Idris Ackamoor and the Pyramids

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Next up is the title-track to the 2016 album “We Be All Africans” performed in 2015 for Unseen Recordings, followed by an interview segment about touring oversees, etc.:

Strut Records put out the band’s 2016 album and posted the following video. There is no song information, but Strut says: “here’s a taste of the original Pyramids experience from a 1975 KQED TV special.

  • Follow Idris Ackamoor & The Pyramids at Facebook

  • Visit Idris Ackamoor’s official website

  • Support Idris Ackamoor & The Pyramids at Bandcamp

Kikagaku Moyo / 幾何学模様 Go To Church

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Japanese psychedelic rockers Kikagaku Moyo / 幾何学模様 recently posted a fantastic new live video to the social messengers. And it is my duty as a Certified Eboy Internet Courier (not a real thing) to pass awesome nuggets like this along to you, my fellow, faithful Internet friends.

We’re all in this together. The band says the following on their Facebook page:

“We are very happy to share our improvised live session with our friends Jacco gardner & Bruno Pernadas :).

The set was performed & recorded at at St. George church in Lisbon, Portugal back in 2018.

Big thanks to Barking Dog Agency for the video production and incredible opportunity.”

The video's Youtube page provides the following details:

• Live session at the St. George Church in Lisbon with Kikagaku Moyo, Bruno Pernadas and Jacco Gardner.
• RECORDING Rui Antunes Emil Lloyd
• CAMERA Francesco Giacomini David Breda Silva André Chaby Mendonça Ulpiano Capalbo
• EDIT Ulpiano Capalbo
• PRODUCTION Barking Dogs

Sun Ra: Brother From Another Planet (BBC Documentary)

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In 2005, the BBC released a short (an hour or so) documentary on Jazz legend Sun Ra. The Guardian wrote:

"Letts's BBC4 documentary, Sun Ra: Brother From Another Planet, is an attempt to make some sense of the man whom he describes as "The Salvador Dali of jazz", who was born in Alabama in 1914 but proclaimed himself to have come from Saturn, on a mission to save the black race in particular from the bondage of planet Earth. Letts himself, however, admits that, even having voyaged extensively through Ra's back catalogue, "a lot of the music goes right over my head. He certainly appeared to be a bit bonkers," he concedes. "But to him, all this stuff was deep and meaningful and had a continuity to it. But it was hard to get a handle on. [Even] Marshall Allen, his saxophonist, admits he didn't quite get it."

Featuring Wayne Kramer, Thurston Moore, Archie Shepp, Marshall Allen and more, and interview segments with Ra himself, the documentary tries to make sense of the Sun Ra legacy. Watch for yourself.

  • Visit the official Sun Ra Arkestra website.

  • Purchase Sun Ra’s music at Amazon.

Manu Dibango "Soul Makossa"

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In light of yesterday’s news that international saxophonist Manu Dibango has died from Coronavirus, here he is performing his best known track “Soul Makossa.”




  • Visit Manu Dibango’s official website.

  • Follow Manu Dibango on Facebook.

  • Purchase Manu Dibango’s music on Amazon.

  • Listen to “Soul Makossa” by Manu Dibango on Episode 25 of the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow.

Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp 03 by Jeich Ould Badou

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Over the past couple of months, I have been pleased to pass along the announcement that 10 years later, the Sahel Sounds was following up their fantastic Music From Saharan Cellphones compilation with the ground-breaking compilation, Music from Saharan WhatsApp.

“For the year of 2020, Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp." Every month, we'll be releasing an EP from a musical group in the Sahel. Every album will be recorded on a cellphone, and transmitted over WhatsApp, and uploaded to Bandcamp - where it will live for one month only. Available for pay as you want, 100% of the sales will go directly to the artist or group. After one month, the album will be replaced by another one, until the end of the year.”

The label says of this third installment:

“This month we go to Mauritania to one of the premiere players of the tidnit, Jeich Ould Badou. Coming from a hereditary family of musicians, Jeich's tidnit (the Mauritanian lute) is updated, with built in phasers and pre-amps. Jeich is well known in Nouakchott, where he regularly gigs in weddings and invitations. Here he presents a series of WZN recordings, instrumental classic Mauritania music, for dancing: three songs recorded at home with the drum machine, and one live invitation recording with percussion.”

credits

released March 16, 2020

Jeich Ould Badou - Tidnit
Boss DR-770 Drum Machine (Tracks 1, 2, 3)

Recorded by Jeich Ould Badou on iPhone 7, March 2020
Album Art by Christopher Kirkley

Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp 02 by Oumou Diabate et Kara Show Koumba Frifri"

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Last month I was pleased to pass along the announcement that 10 years later, the Sahel Sounds was following up their fantastic Music From Saharan Cellphones compilation with the ground-breaking compilation, Music from Saharan WhatsApp.

“For the year of 2020, Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp." Every month, we'll be releasing an EP from a musical group in the Sahel. Every album will be recorded on a cellphone, and transmitted over WhatsApp, and uploaded to Bandcamp - where it will live for one month only. Available for pay as you want, 100% of the sales will go directly to the artist or group. After one month, the album will be replaced by another one, until the end of the year.”

The label says of this second installment:

“This month we present mother and son duo, Oumou Diabate and Kara Show Koumba Frifri (Youssouf Drame), from Bamako, Mali. Playing traditional Mandingue music, these lowkey recordings are a snapshot from a griot family home. Oumou Diabate has been performing all her life, and is honored as one of the first griots to perform on television when it first arrived in Mali. Kara Show carries on his family tradition, a renowned performer of the Tamani drum. A founding member of the Balani Show outfit Group Mamelon, Kara Show is a regular guest performer in Bamako’s modern music scene."

Preview the second EP here (THIS WILL DISAPPEAR AT THE END OF THE MONTH):

Head over to the Bandcamp page to download the first installment and track future releases.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Facebook.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Twitter.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Youtube.

  • Support Sahel Sounds at Bandcamp.

  • Browse “Sahel Sounds” at Amazon.

Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp"

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The Sahel region of northwestern Africa, spans several countries including: Mauritania, Mali, and Niger, and includes dozens of languages and dialects. This region produces some of my favorite music in the world (browse my posts tagged “Tuareg”). And one of my favorite labels putting out some of my favorite music is Sahel Sounds.

Pitchfork says that at least part of the reason label owner Christopher Kirkley chose to work in the Sahel region was “in part because it was so hard to find English-language information about it.” The label’s website says:

“We work directly with artists that we represent and aim to have input and control over artistic endeavors. All profits are shared 50/50. We’re committed to using culture as a means of communication, helping our artists build careers, and listening to good music.”

Preview the trailer for 2016 German trailer about the label (which is available to watch at Amazon Prime):

In 2010, the label put out the terrific and fascinating Music From Saharan Cellphones compilation. The compilation’s Bandcamp page provides some context:

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“Music from Saharan cellphones is a compilation of music collected from memory cards of cellular phones in the Saharan desert.

In much of West Africa, cellphones are are used as all purpose multimedia devices. In lieu of personal computers and high speed internet, the knockoff cellphones house portable music collections, playback songs on tinny built in speakers, and swap files in a very literal peer to peer Bluetooth wireless transfer.”

The compilation not only helped highlight music from the region but was, for many, the first exposure to Tuareg guitar wizard Mdou Moctar, whose album Ilana (The Creator) was one of my favorites of 2019. Now, 10 years later, the label presents the follow-up to the ground-breaking compilation, Music from Saharan WhatsApp.

“For the year of 2020, Sahel Sounds presents "Music from Saharan WhatsApp." Every month, we'll be releasing an EP from a musical group in the Sahel. Every album will be recorded on a cellphone, and transmitted over WhatsApp, and uploaded to Bandcamp - where it will live for one month only. Available for pay as you want, 100% of the sales will go directly to the artist or group. After one month, the album will be replaced by another one, until the end of the year.”

The label profiles the first installment at the Bandcamp page:

“This month's release comes from Agadez guitar band, Etran de L'Aïr. Translated to "Star's of Agadez," Etran is one of the longest running wedding bands in a city renowned for guitar. Constantly playing in the outdoor weddings, both in the city and the surrounding countryside, Etran play exhaustive concerts, late into the night. Even for a guitar band, they push the instrument to the extreme, with three guitars playing simultaneously, soloing over one another, creating a dreamy cacophony of sound. This session was recorded at night in their home in Abala, just outside the center of Agadez. "We invited friends over to the home, for encouragement," says Moussa "Abindi" Ibra. "But we asked them not to make too much noise, for the sake of the recording."

Preview the first EP here:

Head over to the Bandcamp page to download the first installment and track future releases.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Facebook.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Twitter.

  • Follow Sahel Sounds at Youtube.

  • Support Sahel Sounds at Bandcamp.

  • Browse “Sahel Sounds” at Amazon.

Mahmoud Guinia محمود ﯕينيا // 'Star de la Chanson Gnaoua'

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While doing the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow for a year, I listened to A LOT of music. A small percentage of what I heard was pretty bad, but most of it was just forgettable. However, every once in a while, I came across an artist that stood out, that I not only remember, but continue to listen to now that the podcast is over (on indefinite hiatus?).

One of those artists was Mahmoud Guinia (also credited as Mahmoud Guinea, Khania, or Kania // listen to "Fofo Denba" by Mahmoud Kania credited to Mahmoud Kania on Episode 15 of The Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow).

According to the site ARAB TUNES الإيقاعات العربية (where you can also donwnload many Mahmoud releases, including the one featured here today):

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“Mahmoud Guinia (Arabic: محمود ﯕينيا‎, and rarely ﯕنيا or کانية also spelled Gania, Guinea or Khania; Born 1951), is a Moroccan Gnawa musician, singer and guembri player, who is traditionally regarded as a Maâllem (معلم محمود ﯕينيا), i.e. master.”

Wikipedia then tells us that:

“Gnawa music (Arabic. غْناوة or كْناوة) is a north african repertoire of ancient African spiritual religious songs and rhythms."

You might be familiar with the guembri since we have featured American bassist and guembri player Joshua Abrams (here and here and here).

I first came across this album (and then searched out all the Mahmoud music I could from there, which led me to the Arab Tunes post) at the fantastic Moroccan Tape Stash site from a post that immediately grabbed my attention with the title: “Most Psychedelic Gnawa Tape Ever.” That post tries to introduce us to what lie ahead by saying:

“one of the strangest Gnawa cassettes I've ever found. Picked this up around 2001 in Essaouira. Nothing about the j-card gives a clue about the psychedelic grooves contained within.

Sounds drop in and out: Indian tabla and bol drum syllables, jaw harp, darbuka, English recitation, guinbri, gong, digeridoo, and various other sounds. But the texture never seems cluttered - all sounds have plenty of space to breathe. I'd love to know more about this album and who collaborated on it! (Especially, who in the world is doing the English recitation!)

Mahmoud's singing is fantastic - relaxed, often in the lower register. Some of the tracks are built around songs from the Gnawa repertoire (tracks 1, 5 and 6), while others appear to be original to this project. The English recitations are riffs on the Arabic lyrics (or vice versa). And ever think you'd hear Mahmoud sing in fus7a (Standard Arabic)? Check track 8!

Despite the fact that the serial number on the cassette shell matches that of the j-card, none of the listed song titles have anything to do with the songs on the cassette.”

Track titles here are my own:

1) Jilali Bouâlem
2) Lâayoune Dahika
3) Jwedi ya Jwedi
4) Allah Yuhibb Alkurama
5) Fofo Denba
6) Berrma Nana Soutanbi
7) Alhubb Wahid Wa Eddunya Wahida
8) Africa Muwahhada
9) Alhaqiqa
10) Al Umm

If that doesn’t interest you, you might be at the wrong music blog. You can see a different tracklisting at the tape’s Discogs page. Discogs also shows the tape as being released in 1999, though my files say 2000.

Lyrics switch between Arabic and English. Mouth harp floats in and out of focus while ambient noises add texture to the driving percussion and the ever-present guembri, driving the music forward to nowhere in particular. But it’s not meandering music, the longest track is just over four minutes while most are in the three-minute range. Just when you think you’ve identified all the elements or locked in to the groove, it vaporizes itself, only to immerse you all over again.

Stream the album here or download as one file (see links below to download the tape as separated song files).

  • Listen to the track “"Fofo Denba" by Mahmoud Kania from the 2000 cassette Star de la Chanson Gnaoua featured on Episode 15 of the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow.

  • Download Mahmoud Guina albums for yourself and read more about him at ARAB TUNES الإيقاعات العربية.

  • Download the album at Moroccan Tape Stash and visit the post that first introduced me to this amazing album.

  • Download the album directly for yourself.


Tinariwen: 'We made a career out of roaming'

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One of my favorite albums of 2019 is Tinariwen’s Amadjar. You can read more about Turareg music, about the band and some of my thoughts on the album here.

In the meantime, watch this short documentary (20:53) the band put out to promote the album. It features behind-the-scenes footage, interview segments and live performances.

Alan Namoko and Chimvu Jazz

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Last year I did a weekly 30-minute music podcast dedicated to overcoming Xenophobia by exploring music from all over the world. I did 52 episodes and loved every minute of it.

One of the joys of doing something like the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow (find out more about the podcast here and/or stream/download every episode here) is discovering terrific music from all around the world. One of the downsides of doing something like the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow is not taking good notes which results in not remembering where you came across certain albums, especially in the digital age.

Allmusic says:

Here's a gem indeed -- an acoustic quartet: two singers, guitar/banjo, drums -- with music closer to the grass roots than anything since Africa Acoustic and From the Copperbelt. Namoko hews to a pure rural acoustic string sound: precious people music. The packaging of this privately issued CD is odd, but the sound is fine.

I don’t know where I got this album and informationa about Alan Namoko is sparse, even in this abundant internet age. I featured the title track "Ana Osiidwa (The Orphans)" from Namoko’s 1992 album on Episode 04 of The Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow and here’s what I wrote at the time:

Alan Namoko was a blind blues and jazz musician from Malawi. Namoko played the banjo and sang in the Lomwe, Chewa and Nyanja languages. Namoko became an influential figure in Malawi's music scene in the 1970s and 1980s and around the world with the Chimvu Jazz band and was even featured on several episodes of the John Peel show.

Namoko’s music is folk blues that transcends borders. The music is nostalgic and familiar (in the best way) despite the language barriers (at least for me). The album cover says that it was put out on Pamtondo Records, but the Pamtondo website doesn’t appear to be a record label or store of any kind. The page listing their titles says: “At first a small amount was put out on cassette and CD format for sale but now most remains as a collection for research purposes.”

According to Wikipedia, he put out 9 albums, but I haven’t had much luck tracking any of the others down. Maybe you can do better? In the meantime, stream or download the album here.

Tracklist:

  1. Achilekwa (Mr. Chilekwa)

  2. Gitala Kulira Ngati Chitsulo (Playing Guitar Like A Ringing Bell)

  3. A Namoko Akulira (Namoko Mourns)

  4. Kakhiwa Miyene (And When I Die)

  5. Lameki (Lameck)

  6. Ana Osiidwa (The Orphans)

  7. A Chilenga (Mr. Chilenga)

  8. Mwandilanga (You Have Punished Me)

  9. Mwalimba Mtima (You Can Be So Heartless)

  • No purchase or artist links available

  • Download the album as a zip file.

Hamza El Din With The Dead

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This post originally appeared at the now disappeared Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow website on June 26, 2018 and is now posted here for posterity and because who doesn’t need more Hamza El Din With The Dead in their lives, right?!


In September 1978, the Grateful Dead traveled to Egypt to play three shows at the base of the Great Pyramid of Giza, under the gaze of the Great Sphinx. 

The shows were the culmination of a band of seekers being drawn to places of power. In many ways, the shows were Phil Lesh's personal project. He says

"it sort of became my project because I was one of the first people in the band who was on the trip of playing at places of power. You know, power that's been preserved from the ancient world. The pyramids are like the obvious number one choice because no matter what anyone thinks they might be, there is definitely some kind of mojo about the pyramids."

The shows also lived out the ideal of international collaboration, The Dead were famous for having other people sit in, from jazz musicians like Ornette Coleman to Nubian Sudanese composer, oud player, tar player, and vocalist Hamza El Din (Listen to "Did Nura Remember (Gillina Nura)" by Hamza El Din. From the 1965 album Al Oud featured on Episode 02 of the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow).

El Din had already garnered international recognition by this time, having played the Newport Folk Festival in 1964 and we are happy to feature his 1965 track "Did Nura Remember (Gillina Nura)" on Episode 02 of our podcast

In October, El Din returned the favor and played with the Dead at Winterland:  "El Din opened the show solo, offering his divine percussion before the Grateful Dead slowly emerged to join him for an ecstatic rendition of “Ollin Arageed”, a number based off a Nubian wedding tune, before embarking on a soaring half-acoustic, half-electric jam."

Watch "Ollin Arageed - Egypt 9-16-78:

Listen to the Dead with Hamza El Din 10/21/78:

  • Visit Hamza El Din .com

  • Follow the Hamza El Din fan page at Facebook

  • Purchase Hamza El Din's music at Amazon

  • Visit the Grateful Dead’s official website

  • Purchase Grateful Dead music at Amazon

  • Listen to "Did Nura Remember (Gillina Nura)" by Hamza El Din. From the 1965 album Al Oud featured on Episode 02 of the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow.

Artist Spotlight: Letta Mbulu

This artist spotlight originally posted January 18, 2019 on the dearly missed Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow site.

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One of the joys of doing a project like the Global Elite Music Radio Podcast Supershow is discovering new artists we didn’t yet know we loved.

We featured Letta’ Mbulu’s track “Kukuchi” on Episode 32 of our very own podcast. We were so smitten with Mbulu’s music that we wanted to give you, the fine people of the Internet, more Mbulu. So we put together an hour-long mix of some of our current favorite tracks.

If you don’t yet know Mbulu, allow us to introduce you.

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Letta Mbulu (pronounced "let-ah" "em-boo-loo") was born in Soweto, South Africa in 1942 and remains a towering figure in South African music. Doug Payne says in his online biography of Mbulu:

Still in her teens, Letta began touring outside of Africa with the musical "King Kong," which ran for a year in England following a highly successful two-year run in South Africa. When the tour ended, she returned to South Africa but soon the policies of Apartheid were to force her to leave her native land for the U.S.A.

She arrived in the United States in 1965 and quickly befriended such fellow South African exiles in New York City as Miriam Makeba, Hugh Masekela and Jonas Gwangwa - all alumni of the "King Kong" musical. Performances at New York's famed Village Gate club began to attract attention to her talents, particularly from jazz legend Cannonball Adderley, who invited her to tour with him (which she did throughout the remainder of the decade). 

To put Mbulu’s career and influence into perspective, Strange Sounds From Beyond says:

the South African vocalist released her first LP in the same year The Beatles released The White Album. She is the towering figure of South African singing – the proud matriarch of a strange, soulful, synth-powered hybrid of US and South-African influences. Along with the 12 LPs carrying her own name, she’s worked with jazz saxophonist Cannonball Adderley, calypso icon Harry Belafonte, and even Michael Jackson on “Liberian Girl”.

According to South African History, Mbulu was also an accomplished actress who appeared “in the film Roots for which she received an Emmy award. Her other screen appearances include A Warm December with Sidney Pottier and The Colour Purple. She is also a founding member of the South African Artists United (SAAU) an organisation which was established in 1986.”

Allmusic quotes Quincy Jones as saying: "Mbulu is the roots lady, projecting a sophistication and warmth which stirs hope for attaining pure love, beauty, and unity in the world."

If you don’t know her yet, it is our pleasure to introduce you to the music of Letta Mbulu. If you already know her, please enjoy this mix and we’d love to hear your favorite tracks.


Tracklisting:

  1. Hareje *

  2. Kukuchi #

  3. Noma Themba *

  4. Jigijela (Don't Throw Stones) @

  5. Zimkile *

  6. I Need Your Love @

  7. Mamami #

  8. Aredze ^

  9. Afro Texas *

  10. Ade #

  11. Qonqoza (Knock) @

  12. Kube *

  13. Gumba-Gumba #

  14. Macongo @

  15. Olu Ati Ayo #

  16. Melodi (Sounds of Home) @

  17. Never Leave You *

Though there are many terrific albums by Letta Mbulu, for this mix, I focused on the following four albums (use the symbols to see which song is found on each album):

@ Letta (Chisa, 1970)

* Naturally (Fantasy, 1972)

^ I’ll Never Be The Same (1973)

# Letta Mbulu Sings/Free Soul (2005)