viernes, 26 de marzo de 2021

Africa The Women's Voice (2005)



This generously apportioned (67-minute) survey of contemporary woman-sung African music is taken from recordings spanning the early 1990s to the early years of the 21st century. (Although the date on one track, Miriam Makeba's "Pata Pata," is not given, it's certainly not her original recording of that song.) Africa: The Women's Voice is wide-ranging both stylistically and geographically, taking in performers from South Africa, Zimbabwe, Mali, Mauritania, Ethiopia, Cameroon, Cape Verde, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. A few of the singers -- Makeba, Aster Aweke, Oumou Sangare, and Sally Nyolo of Zap Mama -- are among the more famous female African performers, though the majority of them likely won't be too familiar outside of specialized world music circles. Frankly, some of the stuff here doesn't have the spark of African music at its best, favoring the easy-going dance groove common to much of the genre, but there is variety. From South Africa, there's the choral call-and-response vocals of Women of Mambazo, formed by Nellie Shabalala and her husband Joseph Shabalala, the latter would find international fame as part of Ladysmith Black Mambazo. Sangare's dynamic "Kun Fe Ko" has mesmerizing interactions between back-and-forth vocal lines and sparse, traditional instrumentation. Rokia Traore's "Bowmboi" is an unusual collaboration with the American ensemble the Kronos Quartet; Nyolo's "Bebele" strips down the call-and-response structure of much African music to its spare essence, with only swinging light percussion and bass tones as accompaniment, and Tété Alhinho's "Scutam Ess Morna" is a longing ballad not far in feel from the Portuguese fado form.





01. Women Of Mambazoo - Mamizolo (South Africa) (3:26)
02. Miriam Makeba - Pata Pata (South Africa) (2:56)
03. Busi Mhlongo & Twasa - Izinziswa (South Africa) (7:45)
04. Dorothy Masuka - Teya Teya (Zimbabwe) (5:38)
05. Oumou Sangare - Kun Fe Ko (Mali) (4:04)
06. Kandia Kouyate - Sanougnaoule (Mali) (4:00)
07. Rokia Traore - Bowmboi (Mali) (5:54)
08. Malouma - Jraad (Mauritania) (4:43)
09. Abyssinia Infinite featuring Ejigayehu "Gigi" Shibabaw - Gedawo (Ethiopia) (4:43)
10. Aster Aweke - Bati (Ethiopia) (7:06)
11. Sally Nyolo - Bebele (Cameroon) (2:18)
12. Tshala Muana - Tshikunda (Dem. Rep. of Congo) (5:03)
13. Mbilia Bel - Belissimo (Dem. Rep. of Congo) (6:49)
14. Tété Alhinho - Scutam Ess Morna (Cape Verde) (3:17)





Related Posts:

  • Abdul Tee-Jay - Rokoto Make Me Dance-dance Abdul Tee-Jay es oriundo de Sierra Leona, aunque sus padres y, por lo tanto, su nombre completo, Tejan-Jalloh, provienen de Guinea. A una edad muy temprana, algo en secreto, Abdul aprendió a tocar la guitarra. En ese momen… Read More
  • Youssou N'Dour - MBALAX El cantante senegalés Youssou N'Dour ya era un innovador ampliamente celebrado en su país de origen cuando el público mundial escuchó por primera vez su voz altísima de varias octavas en el éxito de 1986 de Peter Gabrie… Read More
  • Ali Farka Toure [1979-2009] Ali Ibrahim "Farka" Touré (Kanau, Tombuctú, Malí, 31 de octubre de 1939-Bamako, 7 de marzo de 2006) fue un conocido guitarrista y cantante maliense, cuyo estilo aunaba la música tradicional de Malí con el blues. Ali Farka … Read More
  • Angelique Kidjo (1989-2019) Desde los seis años, Kidjo formó parte del grupo de teatro de su madre, acercamiento que le permitió gozar de una precoz apreciación de la música y la danza. Se inició como cantante de apoyo en bandas locales antes crear s… Read More
  • Eboa Moukouri & His Super Dada Orchestra - Billy Records Eboa Moukouri & His Super Dada Orchestra. An outfit with the unlikely name of Billy Records re-released quite a few of his records as downloads last year, but have not provided any information about the Great Man. 1.B… Read More

3 comentarios: