Rolling Global Outernational Non-West Non-English (Some Exceptions) 2018 Thread Once Known as World Music

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Amadou & Mariam and then Noura Mint Seymali are gonna be in the Washington DC area on successive nights in June. Fun live acts

curmudgeon, Thursday, 24 May 2018 15:53 (eight years ago)

UK electronic dance duo Disclosure have a new single "Ultimatum" that samples and credits Malian singer Fatoumata Diawara.

curmudgeon, Thursday, 24 May 2018 19:18 (eight years ago)

Fatoumata deserves the attention.

curmudgeon, Friday, 25 May 2018 14:46 (eight years ago)

Angélique Kidjo is releasing a full-album cover version of Remain In Light next month (She's been doing it live for a year now). Videos of some of the songs on the Talking heads classic or dud thread

curmudgeon, Monday, 28 May 2018 05:31 (eight years ago)

went to a party yesterday with an Angolan trio jamming out, great stuff - is Bonga a good point of entry to Angolan rock?

niels, Monday, 28 May 2018 06:14 (eight years ago)

Most of the Bonga stuff I have heard is more mellow like Brazilian samba.

curmudgeon, Monday, 28 May 2018 19:31 (eight years ago)

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_music_in_Angola

Also, Congo singer Sam Mangwana lived in Angola. He did some rocking groove filled efforts

curmudgeon, Monday, 28 May 2018 19:36 (eight years ago)

https://www.npr.org/2011/02/02/130076680/funk-before-war-in-angola

curmudgeon, Monday, 28 May 2018 19:38 (eight years ago)

thx!

niels, Tuesday, 29 May 2018 06:06 (eight years ago)

Malian singer Kassé-Mady Diabaté died last week:
https://face2faceafrica.com/article/mali-mourns-music-icon-kasse-mady-diabate-who-died-aged-69

breastcrawl, Tuesday, 29 May 2018 06:21 (eight years ago)

went to a party yesterday with an Angolan trio jamming out, great stuff - is Bonga a good point of entry to Angolan rock?

I've never really heard any Angolan artists described as Rock - keep in mind it was a Portuguese colony until '74 (the Portuguese regime being relatively hostile towards Anglo-American music; even in Portugal most of the pre-74 Rock bands were rich kids who could afford to fly off to London and buy records), and after that (which I guess would be prime Afro-Rock time in Nigeria and other places) the country was launched into a bloody, decades long civil war. I met a lot of Angolan musicians from that generation when I lived in Portugal and they certainly counted Rock bands amongst their influences, but the connection to Brazil was much stronger.

Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 29 May 2018 09:54 (eight years ago)

I could see classifying Waldemar Bastos as Rock, though more in a singer/songwriter vein than, like, Acid Rock.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=szTWcNFWX6s

Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 29 May 2018 09:55 (eight years ago)

New Yorkers should go see the great Mauritania singer Noura Mint Seymali and her band led by her husband guitarist who plays cool African psychedelic licks, for free at the Lincoln Center Atrium Thursday June 7. They’re in Washington DC the next night ( not free but not expensive)

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 29 May 2018 20:50 (eight years ago)

xp thanks for the info Daniel

quite digging that Bastos

niels, Wednesday, 30 May 2018 16:42 (eight years ago)

https://analogafrica.bandcamp.com/album/african-scream-contest-vol-2-benin-1963-1980

A Box of After Dinner Comics Shipped to Your House Each Month (seandalai), Friday, 1 June 2018 00:12 (eight years ago)

Volume 1 was good. Will check this one out.

So I was in Houston, Texas and at Afrikiko restaurant I saw a poster for Zaiko Langa Langa coming to Dallas and Houston in July. So apparently that legendary Congolese band is now back together. Not sure who's in the group at this point.

curmudgeon, Monday, 4 June 2018 17:48 (eight years ago)

had the great pleasure of seeing Hailu Mergia live this Sunday, a trio with an extremely solid rhythm section (bass player quite unbelievable really, played disco stuff, Sly Stone style, some very fast jazz things, 5 strings all used a lot) on top of which mr. Mergia did his unique thing on rhodes, digital Nord organ, melodica, accordeon

a very simple, driving soundstage, dancing music no doubt, it would be the ultimate wedding band

his style is so interesting, naive, unpredictable - who do you reckon his points of reference are? there's perhaps a bit of Monk, maybe Augustus Pablo?

niels, Tuesday, 5 June 2018 10:18 (eight years ago)

really want to get that Africa Scream Contest album

My name is the Pope and in the 90s I smoked a lot of dope (dog latin), Tuesday, 5 June 2018 10:28 (eight years ago)

The label does a nice job with liner notes and photos which makes me want to get a physical version of it, but I listened to it on Spotify tonight and it sounds great.

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 03:54 (eight years ago)

x-post -- seen some mentions of jazz organist Jimmy Smith re Hailu Mergia's style

curmudgeon, Thursday, 7 June 2018 14:57 (eight years ago)

nice, checking out some Jimmy Smith

niels, Friday, 8 June 2018 06:29 (seven years ago)

saw mdou moctar at an instore performance and really enjoyed it -- he really cranks the volume on those solos!
also i heard that at the official concert performance (which i did not attend) there was some egregious and awful dancing in the audience.

weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Friday, 8 June 2018 13:38 (seven years ago)

The Mdou show I saw was very loud.

egregious and awful dancing in the audience.

Ha. A number of west African acts I have seen invite folks onstage to dance-- that's where I dislike the awful dancers. Invariably, some goofy dancers insist on going onstage. Thankfully they are usually balanced out by the skilled dancers, able to shake their hips and do other movements in an impressive artistic fashion.

I saw Amadou & Mariam last night in a tables and chairs sit-down place, but they encouraged everyone to get up and dance at one point. I was near the stage. I hope no one thought my movements were egregious. It was a good show too btw. I like Amadou's guitar playing and Mariam's vocals. Plus their backing singer/dancer is good. I don't know the material from their most recent album but it sounded good, along side the older cuts I do know. Last time I saw them Amadou stretched out some guitar solos in a way that was not interesting, he was more concise last night.

curmudgeon, Friday, 8 June 2018 17:40 (seven years ago)

Saw a video of a Noura Mint Seymali and band song at Tropicalia in DC last night plus one from the night before at
Lincoln Center in NY. A powerful voice and her husband on guitar has such a cool sound. They’re from Mauritania

curmudgeon, Saturday, 9 June 2018 16:29 (seven years ago)

Love the two Noura Mint Seymali albums I own.

Daniel_Rf, Monday, 11 June 2018 09:22 (seven years ago)

saw Orlando Julius & the Heliocentrics live this Saturday

both crowd, venue and weather could have been better, but band was very groovy, and I enjoyed it

Orlando seemed quite tired, though, not strong in his solos, outshined by the young trumpeteer :/

niels, Monday, 11 June 2018 09:52 (seven years ago)

Listened to the Turkish Ladies comp out on Sony. Gorgeous packaging and the music fluctuates between traditional styles and a more Disco take. Would've liked more of a breakdown of the scene in the liner notes - genres are mentioned but not contextualized, singers brought up within the essay but not really given their own spotlight. Translated lyrics though, which is nice.

Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 13 June 2018 11:55 (seven years ago)

listening to 2017 from high-pitched, slightly nasal (but in a unique good way) singer Leila Gobi from Mali. Her uptempo rhythms from her band are impressive too

curmudgeon, Thursday, 14 June 2018 12:29 (seven years ago)

I like the Leila Gobi one a bit more than Bombino’s latest Deran. Deran is good too though. He’s got that North African desert guitarist style down.

curmudgeon, Friday, 15 June 2018 19:26 (seven years ago)

Back in the end of May, folks were writing about Angola here. Just remembered that writer Jonathan Bogart put a guide to Angolan pop circa 2016 on Medium & he has been tweeting occasionally YouTube videos of Angolan pop.

curmudgeon, Friday, 15 June 2018 21:07 (seven years ago)

https://www.voanews.com/a/leo-sarkisian-voa-music-time-in-africa-program-dies/4432645.html

Sarkisian who died at 97 led such a cool life. I saw him speak at the VOA in DC in 98. He traveled in the Middle East and then from the 1960s on to ? With his wife and his reel to reel tape recorder in a number of African countries. He hosted the VOA’s Music Time in Africa program that was very popular there. A nice guy who invited the audience at the talk I was at, to come back to his office and see some of the memorabilia he collected over the years.

curmudgeon, Saturday, 16 June 2018 13:45 (seven years ago)

He was an Armenian American who spoke multiple languages and was also a musician himself

curmudgeon, Saturday, 16 June 2018 13:46 (seven years ago)

Saw on twitter that some Sarkisian projects are now being digitized. He recorded Fela way back when, wonder if that’s available.

curmudgeon, Monday, 18 June 2018 13:35 (seven years ago)

Haitian band Tabou Combo are on a 50th anniversary tour. I like their older stuff that melded Afro-Caribbean rhythms with James Brown funk. Gradually they have followed Haitian trends and added more syrupy and schmaltzy keyboards, and modern r'n'b. But I haven't heard them in awhile. I want to check out some videos and such and see what the current version of the band is like (have a conflicting event and can't see them this Saturday in Maryland).

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 19 June 2018 18:39 (seven years ago)

young energetic Zimbabwe band Mokoomba are touring the US again. Great live, and pretty good on albums

curmudgeon, Friday, 22 June 2018 13:57 (seven years ago)

Gonna see Mokoomba again tonight in DC at a special 6 pm gig.

curmudgeon, Monday, 25 June 2018 13:13 (seven years ago)

Mokoomba were fun—great harmonies, grooves, dance steps and more.

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 16:54 (seven years ago)

The annual free Smithsonian Folklife Festival outdoors on the national mall in Washington DC is starting now, and they are featuring music and culture from Armenia and Catalan. Alas, I am not excited. Been never wowed by music from those locales. Maybe I will go and have my mind changed. Catalan fireworks tonight too.

curmudgeon, Thursday, 28 June 2018 12:43 (seven years ago)

Liking the latest Fatoumata Diawara album.

curmudgeon, Friday, 29 June 2018 18:18 (seven years ago)

Oh, turns out the Catalan fireworks were not last night. They're on Saturday. Saw a Catalan rap-rock ska bnd who had to play without their Algerian born bassist who could not get a visa. Also saw Armenian jazz and Catalan harmony folk. Just ok. All of it

curmudgeon, Friday, 29 June 2018 18:27 (seven years ago)

Still liking the Fatoumata Diawara album. Some nice poppy melodies

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 4 July 2018 18:09 (seven years ago)

From another obit of Leo Sarkisian (see up for earlier obit post by me). This one by record collector, compiler Ian Nagoski https://canaryrecords.tumblr.com/

[I]At night, he went out and listened to music and drank and blew his wages in jazz clubs in the Village listening to Artie Shaw, Lionel Hampton, and Vido Musso, Benny Goodman’s Italian tenor saxophonist. Leo had always been a clarinetist himself and played jazz. Then there were the “oriental” clubs up and down 8th Ave, where music in Turkish, Greek, and Armenian thrived among the immigrants - The Egyptian Gardens, The Brittania. The music there was close to the music from childhood in Lawrence, Massachusetts, where the older Armenian men played oud, violin, zurna, and dumbek and sang Ottoman folk songs in Turkish, listening to Marko Melkon and “Sugar Mary” Vartanian, and Louis Matalon, Sephardic Jew at whose side Leo often sat, watching him play the 72-string dulcimer, the kanun. That was when Leo wasn’t throwing money at the dancers or ordering another drink.
And it was like the fleeting, fun nights in Rabat and Casablanca when Leo had heard Arabs playing the same instruments with bellydancers. There was one night when he had been chased off by the French police because the music “stirred up the locals.” There was another when he had a moment of stardom because he, an American G.I., had gotten up and played oud and rocked the house. A bellydancer had wrapped her arms around him because played a song he knew from back in Lawrence.
The nightclubs in New York were for the weekends. Weeknights were all in the New York Public Library. Four nights a week, Leo read anything about music from Asia and Africa. There he saw patterns of expansion of instruments and ideas. The kanun and its scales travel from here to there. One instrument travels to another place. A local instrument replaces it, but the idea of how it’s played remains. There is a connection from the Ottoman Empire to the Arab world. Then, Africa to India and China… There is a deep musical connection among all of these people, including a boy from Lawrence, Massachusetts who feel compelled under the city’s lights to understand how his own feeling of music connects so many other people.
“I don’t know why,” he told me in 2014, when he was 94 years old. “I’m reading, reading all this stuff. There was something in me that I had that feeling that whoever wrote those books didn’t really have that feeling… Even if someone does get a degree in music and stuff like that, there’s something between – under – inside of you. They can’t get that.”

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 4 July 2018 18:31 (seven years ago)

He knew how to live. Sarkisian made it to 97

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 4 July 2018 19:11 (seven years ago)

Congo's Jupiter and Okwess have a new album Kin Sonic out, that Jon Pareles of the NY Times likes:

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/03/arts/music/jupiter-okwess-kin-sonic-review.html

curmudgeon, Thursday, 5 July 2018 20:28 (seven years ago)

I was just reading this New York Times story on Bombino:

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/17/arts/music/bombino-desert-blues-deran.html

and this line caught my eye:

"North African desert blues ... has become arguably the most successful world music genre to break through since reggae"

What do you think? Agree? Disagree? What other "world music" genres are in the conversation?

alpine static, Tuesday, 10 July 2018 00:36 (seven years ago)

Among 1) non-Latin musics, 2) in America 3) over the past decade, none.

Compared to Latin American genres, from Buena Vista Social Club type stuff to Ranchero, Tichumaren is pretty minor.

There was huge soukous and related post-rhumba afropop movement that penetrated further in the late 80s and early 90s than desert blues does now, especially in France. Every Kanda Bongo Man and Loketo album seemed to receive as much press in American sources as desert blues does now.

Roomba with an attitude (Sanpaku), Tuesday, 10 July 2018 00:53 (seven years ago)

Exhibit: [Soukous in Central Park](http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLWSoYkdo799OvI71oOIn_ELo11jEQDQiH) (NY), 1993.

Roomba with an attitude (Sanpaku), Tuesday, 10 July 2018 00:56 (seven years ago)

Agree with Sanpaku

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 10 July 2018 11:41 (seven years ago)

The new Jupiter & Okwess album sounds pretty good.

curmudgeon, Wednesday, 11 July 2018 13:01 (seven years ago)


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