Thursday 20 May 2010

Around the World in 80 Minutes Volume 2!

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So here it is at last, finally! I have been sitting on this for ages and have not given my self the oomph to get round to uploading it until now but after several months it is yours to keep.
As with volume one this is a rollercoaster ride around the globe and through time with no care for genres! 'World' music is such a tired old phrase, let's mix it up!

Day-Glow-Radio presents Around the World in 80 Minutes Vol.2
  1. (Algeria) Didi ~ Khaled
  2. (Benin) Les Djos ~ Orchestre Poly-Rhythmo
  3. (Bolivia) Le Gran Pelea ~ Los Ecos
  4. (China) The Lady of Mount Ali ~ Koo Mei
  5. (D.R. Congo) Loi ~ Koffi Olomide
  6. (Egypt) Ya Ramal ~ Adel El Musree
  7. (Guinea) Soko ~ Tropical Djoli Band De Faranah
  8. (Iceland) Ruby Baby ~ Björk Gudmundsdóttir & Trió Gudmundar Ingólfssonar
  9. (India) Aaj Mausam Bada Beimann Hai ~ Mohammed Rafi
  10. (Iran) Tesh Bad ~ Mousighi Jonub Siraf
  11. (Jamaica) Baltimore ~ The Tamlins
  12. (Japan) うるま島 Huruma Island ~ The Hoptones ホップトーンズ
  13. (Lebanon) Imminent Journay ~ Rabih Abou-Khalil
  14. (Nigeria) Dancing Time ~ The Funkees
  15. (Pakistan) Allah Hoo ~ Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan
  16. (Peru) Tookie Tookie ~ Telegraph Avenue
  17. (Senegal) Africa Child ~ Abass Abass feat. Daby
  18. (South Africa) Vuli Ndlela ~ Brenda Fassie
  19. (Syria) Lanshob Sherek ~ Omar Souleyman
  20. (Zimbabwe) Hende Baba ~ Thomas Mapfumo & The Blacks Unlimited


First off we are in Algeria and who better to show us around than the almighty Khaled, the biggest name in the Rai genre. Didi is his massive hit from 1992 which made him a name around the world and not just Arab speaking countries, resulting in nearly 50 million album sales round the world!


Next up we move down through Africa to Benin, home the Orchestre Poly-Rhythmo, a voodoo funk band who have recently seen a revival thanks to a series of reissues by the likes of Soundway and Analog Africa. Fela Kuti and the like dominates most people's image of 70s African funk but Poly-Rhythmo were a force to be reckoned with and I cannot recommend their Kings Of Beninalbum highly enough.



Now when you think of Bolivian music most people picture native dress and panpipes, not screeching psych-rock. But the makers of the Psicofásicos De Bolivia - Go-Gó A 4000 Metros compilation obviously knew different and dug out some rare finds up in the Andes, they must have felt like Indiana Jones in a record store!

Next up we are in China courtesy of the beautiful Koo Mei. Known at the height of her career as The Little Skylark, she started out as an actress and moved in recording jazz songs, which can now be heard on Pathe 100's series of reissues (Vol.14). Her beautiful voice and the classy arrangements bring to mind the high life of Shanghai Jazz clubs, you can almost smell the opium!



To the Democratic Republic of the Congo next, and the sounds of soukous are made for moving! Koffi Olomide is one of the big stars of the scene and even named his own personal style of the genre (Tcha Tcho). He was recently reported dead but made a tearful television appearance claiming he had not died in a car crash, much to his fans relief! This track features so many beautiful guitar riffs and clattering beats, it's impossible not to feel like dancing.

The next track comes from Yalla! Hitlist Egypt, a 1990 album of Egyptian urban pop music that can be found here for those wanting to hear more

More music from the golden era of African guitar music now, and we are in Guinea, straight after they became independent from France in 1958. The 60s and 70s saw alot of hardship in post colonial times but as a result a huge west African movement of musical freedom and expression that lead to such a rich and varied musical heritage, preserved in Guinea mostly by the legendary Syliphone label, responsible for recording all the major bands in the country.



From African heat to Nordic blues now, Iceland specifically. Taken from the 1990 album Gling Glo this cover of the Drifter's marked Icelandic punk singer Bjork's first experimentation away from guitar-based rock music. Guðmundur Ingólfsson was a great and famous piano player in Iceland and he remembered Bjork as a 16 year old girl who, obsessed with jazz, would hang around his recording sessions. The album was a huge hit in Iceland and since Bjork's success worldwide has become even more popular. Sadly Guðmundur died not long afterwards and the band disbanded.



Mohammed Rafi sings to us now, from India. His four-decade career as one of the greatest bollywood playback singers can not be argued with, having recorded an estimated 26,000 songs in this time! This track (Today The Weather Plays Tricks On Me) can be seen in the film "Loafer"


Iran next, to southern Iran and some Janub music. Iran has an incredible musical heritage that fascinates me and this is another example of how much cool music it has to offer. This is a little different from the usual you think of when you think of Persian music, but the banging rhythms and choirs have a really big hypnotic sound.

The Tamlins provide our next track, the 1979 hit Baltimore, which was also covered by Nina Simone in the same year. The Tamlins were very famous in the 70s and this is one of their classic songs. You can hear this and much more soulful reggae on the compilation Darker Than Blue; Soul from Jamdown.

Okinawa pop is up next, from the Hoptones. There is a great amount of rock'n'roll, rhythm'n'blues and jazzy pop from the pacific Asia during the 50s and 60s and it has achieved a very cool cult following. Labels like Sublime Frequencies release almost nothing else. This is a brilliant song from Ryukyu Rare Groove: Shimauta Pops in 60's-70's 琉球レアグルーヴ



One of the greatest Oud players in the world can be heard in the next song; the legendary Rabih Abou-Khalil. He has released scores of incredible jazz-fusion albums, mixing the middle east's traditional music with western jazz and classical. This is from his album Yara.

Nigeria is famous for it's funk and here from the Nigeria 70 series is a classic example of what makes the country so famous for just that! Pakistan next, and the renowned Sufi singer, easily the most famous of them all (in the west at least), Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. Allah Hoo is one of his most famous recordings and is a great example of devotional music.

More low-fi rock from the Andes now, except this time from Peru specifically. This track has a really funky feel to it and again, like the Bolivian track earlier, shows that Peru is not all about panpipes. Telegraph Avenue were a popular underground band in the 60s and often sang in english, being inspired by the American rock music of that era. Some hip-hop brings us to Senegal next, home of Abass Abass. This a great track that shows the depth and beauty of African hip-hop, which really is where it's at! There's alot of exciting hip-hop and ghetto music coming out of africa and always has been.


Speaking of African ghetto music, Kwaito is a form of house music from South Africa's townships, coming in many forms, from full on techy house (see DJ Mujava's huge 2007 tune Township Funk) to more pop sounding, like Brenda Fassie's classic song Vuli Ndlela. Brenda Fassie was one of the huge 90s stars of the electronic pop movement in South Africa and her song about Nelson Mandela (Black President) was a huge hit.



Another artist who mixes traditional with electronic beats is Omar Souleyman, Syrian music's wild card, this man has recorded over 500 albums and attained mythic cult status in the west thanks to the Sublime Frequencies label who started releasing hhis albums a few years ago.



And then finally, the Lion of Zimbabwe sings us out, Thomas Mapfumo. With his band The Blacks Unlimited, he became a massive icon of African music, just as much for his outspoken political views as for his music(of which Bob Marley was a fan), a trait which got his music banned numerous times and resulted in him having to flee to America. He still lives there, in Oregon to be exact and still tours the world.


............And there you have it, I hope you all enjoy listening to this as much as I enjoyed putting it together.
*GEEK*


4 comments:

  1. Very nice, thanks.
    Do you know where one can find a download of Ryukyu Rare Groove 2 ? Seems to be missing from the internet...

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  2. This whole mix looks awesome...
    Are you able to reupload it again?
    Thanks for sharing the tunes...

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    1. hey thanks, i will try and get it re-uploaded this week!

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    2. I REALLY want to hear this compilation!!! Can you email me the link? thebinsdigs@gmail.com

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