Monday 26 May 2014

Mississippi Fred McDowell - The Alan Lomax Recordings (1959)

Fred McDowell (1904 - 1972) was born in Rossville, Tennessee and is a Hill Country Blues musician. While commonly lumped together with Delta Blues singers, McDowell actually may be considered the first of the bluesmen from the 'North Mississippi' region (somewhat east of the Delta region) to achieve widespread recognition for his work. A version of the state's signature musical form somewhat closer in structure to its African roots (often eschewing the chord change for the hypnotic effect of the droning, single chord vamp), the north Hill Country Blues served as the driving force in founding Fat Possum records in Mississippi.

The 1950s brought a rising interest in blues and folk music in America and McDowell was brought to wider public attention, beginning when he was discovered and recorded in 1959 by Alan Lomax. He would go on to play blues for the next few decades evolving his styles later to play the electric guitar. Despite this transition to electric guitar, he is famously quoted as saying "I don't play no rock and roll". However this did not hinder the Rolling Stones in covering his song "You Gotta Move" on their 1971 album "Sticky Fingers"! :)

From the linear notes:

In 1959. when he traveled through the American South on his 'Southern Journey' field-recording trip, Alan Lomax made no plans to visit the Mississippi Delta. He had spent considerable time there some years earlier, in 1911 and 1942. when he and a team of researchers from Nashville's Fisk University had undertaken an extensive sociological study of Coahoma County in the heart of the Delta, with Lomax directing the musical investigations on behalf of the Library of Congress. That had resulted in the first recordings of Muddy Waters and Honeyboy Edwards; a trip to Robert Johnson's mother's house brought the news that "Little Robert" was dead, but Lomax was able to meet Johnson's mentor, Son House, who made for Alan his first recordings since House's slender pre-war output for the Paramount label. It was a hugely successful expedition to what Alan later called "the land where the blues began" But signs of a shifting in taste, among players and listeners alike, were evident even then: records of jump blues and big-city jazz beginning to fill up the "Seebird" (Seeburg) jukeboxes; talk of migration north to Chicago among the more talented of the Delta musicians, Muddy Waters foremost among them: and the increasing electrification of the combos that stayed behind to play in the small-town clubs and country jukes.

It was during the Coahoma County study that Lomax first visited the Mississippi Hill Country, the uplands to the east and northeast of the Delta. While doing research in Clarksdale, Alan had met a blind street singer and harp-blower named Turner Junior Johnson, who advised him to seek out Blind Sid Hemphill, the musical patriarch of the Hill Country. Lomax found Sid at his home in Senatobia, Tate County, and went on to record from him and his band some of the old-time black country dance music played on banjos, fiddles, rifts, drums, and quills that had survived in the hills, away from the social and economic changes roiling the Delta, and relatively isolated from the urbanized black music filling the airwaves and the jukeboxes.

Nearly twenty years later, in 1969, Lomax returned to the Hill Country instead of the Delta, hoping to find some of the misty old dance tunes still holding on. He wasn't optimistic, worrying that he'd find as he had on many other occasions, 'that the best people had passed away or withered and their communities had gone to pieces.' But not only were Hemphill and his friends and family still going strong in Tate County. Lomax discovered in neighboring Panola the string duet of the elderly Pratcher brothers, with their repertoire born of the minstrel and medicine-show eras, as well as the fife-and-drum music of the Youngs, Ed and his brother Lonnie. What he didn't expect to find, however, came by Lonnie's porch one evening: a diminutive farmer in overalls, carrying a guitar. He was Lonnie Young's neighbor, and had just finished his day picking cotton. His name was Fred McDowelL Alan's travelling partner and assistant, the English folk singer Shirley Collins, recounts that at first they resented the younger man's intrusion, but when Fred started to play, they realised they were in the presence of a master musician.


Alan Lomax recorded me for the first time. I remember he was at the Pratcher brothers' house doing some recording, and somebody sent for me and said I should bring my guitar along. I did come by and played a little for Lomax. and he asked could he come to my house on Saturday night to record, and I said sure. So come that Saturday night, the house is full of people thee to hear me recording and wanting to record, too. But right away Lomax said, "I'm not interested in nobody but Fred" (Quoted in Bruce Cook. Listen to the Blues, 1973)

In the 20's and 30's, A&R men from commercial record companies scoured the southern states in search of talent for their "race" and "hillbilly" catalogs. They set up temporary studios in hotels, warehouses, and vacant storefronts and took out advertisements in local papers inviting people to come out, audition, and maybe even make a record. This turned up hundreds of artists who might well have otherwise remained unknown, but Fred McDowell was not among them. At the time Fred was in his teens and had just begun playing guitar, picking out the notes one string at a time on borrowed instruments, to songs he heard locally and on records by artists like Tommy Johnson and Blind Lemon Jefferson.

Alan Lomax too had missed Fred, during his earlier trip through Panola and Tate counties in 1941, right about the time McDowell moved down from Memphis. He had yet to appear on the local picnic circuit; Hill Country tastes were still largely tuned to the sound of the Hemphill string band. Besides, although Fred had been playing weekend parties throughout the Memphis countryside for a decade or so, it was his move to Mississippi and his exposure to a new community of gifted musicians that expedited his musical development. Nearly twenty years later, however, a talent as big Fred's in a community as stall as Como could not stay buried for long. It was inevitable that the two strangers making their way around town with a 26-pound, two-track reel-to-reel tape machine and talking of making records would run into it.

Fred McDowell was born around 1906 in Rossville. Tennessee, just a few miles north of the Mississippi border and another fifty from Como. From an early age he farmed cotton, pea and corn with his family. Music was all around him. In Rossville, he remembered, "There wasn't hardly any seen who couldn't play guitar". Two of the better players he recalled were Raymond Payne and bandy McKenna. neither of whom ever recorded. Fred watched them and picked up what he could. The first song be learned to play was 'Big Fat Mama Blues ("Big fat mama with the seat shakin' on your bones') from a 1928 record by Mississippi bluesman Tommy Johnson. "I learned it on one string, then two, note by note" Fred explained to a student years later. 'Man. I about worried that first string to death trying to play that song' By his own account, Fred was a disciplined autodidact, which no doubt explains why his sound was so intensely individual.

"I never could hardly learn no music by somebody trying to show me. Like, I hear you play tonight, well, next week sometime it would come to me - what you was playing. I'd get the sound of it in my head. Then I'd do it my way from what I remembered."

Fred's uncle Gene Shields played slide guitar with a filed-down pike of rib bone from a cow. "I was a little bitty boy when I heard him do that and after I learned how to play, I made me one and tried it too. Started oft playing with a pocket knife" Eventually, he would settle on a glass bottleneck (preferably from a Gordon's Gin bottle), which provided the most clarity and volume.

McDowell moved west from Rossville to Memphis in 1926 and took a series of labor jobs beginning at the Buckeye Oil Mill. He had begun experimenting with the slide guitar style that he had seen his uncle playing, and that he would eventually make uniquely his own. Two years later, while working in Mississippi, he heard Charley Patton at a juke joint in Cleveland, and set to adapting some of his songs. Weekends found him sitting in at Saturday night parties, fish fries, and country picnics where the music was all about working for six days and shaking it for two. Yet he did not own his own guitar until 1940, about the time that he moved to Mississippi.




In the Hill Country, Fred joined his sister. Fanny Davis. who had relocated to Como after their mother died in Rossville. There he met his wife, Annie Mae, a Como native. Soon he was traveling throughout the region for work, which brought with it exposure to a variety of music. Sid Hemphill, the Pratcher brothers, Ed and Lonnie Young - all playing something quite other than blues - grounded his musical community around Como and Senatobia, while a blues guitar player and singer named Eli Green emerged as a valued teacher and frequent traveling companion throughout the Delta. 'When You Get Home Write Me a Few of Your Lines' (Side B. Track 4) is a song Fred learned from Green, and one of the most impressive in his repertoire.

In addition to the old-time country dance music made by the Pretchers. the Youngs, and Blind Sid, the Hill Country was and continues to be fertile ground far African American congregational music. Singers like Viola James, James Shorter, Fred's sister Fanny, and his wife, Annie Mae, were all highly regarded performers in churches like Hunter's Chapel in Como, Independence Church in Tyro, Free Springs Methodist in Harmonstown, and Greater Harvest Missionary Baptist in Senatobia. Always catholic in his repertoire, McDowell was as adept performing or accompanying sacred material as he was blues - as he told a Sing Out! interviewer in 1969, "I play most anything I hear anybody else sing". Fred showed no evidence of internal discord over combining the sacred and the profane in his repertoire, a struggle that famously tormented his fellow Mississippian Son House. Here McDowell seamlessly follows his sisters plaintive rendition of 'When the Train Comes Along' with a hot-blooded 'When You Get Home.' A 1964 LP of Freds, entitled (speciously) My Home Is in the Delta, devotes its first side to blues and its second side to spirituals and hymns sung with Annie Mae, among them 'Keep Tour Laps Trimmed and Burning' and 'Musing Grace'

The goal of Lomax's 'Southern Journey' field recording trip of 1959 and 1960 was to demonstrate the diversity of vernacular expression still thriving in the American South, from the old-time banjo breakdowns of the Blue Ridge Mountains to the ring shouts of the Georgia Sea Islands. In the Rill Country, the spectrum extended from the picnic proto-blues of the Pretchers, representative of an older, Wing collective tradition. to the music made by Fred McDowell, an integration of various traditional, vernacular, and popular influences into an artistry all his own. Some of the prison singers Lomax met at Parchman Farm had similarly synthetic repertoires, as did country gospel songwriter and arranger E.C. Ball of Rugby, Virginia, and Arkansas cotton-country bluesman Forrest City Joe. But Fred embodied this synthesis most succinctly. and his interpretative and compositional abilities only deepened during his era of international success.

The Atlantic and Prestige releases of the 'Southern Journey' material brought McDowell's music to an increasingly blues-hungry public turned on by the efforts of impresarios like John Hammond and the Newport Folk Festival. The versatility and depth of Fred's repertoire made him one of the most popular bluesmen of the era. He quickly and nimbly adopted the electric guitar. Though not at the expense of his distinctive chops, and he was sensitive to differences in audiences' tastes. (Before a trip to the San Francisco Bay Ares in 1964, he wrote Arhoolie Records' Chris Strachwitz, asking. 'Should I bring an electric guitar or a plain one?') A few years later, he explained in Sing Out!, "I'm using the electric guitar for the sound it sounds louder, and it plays easier too. But my style's the same."

Influencing as it did McDowell's landsmen and musical heir. R.L. Burnside and Junior Kimbrough. that style put the blues of the Mississippi Hill Country on the map, counterpoising the heavily chordled, song-based Delta blues with a droning, "groove"-based approach that has often been compared to the music of West African riots. Alan Lomax wrote in 1991 that Fred was "quite the equal of Son House and Muddy Waters but, musically speaking. their granddaddy"

'I look at it this way,' Fred told Sing Out! 'If you've got a gift, you do that, you don't know what may turn up in your favor." It was a gift that sent is around the world to perform, and it was represented on more than a dozen albums between 1960 and 7972, when McDowell died in Memphis. A year earlier the Rolling Stones bad covered his 'You Got to Move' on their Sticky Fingers album. The Stones 'made much of him" Lomax later remarked. "They wined and dined him, and bought him a silver-lamé suit, which he wore home to Como and was buried in, for he died soon after, much reduced by the life that 0120 and fortune had too late introduced him to"

But at least Fred McDowell had received the introduction, beginning that early fall evening on Lonnie Young's porch, when, hearing his recordings played back to him, "He stomped up and down on the porch, whooping and laughing and hugging his wife", as Lomax remembered. "He knew he had been heard and his fortune had been made." Fred's sister Fanny patted Alan. "Lord have mercy" she exclaimed. "Lord have mercy"

Tracklist:

01. Shake 'Em On Down
02. Good Morning Little Schoolgirl
03. Keep Your Lamps Trimmed And Burning
04. Fred McDowell's Blues
05. Woke Up This Morning With My Mind On Jesus
06. Drop Down Mama
07. Going Down To The River
08. Wished I Was In Heaven Sitting Down
09. When The Train Comes Along
10. When You Get Home Please Write Me A Few Of Your Lines
11. Worried Mind Blues
12. Keep Your Lamps Trimmed And Burning (Instrumental)

Download Link - Mediafire

Various Artists - Seven 7 Inches From Ghana (Global Groovers)


This is a compilation of highlife music from Ghana taken from the Global Groovers blog. I cannot reccomend this blog highly enough, it's a fantastic resource for anyone with an interest in world music, and the webmaster has taken the time to reupload a vast amount of his extensive collection despite the problems with file hosting services a couple of years ago.

There have been a number of compilations done on this website, including the Global Sampler volumes; however this is from the "Seven 7 Inches" series - there are a number of different ones from a variety of African nations. The Ghanaian highlife music seems to stand out a bit more compared to other kinds of highlife, however in my opinion the majority of music that falls into the afrobeats genre is worth investigating. :)

From the Global Groovers website:

"We had some from Kenya and from Colombia and Congo, today it is Ghana's turn to get a 'Seven 7" singles' compilation. I recently found some so here they are. ET Mensah's tracks are a bit noisy but the rest sounds fairly okay. Hope you like them, enjoy listening..."

Tracklist:

01.   Ramblers Dance Band - Oburoni woewu
02.   Ramblers Dance Band - Antie christie
03.   Dr. K. Gyasi's Noble Kings - Sama awo deme
04.   Dr. K. Gyasi's Noble Kings - Sei na'zo
05.   Ashanti Brothers - Me yonko awisia
06.   Ashanti Brothers - Kae owuo
07.   E.T. Mensah & his Tempos Band - Odo anigyina
08.   E.T. Mensah & his Tempos Band - Abele
09.   Yamoah's Band - Atemmuda
10.  Yamoah's Band - Oyefo
11.  Abongo Boys led by Sammy Kwampoh - Anka meye bi
12.  Abongo Boys led by Sammy Kwampoh - Menko ofie ho
13.  EK's no.1 Band - Efa woho ben ?
14.  EK's no.1 Band - Ma agyanka nesu nye wosu

Download Link - Mediafire

The Growling Tiger - Alan Lomax Recordings (1962) / Knockdown Calypsos (1979)



After about a year of searching I finally located a Calypso tune I had heard last June. It has been seriously bothering me all year that I couldn't find it again! I was shocked that I had very little in my collection of The Growling Tiger and so am happy to share these albums with you all!

Neville Marcano, aka The Growling Tiger (1915-1993) was a calypsonian from Trinidad. A former boxer - he became a star in the 1930s, when calypsonians started exporting their music overseas, and big names emerged like Lord Kitchener, Lord Invader or Roaring Lion (I don't know which one of Roaring Lion or Growling Tiger acquired his nickname first).

He was recorded in 1962 by Alan Lomax in Trinidad. (whose field recordings are priceless in the fact that they preserved many fantastic folk tunes from a wide variety of cultures) these recordings were reissued in 1998 under the name "The Growling Tiger of Calypso". Marcano played a variety of calypso and even older styles of music. His music is a sum of various influences from French, Spanish, English and African traditions, and ranges from old-school minor-key calypso ("Money Is King") to derivations from more ancient styles like kalinda (a stick-fighting dance popular in Trinidad carnivals) or songs with a strong African heritage like "Youruba Shango".



Tiger had become famous for his deep baritone voice, and his socio-political lyrics. As with a lot of calypsonians the lyrics and identity of the singer are extremely important to the song (and the singers success!) The above song is an example of his thinking, it's both funny and serious, and Tiger had a reputation for questioning social normas and mocking the establishment in true carnival fashion.

By 1977, Tiger had long since retired and was presumed to be dead by most people. An American calypso enthusiast named Steve Shapiro travelled to Trinidad and sought out Tiger. Shapiro prevailed upon Tiger to do a modern recording of some of his finest works in their original style. He also recorded some songs with a "modern" band featuring horns. 

At sixty-four years of age, Tiger had lost none of his prowess and the resultant 1979 album "Knockdown Calypsos" on the Rounder Records label later was nominated for a Grammy! 

Robert Leaver says of the man: "A master of improvisation (extempo) and the competitive Calypsonian duel, Tiger could rhyme on diverse subjects with intelligence and wit. Rappers take heed -- Growling Tiger could school you"

Tracklist:

Alan Lomax Portrait:

01. War (3.17)
02. Senorita Panchita (3.05)
03. The Parrot (3.22)
04. Money Is King (3.32)
05. Bury Boula For Me (4.48)
06. War (4.30)
07. The Train Blow (3.28)
08. When I Dead Bury Me (4.43)
09. Rose Of Caracas (3.02)
10. Getting Along With The Calypso Music (1.49)
11. Atomic Energy Calypso (5.59)
12. Senorita Panchita (3.39)

Knockdown Calypsos

01. When I Dead Bury Me Clothes, Five Five Five In Morning, Going Home To Africa Tonight
02. The Train Below
03. Go Back To Coal
04. Bandandee-A
05. Yoruba Shango
06. Medley: Heles Enfants/Salvatorie Fire/Rama I Rama Lo Kine/I Wheel & I Wheel San Fernando...
07. Money Is King
08. Motor Car Horn
09. San Fernando The Ark/Gentiles Fille
10. War

Saturday 17 May 2014

The Complete Blue Note Recordings Of Art Blakey's 1960 Jazz Messengers (1992)



Drummer Art Blakey goes down in jazz annals in several ways, including for artistry and energy on his instrument. But perhaps more lasting is the influence his group has had not only on the development of the hard bop idiom but also for his influence on the generations of young players who have gotten their on-the-job training with Blakey. The list includes such figures as Wynton Marsalis, Keith Jarrett, Jackie McLean, Benny Golson, John Hicks, Woody Shaw, Joanne Brackeen, Curtis Fuller and Steve Turre.

Each successive group had different qualities, which kept the Messengers growing all the time. While arguments rage regards which was his “best”, no doubt the 1960-1961 unit figures in the debate. To my own tastes the group in 1960 (and a little later, when Curtis Fuller joined on trombone), was the finest. Lee Morgan on trumpet, Wayne Shorter on tenor sax, Bobby Timmons on piano, these musicians were extraordinary. It was a dream band almost as luminous as Miles Davis`s group with John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderley Paul Chambers and Bill Evans.

This six-disc set covers studio and live sessions from March 6, 1960, to May 27, 1961, with the same personnel on all but two songs that were recorded on February 18, 1961, when Walter Davis had replaced Timmons.

Michael Cuscuna (Producer) uses only first-issue dates and while he includes some alternate takes, he does not litter the discs with second-rate vault material. They smoothly detail the band’s evolution, cohesion and maturation. Shorter is at his fiery best on tenor sax, while Morgan is either a furious note-bending acrobatic or a mellow, dynamic ballad stylist. Timmons excels at soul/gospel voicings and accompaniment but also demonstrates a flexibility and melodic and harmonic variety sometimes overshadowed by the popularity of such compositions as “Dat dere” and “Moanin’”. Merritt brings a rock-solid pulse and consistent edge to the group on bass, and Blakey himself offers his patent “bombs” on drums, driving and pacing the band without dominating it.

The Jazz Messengers as always are effective playing in either a surging or soothing manner on waltzes, standards or originals, personifying the mix of emotion and skills that are the essence of great jazz.

This set goes beyond essential. Get it post haste.


(It has been pointed out to me that I should start putting up a video link so as people who maybe unfamiliar with some of this music can get an idea before downloading specific things.)

Tracklist:

1.1 It's Only A Paper Moon (Alternate)
1.2 It's Only A Paper Moon
1.3 Dat Dere
1.4 The Chess Players
1.5 Lester Left Town
1.6 Sakeena's Vision
1.7 Politely
1.8 When Your Lover Has Gone
1.9 Noise In The Attic
1.10 Sleeping Dancer Sleep On (Alternate)

2.1 Sleeping Dancer Sleep On
2.2 Sincerely Diana
2.3 Sincerely Diana (Alternate)
2.4 Yama
2.5 Kozo's Waltz
2.6 Giantis
2.7 Johnny's Blue
2.8 So Tired
2.9 Like Someone In Love

3.1 A Night In Tunisia
3.2 United
3.3 Ping Pong
3.4 Blue Ching
3.5 Pisces
3.6 Look At The Birdie
3.7 Master Mind
3.8 Ping Pong
3.9 Petty Larceny
3.10 Roots And Herbs

4.1 United
4.2 The Witch Doctor (Alternate)
4.3 Those Who Sit And Wait
4.4 A Little Busy
4.5 Joelle
4.6 Afrique
4.7 Lost And Found
4.8 The Witch Doctor
4.9 The Back Sliders (Alternate)

5.1 The Back Sliders
5.2 The Freedom Rider
5.3 Tell It Like It Is
5.4 El Toro
5.5 Blue Lace
5.6 Uptight
5.7 Announcement By Pee Wee Marquette
5.8 The Opener
5.9 What Know
5.10 Theme And Announcement By Pee Wee Marquette

6.1 Announcement By Art Blakey
6.2 'Round About Midnight
6.3 The Breeze And I
6.4 Announcement By Pee Wee Marquette And Art Blakey
6.5 High Modes
6.6 Night Watch
6.7 Announcement By Art Blakey
6.8 The Things I Love
6.9 The Summit
6.10 Theme And Announcement

Download Link - Mediafire (Disc 1)
Download Link - Mediafire (Disc 2)
Download Link - Mediafire (Disc 3)
Download Link - Mediafire (Disc 4)
Download Link - Mediafire (Disc 5)
Download Link - Mediafire (Disc 6)

Monday 5 May 2014

Ska Cubano - ¡Ay Caramba! (2006)

¡Ay Caramba! is the second album by London based group Ska Cubano. The band was brought together by manager Peter A. Scott, who "decided to create an alternative history in which Cuban ska had emerged". He travelled to Santiago de Cuba with Top Cats singer Natty Bo (Nathan Lerner) in 2001 and there they rehearsed and recorded the Ska Cubano album over a two-year period mainly with local musicians including singer Beny Billy (Juan Manuel Villy Carbonell).

In late 2004, Scott and Bo decided to go for a less Cuban sound and formed a line-up in London mainly using UK-based Cuban and other Caribbean musicians (three of whom were/are also members of Top Cats, Natty Bo's traditional ska band ). After some experimentation, with Natty Bo as leader and vocalist, the permanent core of Ska Cubano became :


Natty Bo (Nathan Lerner) - vocals
Carlos Pena - vocals and minor percussion
Beny Billy (Juan Manuel Villy Carbonell) - vocals
Miss Megoo ( Megumi Mesaku ) - alto and baritone saxophones
Trevor Edwards - trombone
Kico Cowan - tenor saxophone and flute
Rey Crespo (musical director) - double bass and marimbula
Jesús Cutiño - tres (Cuban 3x2-strung guitar)
Ernesto Estruch - piano, organ and violin
Oresta Noda - congas and pailas
Dr. Sleepy (Reuben White) - drumkit
Tan Tan ( Eddie Thornton ) - trumpet
Jay Phelps - trumpet


In 2006 Carlos Pena gradually took over as co-lead singer, although Beny continued to record and occasionally tour with Ska Cubano. Upon it's release ¡Ay Caramba!, was nominated for a BBC World Music Award in the "Culture Crossing" category. The album was described as "imaginatively crafted, brimming with melody, wit and a joyous fusion of rhythms, this album’s about as much fun as you can have with your clothes on". A statement which I wholeheartedly would second. Enjoy!

Leave it to a British band to combine Latin rhythms, Jamaican mento, and ska beats, all dressed in retro zoot suits. The group is fronted by Cuban vocalist Ben Billy and London-born singer Nathan "Natty Bo" Lerner, with Jamaican trumpeter Eddie "Tan Tan" Thornton, Japanese saxophonist Megumi Mesaku, and Havana bassist Ray Crespo. For the most part, the music is a surprising melange of Beny More-type vocals and upbeat ska rhythms made famous by The Skatalites, as evidenced by the snappy instrumental "Jezebel," the hypnotizing mid-tempo "Soy Campesino," and the humorous title track. Also included are the Colombian cumbia "Tungarara" and Miguelito Valdes' "Babalu." Before purists attach the gimmick flag to the ensemble's second CD, they should please note that a few of the creators of ska were born in Cuba, and since African descendants are the prime creators of Caribbean music, this effort represents a reunion of kindred rhythms.
-- amazon.com

"Altogether a triumph: if Ska Cubano didnít exist, it would be imperative to invent them, and these public-spirited musicians have saved the world the trouble. Sincere gratitude is in order."
-- SongLines

"A triumph of musical imagination!"
-- London Independent

Tracklist:

01 Istanbul (Not Constantinople) 02:34
02 Tabu 03:32
03 Oye Compay Juan 03:35
04 No Me Desesperes 03:34
05 Tungarara 03:50
06 Big Bamboo 02:59
07 Cachita 04:31
08 Soy Campesino 03:42
09 Jezebel 03:20
10 Marianao 03:52
11 !Ay Caramba! 03:02
12 Chispa Tren 03:22
13 Bobine 04:57
14 Cumbia En Do Menor 04:41
15 Natty No Dead 02:36
16 Jezebel (Instrumental) 03:18
17 La Boquilla 03:14

Download Link - Mediafire (.mp3)
Download Link - Mediafire (.flac)

Marvellous Boy - Calypso From West Africa (1950's - 1960's)

Another compilation from the Honest Jon's record label, this calypso compilation is interesting insofar as it incorporates numerous aspects of different styles of West African music be they highlife legends such as Rex Lawson, or various gems in the Afro-Cuban jazz style. It's definitely worth checking out for anyone interested the origins, emergence and popularisation of African rooted genres in Western culture as they exist today.

From the Honest Jon's website:

The inter-war dance bands of British West Africa are often strikingly similar in sound to Trinidadian orchestras like Lovey's String Band (credited with the first calypso recordings, in 1912). However, the first West African calypso recordings in the modern style are from Freetown, Sierra Leone in the early 1950s, by Ebenezer Calendar and Famous Scrubbs. In arrangements blending African and European instruments, the brass plays out the legacy of colonial military bands, albeit hair-down and a little ramshackle now; and the beautiful creole lyrics are as upful, quick, current, musical and intimate as any classic calypsonian's.

Decca also organized the first calypso recording session in Ghana, down the coast, where a sound interchangeably designated 'calypso' or 'highlife' ruled urban dancefloors, courtesy of The Tempos — fronted here by Julie Okine — and its spin-offs The Black Beats, The Red Spots, and finally The Rhythm Aces.
The invasion of King Mensah of Ghana, and The Tempos' money-spinning tour of Nigeria at the start of the 1950s sparked a decade of musical innovation. Bobby Benson’s new highlife eleven-piece included the great trumpeters Victor Olaiya and Roy Chicago — both leaving to lead the bands featured here, the Cool Cats and Rhythm Dandies — and his calypso Taxi Driver was their first, huge, signature hit. (By contrast, little is known about the Nigerian Rolling Stone, whose real name was Roland Onaghise, singing here in the Bini dialect with such rootical frankness.) 

The Mayor's Dance Band was the second lineup run by the celebrated Erekosima 'Rex' Lawson, after the Nigeraphone Studio Orchestra Of Onitsha, and highly successful throughout the 1960s. With Lawson's trademark blend of Igbo lyrics over a Calabari rhythm, reflecting his mixed parentage, and his superb, Caribbean-flavoured trumpet-playing, Bere Bote is the latest of the recordings here.
Like Lawson, Steven Amechi was from eastern Nigeria — the guitar solo on Nylon Dress is by the king of Igbo highlife, Stephen Osita Osadebe. 

The Tempos' drummer Guy Warren once recalled a trip to London, where he'd played in Kenny Graham's pioneering Afro Cubists: 'When I was in London I went to the Caribbean Club somewhere near Piccadilly, the haunt of a lot of West Indians. It was all calypso every night... When I came back I brought some of these records and we learnt to play them as I knew straightaway that these musical inflections were so highlifish.' And most likely he would have thrown in some of Ambrose Campbell's London recordings of calypso highlife with the West African Rhythm Brothers, including horn players from the Caribbean — at that time making an epochal impact back home in Nigeria. 

And saxophonist Chris Ajilo was likewise deeply impressed by the Afro Cubists, forming his band The Cubanos on his return to Lagos in 1955, after studying at the London School Of Music. (Baba Ani, aka Lekan Animashaun — stalwart of Fela Kuti's music, from the Koola Lobitos to Egypt 80 — was in later lineups.) A tribal 'woro', 'fire dance', from Egun country, obviously Ariwo isn't highlife-calypso, it's cooking afro-cuban jazz with traditional roots; but it exemplifies the open hybridity of all these forms, and the receptivity of their West African milieu to inspiration abroad, as throughout the 1950s West African musicians like King Bruce of The Rhythm Aces, the Sierra Leonean calypsonian Ali Ganda, E.T. Mensah and Zeal Onyia all checked out London's burgeoning West Indian and West African scenes.
 
By the early 1960s, calypso was fading in West Africa. US soul and rhythm and blues were poised to replace Caribbean influences, even as there was also a turn towards more traditional, local, African musical material. Still, the dying embers would produce its most classical exponent, Godwin Omabuwa, Nigeria's own Lord Kitchener, ebulliently singing here about a famous victory of the middleweight Dick Tiger. Another graduate of Bobby Benson's orchestras, his band the Casanova Dandies at this time included the jazz modernist Mike Falana, on the eve of his departure for London, where he would join Peter King's African Jazz Messengers. In the face of changing tastes, Omabuwa cut only a few records, and his live audience was steeply reduced to prostitutes and their customers in a Lagos Island dive, but his mastery of the genre was a fitting end to the heyday of calypso in British West Africa.

'endlessly satisfying' (Boston Phoenix)

'Blending cheeky calypso with rocking highlife — and by turns breezy, wistful and downright uproarious' (Daily Telegraph) 

'gems at every turn... weaving highlife, swing, military brass bands, Afro-Cuban jazz, into a hell of a compilation... Honest Jon's have added to the highest order of this simple music of heartbreaking celebration' (Brainwashed)

Tracklist:

01. Famous Scrubbs - Poor Freetown Boy
02. Bobby Benson And His Combo - Taxi Driver (I Don't Care)
03. Chris Ajilo And His Cubanos - Ariwo
04. Roy Chicago - Olubunmi
05. Mayor's Dance Band - Bere Bote
06. Steven Amechi And His Empire Rhythm Skies - Nylon Dress
07. Ebenezer Calender And His Maringer Band - Fire Fire Fire
08. Famous Scrubbbs - Scrubbs Na Marvellous Boy
09. Godwin Omabuwa And His Sound Makers - Dick Tiger's Victory
10. Rolling Stone And His Traditional Aces - Igha Suo Gamwen
11. E.T. Mensah And His Tempos Band - The Tree And The Monkey
12. Bobby Benson And His Jam Session Orchestra - Calypso Minor One
13. Ebenezer Calender And His Maringer Band - Cost Of Living Nar Freetown
14. Ebenezer Calender And His Maringer Band - Me Nar Poor Old Man Nor Do Me So
15. Bobby Benson And His Combo - Gentleman Bobby
16. Victor Olaiya - Yabomisa Sawale
17. The Rhythm Aces - Mami
18. Ebenezer Calender And His Maringer Band - Arria Baby