Welcome to World Music Central 05/17/2008 03:48PM  
  Home  |  Submissions  |  World Music Forum |  Links |  Calendar |  F.A.Q.  |  Directory of Articles  |  Contact Us  |
User Functions
:

:

Don't have an account yet? Sign up as a New User
Lost your password?

World Music News
CD Reviews
Articles
World Music sound loops and samples
General News
Interviews
Video Reviews
Book Reviews
Editorials
Tour Announcements
Concert reviews
Events »
New Releases »
Awards
Obituaries

World Music Resources
Artist biographies
Booking agents
Distributors
Travel Guides
Record labels
Mailing Lists
World Music Media
Organizations
Trade shows
Music Contests and Competitions

Live music:
Venues

Education:
Dance schools
Ethnomusicology
Museums
Music schools

Glossaries:
World dances
Musical genres
World Instruments

Shopping:
- World Music Central Store
- Gift ideas



All Roads Lead to Lagos   
04/22/2006 12:04AM
Contributed by: TOrr

CD Reviews

Various Artists - Lagos Chop Up (Honest Jon's Records HJR CD15, 2005)

Various Artists - Lagos All Routes (Honest Jon's Records HJR CD17, 2005)

Nigeria is home to numerous greats of African music, many of whom were inspired to creative heights by the prosperous, upbeat mood of the 1960s, when their country and many around them were newly independent. Nigerian music of the mid-'60s to early '80s sought to combine traditional and modern in ways that brought out the best of both. These two releases are chock full of not only some of the best examples of that duality, but also some of the hottest African rare groove you can get ahold of.



The styles represented are familiar ones to African music listeners. There's highlife, the guitar-and/or-horn-driven genre that came about when colonial ballroom dances got a much-needed kick with the addition of homegrown rhythms and intricate arrangements. Apala and fuji, styles built around percussion and voices and performed by Nigeria's Yoruba Muslim population, are here as well.

Yoruba rhythms are likewise at the heart of the pulsating juju music in which multiple guitars are also prominent, and finally there's the highlife/jazz/funk/soul fusion known as Afrobeat. Lagos, Nigeria's largest metropolis, was a hot spot for all of these.

"Chop up" is a Nigerian pidgin English term for an abundant feast, and if you've an appetite for classic African sounds, you'll find tremendous satisfaction here. Some bigger names (Ebenezer Obey, Oliver DeCoque, Haruna Ishola) are sprinkled in among a majority of lesser-known ones, but every track, lengthy or short, explodes with heavenly fire.

There are seemingly endless riches to savor in terms of vocals, guitars, percussion, horns and altogether soaring performances, so much so that singling out any particular song or artist is entirely unnecessary. A lot of this stuff reminds me of why Nigeria was my starting point for getting hooked on African music. Even if you need no such reminder, you need these two collections.

Buy Lagos Chop Up and Lagos All Routes.

  [ Views: 1,319 ]  

What's Related

Story Options

Submissions  |  World Music Forum |  Links |  Calendar |  Directory of Articles  |  F.A.Q.  |  Contact Us
World Music Central News RSS Feed

Powered By Geeklog
Created this page in 0.27 seconds

Hosted By Ibiblio.org .