Showing posts with label mixes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mixes. Show all posts

Tuesday, 23 February 2016

Big Big Business


Carnival is a big big bizniiiice, says Olatunji. Round these parts it’s a bizniiice that mixes electronic marimbas, twisted synth licks, basslines deep like the Mariana Trench, scattershot syncopated percussion and excess amounts of bump and clap. From the Caribbean to London to West Africa, this is Riddim Shack 4. Other mixes in the series are here, here and here.



Tracklist:

Jean-Marie Bolangassa - Rikikida
MC Boy - Shubbout
RDX - The Bruk Out Song
Point O - Dancing Time Again
Double K - Last Night
TOK - Doing It Big
Trey Pound - Ebe’ano
Ding Dong - Just Lowe Mi
Charly Black - Bubble Dung
QQ - Tip Pon Yuh Toe
Espoir 2000 - Abidjan Farot (RMX)
Leontre - Dancers Anthem
Aidonia - Clock
Mofe Boyo - Gba Brake
Jo Jo - Drum Roll
Kerrecia - Wuk Dah Wuk
Pamputtae - Pon Di Soca
Olatunji - Big Business
Team C2 - Go
Tiwa Savage - Kele Kele Love (Busy Twist RMX)
Atalaku 8 - Siwo VIP
EL - Obuu Mo
Andi-ites and Hiawondah - Herb Tea
Funkystepz - Warrior
Skinny Fabulous - Waist
South Rakkas Crew ft. Catnapp, Rage - Going To The Dancehall

(Thanks to: Hugo Mendez.)

Sunday, 31 August 2014

Rave o'clock in Dominica

“So the massive want it, and so the massive like it, and so the massive want it, siwo all night long.”

Unlike other Riddim Shack installments (here and here) which have travelled widely around the Caribbean and Africa, this one mostly keeps it locked on Dominica in the eastern Antilles. Bouyon developed in the 1980s and to the uninitiated can most readily be described as Dominica’s take on soca (although it actually evolved from various local sounds): clocking in at around 150 bpm, it is all about big hands-in-the-air choruses, sudden percussion breakdowns, synthesizers emulating accordions, steel band riffs and soaring vocal lines interspersed with cries and chants. An informative introduction is Garford Alexander’s 2014 film, This is Bouyon:



A short history and description can also be found in the Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World, Volume 9: Genres: Caribbean and Latin America, Bloomsbury 2014, pp.83-4.

This mix is just a bunch of bouyon tunes that I like playing, spiced with a few pieces from further afield: South Rakkas from Florida remixed by Toronto’s Marcus Visionary, Poirier from Montreal channelling Trinidad’s Kes the Band and a raw edit of a production from Paris-based Angolan singer Elizio. The previously unidentified track (#3) which comes off a CD I was given in Dominica with “Old Skool Bouyon” scribbled on it and no other info is actually from Antigua - thanks to @copasetiq for the info!

Riddim Shack 3 - Rave o'clock by Musik_Line on Mixcloud


Tracklist:

Swinging Stars - Blaze It Up
Skinny Banton & Klockerz - Tonight A Di Night (Fade 2’s Rub Me Down Edit)
Burning Flames - Tout Moun Dance
Ruff and Reddy Band - Difé
Royalty Band - Siwo
Nayee and Skinny - Signal
Lloyd D Energizer - In The Road
South Rakkas Crew - So It Go (Marcus Visionary Subsoca Remix)
Elizio - Sabi Di Mas (Fade 2’s Mas Ambiance Edit)
Kes The Band - Where Yuh From (Poirier’s Work That Riddim Remix)
Royalty Band - Let We Celebrate

(Thanks to: Hugo Mendez, Franklyn Lockhart, Poirier, @copasetiq.)

Wednesday, 10 April 2013

Riddim Click! 90s/00s dancehall versions


Dancehall is always reinventing itself but there’s something about the 90s era that continues to fascinate me. In the early 90s dancehall producers were suddenly doing something different – these riddims were coming out which were so raw, minimal, uncompromisingly electronic, but had so much swing, so much bump, they just shattered the mould that Sleng Teng had established and beamed down something from another dimension. Yonatan (my long time collaborator and Addis Ababa's party boss) and I wanted to showcase these riddims, just the B-sides with their insistent pulse of drum and bass, scattered and shuffling percussion, twisted synth lines and shards of vocals. The earliest piece on here is probably 1990 and the latest mid-2000s. There's no tracklist - most of them are just called Version …

Download here.


This mix is kindly hosted by the Sofrito crew - check out their site for loads of other mixes for your listening pleasure, party info, etc. Their next London party is on 18 May and ought not to be missed.

Saturday, 23 February 2013

Interzone Dub



Now available at digital stores - 13 raw sound system dubs and vocals, previously exclusive to New York's Black Redemption Sound System.

Get it here:

http://www.junodownload.com/products/fade-2-interzone-dub/2156839-02/

https://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/interzone-dub/id608882605

http://www.amazon.com/Interzone-Dub/dp/B00BLZL0RK


There's also a short promo mix that you can download for free over at soundcloud:



Full tracklist:

1. Atmospheric Duct
2. Atmospheric Dubbed
3. See Them Hide (ft. Meeky Melody)
4. See Them Dub
5. Zambesi (Part 1)
6. Zambesi (Part 2)
7. Confused Land (ft. Judah Eskender Tafari)
8. Confused Dub
9. Fire on the Bridge (ft. Jette)
10. Elements Riddim
11. Interzone (Part 1)
12. Interzone (Part 2)
13. So-Called Leaders (ft. Singing Cologne - Politricks Remix)

90 numbered pre-release CD copies were distributed also - check out:

Jah Waggy's
Reggaemusicstore
Blakamix
Tanty
Dub Vendor


Friday, 6 April 2012

FADE 2 presents RIDDIM SHACK



Riddim Shack brings together different styles of club and sound system music from Africa, the Caribbean and elsewhere. It's a party mix, starting at about 110 bpm and finishing off at almost 160, and it's done on Ableton Live. Some of the tunes are recent hits (such as Sarkodie's You Go Kill Me and the Stylo G relick of D'Banj's Oliver Twist), while others came out a few years ago now. It blends a bunch of different rhythms: Zouglou (originating from Abidjan in Côte d'Ivoire), Azonto (from Ghana), Bouyon (roughly speaking, Dominica's take on soca) alongside productions from London and Kingston JA, and of course Montreal's Poirier, whose digital carnival is represented here by tunes with Cape Town's EJ Von Lyrik and Panama's MC Zulu.



(Download here.)

Approximate tracklist:

Cecile - Step Aside
Arthur Mafokate - Oyi Oyi
Busy Signal - Jafrican Ting
Busy Signal - Bare Gal
Sarkodie ft. EL - You Go Kill Me
Aboutou Roots - La Blessure
Dolomite - African Oil
Poirier ft. Zulu - Gyal Secret Pictures
Fade 2 / Mas Ka Kle - Lese Yo Pale
Stylo G - More Ganja
KES the Band - Ah Ting
So Shifty ft. Natalie Storm and Ward 21 - Clap
Pacific - Sounkraya
Richie D - What's Going On
Petit Denis - Securite
Soum Bill - Gneze
Ruff and Reddy - Mize Re Re
First Serenade - Tough
Poirier ft. EJ Von Lyrik- Bring It On

At some point I might try to develop this into a longer write-up. That's not going to happen right now, so in the meantime curious readers can take a look at this interview with Sarkodie from a couple of months back and (for francophones) a long article by Yacouba Konaté from Cahiers d'études africaines on Zouglou.

Thanks to those who were instrumental in helping me pick up some of this stuff: Gabriel Heatwave, Leo Zhao, Hugo Mendez, Franklyn Lockhart. Big up.

Saturday, 8 January 2011

Mixes Part 1: Dub

In 2010 I did less writing about music and more DJing. A few highlights:

Dub and dubstep at Wax Treatment, Berlin;
Paw Paw Jam African sessions in the New Empowering Church, Hackney;
Soca, bashment and UK funky in the DH Gedda Tower, Addis Ababa;
The Sofrito posse New Year zouk and soukous mashup in Dalston's Bar 23.

Thanks to all those who showed up and got down at these and other parties ... and thanks also to Mystic Sound for hosting my impromptu appearance on NYC's East Village Radio a few weeks back!

At this juncture I thought it would be a good idea to collect together some of my mixes and session recordings which have been floating around for the last few years. Some of these were previously on www.ialityhifi.co.uk, but this seems to have fallen into the dark web following some kind of accounting oversight. Others have been hosted by various people in various places. I'll be adding to this over time, so keep an eye on it if you like that kind of stuff.

The first group is a dub selection: vintage 70s pieces, 80s and 90s digi, 21st-century UK dub, dubstep and other dub-influenced material. The earliest of these is from 2004. This is the first "Hasan Sabah..." mix, which was an attempt to do a continuous mix (rather than just a comp) of (mainly) versions of JA digital roots tunes. Actually the mixing leaves something to be desired but it was a blueprint of future attempts so there it is, along with the sequel I recorded some years later.

Meanwhile, around 2007, I started an exploration into the territory of dubstep, UK steppas and other modern dub-influenced material, beginning with "N15DUBZ" and leading through a series of "Dub Journeys" mixes, three of which are included below.

"Repatriation Soon", on the other hand, goes back and digs into the deeper strata of 1970s roots and culture.

There are also a couple of live sets, unreleased bits and pieces and so forth. More is to come.


Hasan Sabah Captures the Towers of Dub: digital roots and dub, recorded Aug. 2004. Download here.



Hassan Sabah Commits Murder in the Dancehall: 80s and 90s JA digital roots. A sequel to the above. Download here.



N15DUBZ: dubstep and UK dub from the vaults, recorded 2007. Download here.



Higher Heights: digital dub and dubstep, recorded in Berlin in Jan. 2009. Download here.



Xberg Flex: digital dub and dubstep, originally recorded for a Wax Treatment podcast in Feb. 2010.



Live at Wax Treatment, 25 July 2010: unreleased pieces, extract from live set.



Dubplate Selection 1: unreleased pieces featuring Judah Eskender Tafari, Turbulence, Scepta. Recorded 2008-10.



Live at Wax Treatment, 28 Feb. 2010: roots session featuring Tikiman, Rick Wayne and friends.



Repatriation Soon: deep vintage roots and dub, originally recorded for Natural Self in October 2010. You can download it there.

Thursday, 7 January 2010

Tambou!

In the absence of various articles and interviews that are still in preparation, here’s a short mix, concentrating on music from Martinique and Guadeloupe, with a few things from other places thrown in. There’s already been some mention of the Antilles round these parts: the music featured here is later than the pieces on the Tumbélé comp, and generally more percussive. Much of it is based around, or influenced by, the rhythms of gwo ka and chouval bwa. For instant education on the history and meaning of gwo ka, turn to Duke Etienne’s article in the current issue of Shook Magazine (Vol. 1, No. 7) or check out the online companion piece here. The following notes are just a brief introduction to the mix, which at some point I hope to expand.

My first meeting with Antillean music was a chance encounter with a Gratien Midonet record, his extraordinary Ven en lévé, the LP from which the track ‘Mari Rhont...’ is taken. Midonet is usually described as a poet, composer and singer. I know of four albums by him: Ven en lévé (1979), Bourg la folie (1984), Linité (undated) and Potlach (2003). Bourg la folie is apparently the music from a film of the same name, based on a novel by Roland Brival.



Midonet’s music is a fusion. Some of the other tracks in this mix are far more stripped down, especially those by Esnard Boisdur, Eugene Mona and the Akiyo ensemble. Mona, singer and flute player, died in 1991 and was commemorated in 2006 by a tribute album entitled Léritaj Mona. Dédé Saint-Prix, also a flute player, can be heard here veering towards a sort of raw zouk.

These rhythms go back to Africa. Without trying to draw any specific parallels, here are also three tracks from, or derived from, Nigeria, to counterpoint the Caribbean pieces. Agbe De O, by the Sound Millionaires, is a bit of juju-influenced funk, or funk-influenced juju, depending on how you look at it. Jeka Jose is by the percussionist Gaspar Lawal, who was active as a session musician in London in the 1960s and 70s. Shacalao, meanwhile, is a storming version of Fela Kuti’s Shakara, rerouted via Colombia.

At some point I hope to expand this sketch with a more considered account of these tracks and their context. But in the meantime, here’s the music. Tambou means drums: read about them here.



Esnard Boisdur : En Moué O
Gaspar Lawal : Jeka Jose
Sound Millionaires : Agbe De O
Gratien Midonet : Mari Rhont Ouve La Pot
Fabriano Fuzion : Sé Kon Sa
Akiyo : Akiyo La O La Kale Kon Sa
Dédé Saint-Prix : Soldat Papillon
Lizandro Meza Y Su Conjunto : Shacalao
Eugene Mona : Guerie Guerriez
Fabriano Fuzion : Kaladja Vivilo 1
Gratien Midonet : Kannaval Sakré Pou Tout’ Z’Heb’ Poussé

Download here...

(Thanks to Frank and Paulo.)

Tuesday, 15 September 2009

African Dancehall and Hip Hop Minimix



Keep warm in the approaching winter, cure colds, flu, toothache etc., with this bumping and grinding 30-minute minimix of African hip hop and dancehall. It features Nouakchott's 994 Crew (whom I've previously written about here), Pee Froiss (Senegal), African China (Nigeria), Pupa Bajah da Lyrical Bomber (Sierra Leone), Smod and the Zotto Boyz (both from Mali). The tracks are taken from a miscellaneous bunch of CDs and tapes, mostly purchased in Bamako, Nouakchott or in the African Union Headquarters in Neukölln, Berlin. Apart from the sites linked here, those interested should also check out futureafreeka and africanhiphop. Two small nuggets of information: Smod's next album is apparently being produced by Manu Chao. And I'm pleased to note that 'Our Government Bad' references my favourite Fela tune, Shuffering and Shmiling: '49 sitting 99 standing...'



994 Crew feat. Pee Froiss : Diogg Jengou [Art de la RIM]
Pee Froiss : Million [Konkerants]
African China : Men Wey Sabi [Crisis]
African China : Our Government Bad [Crisis]
Pupa Bajah : Raw War [Half Man Half Amazing]
Pee Froiss : High [Konkerants]
Smod : Racisme [Dunia Kuntala]
Zotto Boyz : I Sigi [Keledabila]

(Thanks to Amadou, Xuman, Robin Bah.)

Saturday, 11 April 2009

Rih: Folk and Blues from Morocco

This mix blends pieces from the great bands of the 1970s Moroccan new wave - Nass el Ghiwane, Jil Jilala and Lemchaheb - with folk music, spiritual music (from the Joujouka and Aissaoua confraternities) and a couple of examples of collaborations between Moroccan and non-Moroccan musicians. It's called Rih, signifying 'wind' and also 'tune', and features percussion instruments (t'bel, bendir, qarqaba), stringed instruments (banjo, hajhouj), flutes and voices. It was mixed with Ableton Live: some of the pieces run more or less complete, others are broken up into loops or fragments.



00.00 Section from Lemchaheb, El Jounoud (Hassania, EH3410)
02.46 Loop cut up from 'Etude rhythmique de mode traditionnel lent (2 gros bendirs)', from Anthologie de la musique populaire marocaine vol. II. Marrakech et le pays des Kasbahs (BAM, LD 5835)
04:20 Tanja l-alia, from Moroccan Folk Music (Lyrichord, LLST 7229)
10:24 Loop from 'Etude instrumentale avec accelèration rhythmique T'Bol et crotales de fer', from Marrakech et le pays des Kasbahs, as above
10:58 Arouech (first of 6 pieces), from Marrakech: Musique populaire de la place Djemaa el Fna (BAM, LD5811)
11:52 Jil Jilala, Lahkaya (Disques Esperance, ESP 1706)
15:32 Loop from Arraks teht a 'l Kamar, from Bachir Attar with Elliott Sharp in New York (Enemy, EFA 03514)
16:32 Rih ash-Sheikh al-Kamal, from Moroccan Sufi Mystics (Lyrichord, LLST 7238)
17:22 Jil Jilala, Naditak Falghonna (Disques Esperance, ESP 1706)
23:14 Reprise of Rih ash-Sheikh al-Kamal, as above
23:47 Abdelhamid Boujendar, Myriem (Disques Esperance, ESP 9304)
25:51 Kwaku Baah and Ganoua, Rif Zef Zef (Island, ILPS 9491)
30:00 Spoken intro, looped and overlaid, to Jil Jilala, Mazzine Ossolak (Disques Esperance, ESP 1706)
30:42 Nass el Ghiwane, Mahmouna (Azwaw, AZW 140)
39:18 Extract from Brian Jones presents the Pipes of Pan at Joujouka (COC 49100)
39.18 Reprise of 'Etude instrumentale avec accelèration rhythmique', as above


A few notes. Some of these pieces are essentially field recordings. The Arouech, a piece of Berber festival music, was recorded by Francois Jouffa in the early 1970s. The pieces on Marrakech et le pays des Kasbahs were recorded by Jean Mazel. The LPs on Lyrichord (Moroccan Folk Music and Moroccan Sufi Mystics) were recorded by Philip Schuyler. Tanja l-alia is an example of 'Jiblia' music from the Rif mountains in northern Morocco. Schuyler notes:
Jiblia songs are generally short (5 or 10 minutes), but under conditions of excitement songs may be strung together. A Jiblia song cycle may commence with an introductory instrumental in free rhythm by each member of the band. They then go into the first song, usually in a slow, dragging rhythm; the pace picks up; a bridge increases the tempo and leads into the next song, more spirited still; one, two or more songs may follow after succeeding bridges, after which the piece closes with a long instrumental. During this l-'ail ("the boy") gets up to dance, dressed as a woman. He is a standard feature of most Jiblia bands; an added touch is dancing with a tea tray with pot and glasses on his head.
Rih ash-Sheikh al-Kamal ('Wind/Tune of the Perfect Leader') is dedicated to Sidi Mohammed ben Aissa (1465-1524 AD), the patron saint of the Aissaoua brotherhood. From Schuyler again:
Every devotee has a certain tune which can drive him into a trance almost automatically, and another which can bring him back to consciousness as soon as he has satisfied himself dancing. And each brotherhood has certain acts the members perform when they are in a trance. The Aissaoua may drink boiling water, eat cactus or pass torches over their bodies. This rih comes from around the Meknes area. Pure and unadorned it is played in the second or third part of a hadra [meeting] when the musicians are trying to calm down the adepts and work some of them out of their trances.

The lute virtuoso Abdelhamid Boujendar (b. 1941) studied in Rabat and Versailles and at the time of this recording (1978) was Professor at the National Conservatory in Rabat. The lyrics are by the poet and songwriter Driss Alaoui (b. 1946). The LP from which the song is taken brings together the Franco-Arab work of Boujendar and Alaoui with interpretations of Moroccan popular songs by the group Nahawand (also from Rabat).

Nass el Ghiwane, Jil Jilala and Lemchaheb were themselves influenced by the Moroccan spiritual confraternities such as the gnawa and the Aissaoua, but mixed these traditional musical forms with more contemporary lyrics and instrumentation. There are also a couple of examples of collaborations between Moroccan and non-Moroccan musicians. The “gnawa-style” work of percussionist Reebop Kwaku Baah (in collaboration with Abdellcada Zef Zef and Mohamed ben Hamou Saidi) is an unusual 1976 release from Island records. An excellent account of it can be found here. There is also a short loop drawn from the American composer Elliott Sharp’s 1994 collaboration with the Bachir Attar, from the Master Musicians of Joujouka, who themselves had been introduced to non-Moroccan audiences by Brian Jones in 1971.