The Éthiopiques series is not only the most thorough and informative source of Ethiopian music available, but it is one of the most spectacular bodies of recordings in the annals of African pop. Volume 19 of an expected 30 volumes returns to a central figure in the development of Ethiopian groove, the fabulous crooner Mahmoud Ahmed. A natural singer, Ahmed left school to become a shoe-shine boy in Addis in the early 60s. He was discovered while working as a handy man at a bar. One night the singer couldn't make the gig and he stepped up to the mic to sing brilliant covers of the day's popular hits. Adapted into the Imperial Body Guard Band, he made his first single in 1971, and recorded heavily during the next four years, until the rise of the Derg dictatorship put an end to Amha records and drove Ahmed into the seclusion of exclusive, luxury hotels, the only venues for live pop music during the 18 long years of the Derg.
Ahmed put
Sophisticated jazz overtones color the mellow ballad "Wègènié," an adaptation of a traditional lament about poverty. Many of these songs roll with the distinctive 12/8 feel of Ethiopian pop, a seductive hybrid of rock n roll 4/4 and traditional triplet rhythms. Ahmed's voice is unique for its zeal, passion, and clear-eyed melancholy and we get the full range of its cool despair and full-throated heart cry over the course of this varied set. On the near-ominous ballad "Gubelyé," Ahmed plumbs the depths of melancholy. The set concludes with an extended, 12-minute version of"Tezeta," the quintessential expression of emptiness and gloom, covered obsessively by Ethiopian musicians to this day.
Overall, the tunes here may not be quite as compelling as those found on Volumes 6 and 7, so if you are new to Ahmed, best to start there. Old hands, on the other hand, will find this set a must. And there's more to come. Éthiopiques will eventually cover nearly all of Ahmed's extraordinary output during these crucial years.