensibilities of extremely talented African bands on the cusp of developing styles like soukous, mbalax, and Afro-beat. Senegal's Star Band Number One (aka Etoile de Dakar and confusingly billed here as No. 1 de No. 1), were already seasoned veterans by the dawn of the 1970s, and the sound of their "Guajira Van" with its sinewy fuzz guitar solo and talking drum stabs is glorious proto-mbalax. Elsewhere, there are songs more directly inspired by rock and soul. "Allah Wakbarr" by Ofo & the Black Company has a heavy acid rock guitar lead competing with a conga drum for the top of the mix. The title cut, "Love's a Real Thing" by Gambia's Super Eagles, is a gritty organ and electric guitar-driven soul number that could have come out of Memphis' Stax Records. One of the later period numbers, William Onyeabor's "Better Change Your Mind" from 1978, is sophisticated Afro-soul riding on an alien keyboard line. "Keleya" from Mali's Moussa Doumbia is the funkiest of the Afro-beat songs on Love's a Real Thing; its chunky organ solo and James Brown grunts beat out the more laid-back "Ifa" from Tunji Oyelana & the Blenders and "Awon-Ojise-Oluwa" from Nigerian studio veteran Gasper Lawal. There have been other series that have explored Africa in this vibrant and historic period -- the fantastic Ethiopiques, Dakar Sound, and Discotheque discs document Ethiopia, Senegal, and Guinea, respectively -- but what Love's a Real Thing lacks in depth it makes up for in breadth, and the fact that it surveys the whole region rather than a single area makes it a great entry point for them all. (AllMusic review by Wade Kergan)
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Track lists
01 Orchestre Poly-Rythmo De Cotonou Dahomey Minsato Le, Mi Deyihome 3:19
02 Super Eagles Love's A Real Thing 2:59
03 Moussa Doumbia Keleya 6:42
04 Manu Dibango Ceddo End Title 5:09
05 Sorry Bamba Porry 8:17
06 Starband Number One De Dakar Guajira Ven 5:12
07 William Onyeabor Better Change Your Mind 8:23
08 Ofo & The Black Company Allah Wakbarr 3:30
09 Gasper Lawal Awon-Ojise-Oluwa 6:23
10 Bunzu Sounds Zinabu 3:20
11 Tunji Oyelana And The Benders Ifa 4:59
12 Orchestre Regional De Kayes Sanjina 6:00
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Great stuff
ReplyDeleteCheers
Stephen
Cheers
DeleteStephen
I note some Openining and Closing Tracks Comps!
Delete"In The Beginning" & "The End Is Near..."
Cheers
Stephen
Yes, there will be 20 discs each when this series is finished. Watch out for more over the following months. Enjoy.
DeleteThanks BB, great album.
ReplyDeleteGlad you like it Maren,
DeleteCheers.
If there's a Volume 1&2 of this series posted anywhere I'd loved to know about it. Love this period of African music!
ReplyDelete