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KG Omulo:
Ayah Ye!: Moving Train
A synergy of funk, rock, reggae and traditional African sounds from this inventive, young singer/songwriter.
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Mamadou Diabaté:
Courage
Mamadou Diabate, the kora master, takes a fresh look at Mali instrumental music with his new CD Courage.
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Various Artists:
The Kankobela of the Batonga, Vol. 2
Mysterious melodies from a disappearing thumb piano tradition of Southern Africa.
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Kiran Ahluwalia:
Aam Zameen: Common Ground
Indo-Canadian Songwriter Combines Folk Poetry with African Rock, Jazz and more
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Sona Jobarteh:
FASIYA
West African female kora virtuoso releases an album full of grace, warmth, and passion.
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Sia Tolno:
My Life
Kissi singer releases a strong second album full of pop-infused star power over songs of strife and triumph.
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Zieti:
Zemelewa
Eclectic blend of Afro-infused pop out of Cote d'Ivoire.
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Guelewar:
Halleli N Dakarou
Re-released and remastered live CD from this 80's experimental Senegambian outfit.
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Tinariwen:
Tassili
Touareg desert legends return with an offering that is meandering, sorrowful and proud.
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Los Rakas:
Chancletas y Camisetas Bordada
Oakland/Panamanian rappers -call it "Panabay"-- return with good results.
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Cheikh Lo:
Jamm
The unique Senegalese singer and multi-instrumentalist crafts an eclectically excellent record.
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David Rudder:
Random Notes
Calypsonian David Rudder returns with an album that covers various styles with excellent results.
All Reviews >>
FrancoTPOK Jazz
Rough Guide to Franco
World Music Network, 2001
Until now, it has not been possible to listen to any single CD and get a fair overall impression of Franco, undoubtedly one of--if not the--greatest African band leaders of the 20th century. When the upstart session guitarist launched his band, OK Jazz, in Kinshasa (Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of Congo) in 1956, it was a small guitar-based combo playing Cuban derived son and rumba with a central African twist. When Franco died in 1989, TPOK Jazz, as it was then known, had become an on-stage army, with as many as five guitars, and seeming legions of horns, singers, dancers and percussionists. By then, Franco's songs were more like plays, dramatizing social issues and shifting musical moods, all intensely orchestrated by the master. These 12 tracks, compiled and--for once on a Franco CD--explained by Franco biographer Graeme Ewans amount to a crash course on one of the most classy band catalogues in all of pop music.
It's all here, from the saucy twang on Franco's scarcely electrified guitar on the 1956 "Merengue" to the gorgeous melancholy of male vocal harmonies and nimble double-stop guitar picking on the 1971 "Infidelite Mado," to the full-force band assault of Franco's immortal 1985 rant against an indolent gigolo, "Mario." Ewans' notes identify players, give dates, and explain lyrics, as well as social and historical contexts that make the experience of great music that much richer. Even if you own many of these songs on any of the numberless, sleeve-note-free Sonodisc releases that appeared during the 1990s, this collection is worth it for the notes alone. The set ends with what Ewans' calls "Franco's last great song," "Attention na Sida" ("Beware of AIDS"), recorded in Brussels in 1987. Given that Franco would die in that city, likely from that disease, two years later, the song takes on a certain poignancy. But the main feeling this compilation leaves you with is gratefulness for 35 years of utterly brilliant music.
Contributed by
Banning Eyre for www.afropop.org