Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Bembeya Jazz National - Authenticite 73: Parade Africaine (1973)

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After Guinea won independence in 1958, President Sekou Toure launched a cultural revolution he called Authenticite, which after more than 70 years of colonial rule and suppression of all things African, aimed to promote and celebrate authentic African culture. A primary area of focus was the arts, particularly music. Bands like Bembeya Jazz and Balla et Ses Balladins were subsidized by the government and Guinea saw an unparalleled flowering of creativity. Music and art festivals abounded...concerts--the nation was for the first time filled with hope and possibility.

The Authenticite movement began to fade along with Sekou Toure's descent into paranoia as his regime became increasingly violent and oppressive. But the music created in Guinea from the mid '60s to the late '70s is some of the greatest, most groundbreaking ever made. Most was recorded at the famed Syliphone recording studios. The songs recorded there have an entirely unique sound, an echoey, haunting down-the-hallway type feel. Gorgeous horns, floating electric guitars and ridiculously complex drum patterns weave sounds in and out of your head. Bembeye Jazz's N'Gnamakoro with "Diamond Finger" Diabate's magical guitar nicely demonstrates this feel:






AUTHENTICITE



















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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Alhaji K. Frimpong - Kyenkyen Bi Adi Mawu (197x)

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This appears to be a collection of Frimpong's work as recordings are clearly from different periods over the 1970s and probably early '80s. The title track is a mind blowing tour de force (sampled below) and was a huge hit in Ghana and West Africa in the 1970s. The haunting organ and unusual, infectious drum patterns will destroy your soul (apparently the drummer is a legend by the name of Kwaku Kung Fu). It's a timeless, indestructible piece of music. Frimpong's "Hwehe Mu" receives attention on the spectacular Ghana Soundz collection, where I and probably many others were first introduced to him.





K. Frimpong was a Ghanian Highlife musician who occasionally crossed over into Afrobeat and Afro-Cuban territory. The album--and this one is obviously from a cassette tape--has got to be one of the worst all-time in cover art. Hopefully one day when this record gets a proper release in tune with the times and funkiness of the music, it'll get a fitting jacket like the one below to a totally separate album. One day I might share it, but for now I offer it as something more representative of the spirit of the tunes.



Link removed
































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Monday, January 2, 2012

THONY SHORBY NWENYI - SWEET FUNK MUSIC (1978)

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I'll kick off Afro Session, which will feature my favorite Afrobeat-funk-soul-cuban albums, with this truly obscure gem of deep Afro-Funk. A quick search on the internet reveals a few hits featuring track lists, etc, but there is no detailed information at all on this album anywhere as far as I can tell. Making it even more mysterious is that I cannot even remember how this holy grail of funk albums found its way into my collection.

What I do know is that Thony Shorby Nwenyi was a Nigerian with a penchant for out-of-this-world groove driven wah-wah guitar and elongated funk jams. Unfortunately, it seems for the time being that all we have of Nwenyi is this vinyl rip, though some collectors out there may be lucky enough to be in possession of the original vinyl. Collectors of African music of a similar era and older will often run up against this kind of scenario in which we know almost nothing about the musician or the music's origin. Some find it frustrating; others, like myself, think it adds to the mystery and charm. One could feel they're in possession of something truly rare.

While I cannot speak highly enough of the quality of the album through and through, there are two absolute floor shaking tracks here that I routinely select in my own DJ sets. Here's one to get you moving...



This album needs to see the light of day. I hope this post will aid in helping point things in a direction that ultimately gets this album and Thony Shorby the notoriety it and he deserves. Somebody somewhere surely must know something more, if not Thony Shorby himself. Download, share, turn your friends on...


THONY SHORBY NWENYI - SWEET FUNK MUSIC




















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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

BOSS POLIZIO: THEMES FROM '70S ITALIAN COP THRILLERS




Most Poliziotteschi compilations aim for more uptempo, rock and psychedelic oriented tracks to showcase the best of the genre. So I wanted to put together a mix that brings in the groovier, mid-tempo side of Polizio soundtracks. By no means do I neglect some heavier ones. It wouldn't be Polizio without them.






BOSS POLIZIO


















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Friday, December 23, 2011

Nico Fidenco - Emanuelle Goes East (Black Emanuelle in Bangkok) (1976)

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Nico Fidenco's Emanuelle Goes East was one of the seminal albums that set me on the Italian Groove odyssey. The film which stars Laura Gemser is the best and probably the most depraved of all the volumes of the Emanuelle series.

The soundtrack isn't as groove-driven as most of the stuff I've posted recently. On this effort Fidenco relies heavily on layered strings, horns, flutes, violins and an array of exotic instruments and aims for eclecticism in playing with the versions on the main theme. Tracks are variously named "Arabian Evasion Theme", "Thailand Sweet Sound" (though not sounding particularly Thai), "Belle's Orient Dance", "Sweet Bossa"...

"Sweet Variations" is probably my favorite track on this one. Rising and falling, lush strings are juxtaposed with the plucking of a banjo. Muted drums and electric guitars--an unusual mix... (takes a bit to load...)
















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Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Edda Dell'Orso - Mondo Dell'Orso Vol. 5 - La Voce del Cinema Italiano (197x)



Edda Dell'Orso worked with virtually every great Italian film composer. It is her sweeping, breathless, typically wordless vocals that appear all over Italian films of the '60s and '70s. Even if you're not aware of it, you've surely heard her somewhere, most likely on any number of Ennio Morricone scored films like Once Upon a Time in the West or The Good, the Bad & the Ugly.  

This album is part of a five volume set. If you dig it, go buy the others...

Sample:



MONDO DELL'ORSO VOL. 5














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Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Christmas Music That Doesn't Suck


WE INTERRUPT REGULARLY SCHEDULED PROGRAMMING FOR THIS VERY IMPORTANT MESSAGE...



I'm not a Christmas hater, but let's be honest, the great majority of Christmas music is annoying garbage. I dread the arrival of December when shops, adverts, etc, begin the Christmas music assault. The problem is not that we hear Christmas music everywhere; the problem is that we hear VERY BAD Christmas music everywhere. 

A special treat that we hope meets your approval...



Christmas Music That Doesn't Suck says all that needs to be said. Now download it and funk up your holidays.





CHRISTMAS MUSIC THAT DOESN'T SUCK

Friday, December 9, 2011

Piero Umiliani - La Ragazza Dalla Pelle Di Luna (1970)


Piero Umiliani's La Ragazza Dalla Pelle Di Luna aka The Woman With the Skin of the Moon is propelled by a wicked title track and its shockingly delightful versions. This piano solo kickstarts the soundtrack nicely...




Umiliani is one of the great masters of the Italian Groove. I've found his later experimental phase a bit hard to penetrate, but his work is never bland or boring. We get a taste of some of his more daring stuff here (Il Santone Del'Isola, Danza Della Luna), but by and large, this is romance music, a score with more meditative little treasures that reveal themselves with every listen.

The music here is so fuggin' good it deserves a second sample, the beautiful "Funerailles d'un Heros".





LA RAGAZZA DALLA PELLE DI LUNA 

















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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Guido & Maurizio de Angelis - Roma Violenta (1975)


Roma Violenta is one of more than 10 soundtracks scored by the legendarily prolific de Angelis brothers in 1975 alone. To my ear, the brothers de Angelis have one of the most recognizable sounds in all of Italian Cinemusic. 

This soundtrack is complete with the typical variations on the main theme we come to expect with Italian soundtracks: altered tempo, addition and subtraction of instruments from track to track, etc. Roma Violenta in particular forays into bossa nova and blues territory on certain efforts, and the tandem are particularly deadly when they bust out the electric guitars. 

The seven versions of "The Other Face" & "The Punitive Justice" are my particular favorites. Sample one here...





Then get the whole thing:












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Friday, December 2, 2011

Franco Micalizzi - Laure (1976)


More Franco Micalizzi. I've never seen a majority of the films to the soundtracks I put up here. But I have seen Laure which is part of the Emanuelle series, the most famous of which star Laura Gemser (not the lady on the cover, but on the cover of the mix below this post).

Laure is a terribly cheesy softcore movie worth watching primarily for Micalizzi's groovy soundtrack. Start off with this bass and organ driven downtempo exotica-leaning track.





Then enjoy the whole damn thing here:












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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Erotic Italia: The Insatiable Sounds of '70s Italian Cinema Vol. 2



More homespun Italian groove straight from the library of yours truly. Volume 2 is as groovy as the first. If you didn't grab that one, do so here. That's the incredibly hot Indonesian-blooded Laura Gemser on the cover looking her best (hope my blog doesn't get an X-Rating for showing some muff). Don't be shy about playing and replaying these awesome tunes; I haven't stopped listening to volume one since I posted it last month.

A pretty even selection of artists here. I had to find a way to get Nico Fidenco more involved in these mixes so there are three killer tracks of his including the opener, one of the coolest ever to start a mix (teased below in the sample). Listen to it and tell me that is not the way to kick off an awesome mix! Listeners of volume one may find the second volume a touch more mellow. Indeed, this blogger has located calmer spirits the last few weeks...

The teaser...



..and the whole shebang...

EROTIC ITALIA VOL. II

















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Friday, November 18, 2011

Armando Trovaioli - Una Magnum Special Per Tony Saitta aka Blazing Magnum (1976)


Without a doubt one of the best Poliziotteschi soundtracks, and by far my favorite Trovaioli album. This one smoothly transitions between downtempo lounge ballads and some hard swinging chase-type action sequences. It's an excellent commuting experience if that's your lot. Someday I'll get around to seeing the actual film, referred to by many Polizio and U.S. Action film buffs as something of a genre masterpiece, including a chase scene on par with those in Bullitt and The French Connection. The jury is out on that account, but I can vouch for the soundtrack. The gorgeous opening of "Louise", "Black Pearl Necklace", and the closing "The Story Concludes" are painfully beautiful romantic ballads. A must-have for Italian cineasts and groove-philes.

It doesn't get much chiller than this...























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Monday, November 14, 2011

Arawak - Accadde A (1970)


I've never been able to find much info on this album. I've known a couple Arawak songs for some time as they appear on the famous Dusty Fingers collection. Locating a whole Arawak album was met with great excitement, and the record does not disappoint. For best results, play this rare Italian groove deep into the night.


Sample:



ACCADDE A




















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Friday, November 11, 2011

Nico Fidenco: Black Emanuelle's Groove (197x)





A Collection of tracks done by Nico Fidenco from various Emanuelle sexploitation films starring Laura Gemser. Fidenco is one of my favorite soundtrack composers, he of the tight, sexy, deep groove. This one collects most of his best tracks from Emanuelle in America, Emanuelle Goes East, Emanuelle Versus Violence to Women...

Try it out...



The full slate:

BLACK EMANUELLE'S GROOVE

























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Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Ennio Morricone - Morricone Happening: Acid Sides of the Maestro (196x-'7x)


If you've read this blog previously, you know that I will not shut up about Ennio Morricone. So I won't add to the hyperbole I've already thrust upon the readership. I'll just say that if there's a go-to Morricone album for me, this is the one. 

Whet your appetite on some psychedelic Morricone...




And now for the Main Course:

MORRICONE HAPPENING: ACID SIDES OF THE MAESTRO part 1

MORRICONE HAPPENING part 2



























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