Feb 16/07

Groovy Naija

Matt Yanchyshyn @ 09:29

Orlando OwohOriginal Music certainly make the shortlist for best album name for their 1995 Orlando Owoh release, Dr. Ganja’s Polytonality Blues.

I’s a classic four track mix of mid-70s Nigerian juju-highlife stuffed with psychedelic riffs and slow burning melodies. The track I picked for today makes a sweet switch at about the five minute mark, catching your ears off guard as you two-toke it around.

Orlando Owoh has been playing music in Nigeria since the mid-1950s. In his heyday he was one of Decca’s best-selling artists, and is known for being one of the key pioneers of the juju-highlife movement during the 1970s. He suffered a stroke in 2005 but, as far as I know, is doing alright now.

Thanks to Benn loxo listener, Flecton, for sending this my way.

Orlando Owoh – Emi Wa Wa Lowo Re, Alun Gbere Wa De

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Feb 5/07

Highlife for domestic onions

Matt Yanchyshyn @ 23:59

The Old HighlifeBeen doing a lot of home living and home cooking lately. Today’s track is especially great for when you’re chopping onions.. knife in my left, glass of red in my right, highlife-ing around the kitchen.

You can hear this tune on the Art Hurts release, The Old Highlife. It’s the baby of Art Hurts Records’ Nashville native, Beston Barnett. He went to Ghana on his Honeymoon and ended up studying guitar with Nana Opoku Agyemang. Three weeks into the lessons he managed to convince his new teacher to record an album with long-time friend, Amankwah “Roadmaster” Ntori.

You might recognize Agyemang’s guitar from, among others, F Kenya’s Band that we heard here before on one of Ulubujaja’s guest posts. And in case you’re wondering, Roadmaster gets his name from his mom since he used to walk for miles on foot.

Roadmaster & Agyemang – Akwasi Broni

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Dec 7/06

The highlife listening booth, vol. 2

Matt Yanchyshyn @ 10:58

F Kenya - Ngakula NgakulaToday veteran Benn loxo guest poster, ubulujaja, returns with some more hard to find 1970s highlife:

“F. Kenya was born in the Ghanaian town of Asima in the Eastern Nzema District. Trained as a goldsmith, he started singing in the mid 60′s with the Ahamanos band and later joined Kaikaiku’s No. 1 band before going out his own in the late 70′s. He was one of the first popular singers to sing in his native Nzema language and the energy in his vocals and performances made him very popular in Ghana and neighboring Ivory Coast. F. Kenya moved to the Ivory Coast in the early 80′s and did a number of LP’s including the great LP’s Powerhouse Vol 1 and Vol 2. A few F. Kenya tracks have appeared in the Gun and Guitar compilations Vol 1 and 2 put out by John Booker, but nothing else has been available in the West. The song Ngaluka Ngaluka is from a 1977 Essiebon release of the same name. His nephew is the famous Cote de Voire musician Meiway.

Master Bob Akwaboah started out in the early 60′s with Kwaa Mensah’s band, then joined Dr. K. Gyasi’s band as a vocalist before forming the Akwaboah’s guitar band in 1963. A prolific musician he put out more than 50 45′s during the 60′s and a number of LP’s. I first heard his music on one his early 80′s release Hwe Mibi Nako. This LP is worth tracking down because the great Ghanaian trumpeter ET Mensah lends a hand along with Sweet Talks bassist Ralph Karikari. While not as well known in the West as bands like the African Brothers and Sweet Talks he was a integral part of the Ghanaian music scene for three decades and his music is a prime example of the down tempo guitar band sound of Ghanaian music in the 70′s and 80′s and deserves wider recognition. The track Mihune A Anka Manba is from the B-side of an Executive release titled Wayge Wodee Anaa. The record does not list a release date, but I would guess sometime in the late 70′s.”

Thanks again for the music, ubulujaja.

F. Kenya – Ngakula ngakula
Master Bob Akwaboah and his Supreme Internationals – Wayge Wodee Anna (Maye Dada)

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Sep 1/06

The highlife listening booth, vol. 1

Matt Yanchyshyn @ 18:39

Highlife Listening Booth 1Today’s guest post will hopefully be the first in a series called In my ears: The highlife listening booth by Benn loxo listener, Ubulujaja.

“This month these two highlife tracks recently caught my ear:

Bob Fred: Okolobie Special

An important Ukwani highlife guitarist, Bob Fred appears to have been at the center of the Ukwani highlife music scene of the late 70s and early 80s. He played lead guitar on Rogana Ottah classic 1st LP Ukwani Special in 1976, fronted for well known Ukwani highlife bands like the International Brothers and the Ndokwa Super International Band, and released several LPs under his own name.

I found the song Okolobie Special to be a good example of Bob Fred’s music. The opening features an up-tempo guitar and horn segment that sets the stage for the vocalists to launch into an eight minute cavalcade of call and response vocals. While the guitar playing clearly echoes Rogana Ottah style, the vocals have a rawer, earthier feel. The lead vocalist is listed as Paddy and the chorus is led by Show Scatter (who also appeared on the Ukwani Special LP) and someone named as George. Okolobie appears to be a town in the River State. A solid Uwkani highlife number.

Prince A.E. Amgabaduba: Tamarau Au Na

Tamarau Au Na is a song by Prince A.E. Amgabaduba. I don’t know much about the performer or how to classify his music style, except to say I always liked Prince A.E. Amgabaduba’s style of vocalization and have only been able to find a few tracks where all the depth and beauty of his singing really comes out. The 18 minute song Seikiriemelemor on the Highlife Specialist LP is his masterpiece, but this shorter song gives you a good idea of what his vocals are all about.

Hope you enjoy the music…

Ubulujaja”

Thanks for the music and info. I’m looking forward to future editions.

Bob Fred & Ukwuani Brothers – Okolobie Special
Prince A. E. Amgabaduba & his Amazuo’s Band of Nigeria – Tamarau Na

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Jun 15/06

Black stars and high hopes

Matt Yanchyshyn @ 18:59

Ghana FootballWhile German and Polish fans run around throwing bottles at the police in Dortmund, the Ghanaians are dancing around fountains in Stuttgart. The Black Star fans that I’ve seen here and in Munich have great spirit.

So why not give them something to dance to? Some highbeat from one of Ghana’s great musicians, CK Mann, and some highlife from TO Jazz.

We heard CK Mann before singing one of my favourite tunes to come out of 1970s Africa, Funky Hi-Life, and TO Jazz you might have heard on this post featuring that solid compilation, Vintage Palm Wine.

Go Ghana!

CK Mann – Nyimpa Rebre
TO Jazz – Agyeman Baidoo

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May 14/06

Highlife and the ballet

Matt Yanchyshyn @ 18:40

Paulson KaluI have to be in the right kind of mood to listen to highlife. Drunk on palm wine? Yeah, bring it on. Earphones in, on a beach, sipping a coconut? Absolutely. Slightly hung-over late Sunday afternoon with a glass of Chablis after some modern ballet? Fuck yeah.

Old-time Benn loxo listeners know the deal about highlife, so I won’t bore you with too many details. The genre is still enormously popular both in and outside of Africa. It’s easy to see why; its laid-back rhythms, simple melodies and happy feel give it a universal good-vibe quality.

Highlife music makes me think about my friend Dulue in Lagos, Nigeria. When I was but an African music pup I would pepper him with questions about Nigerian music. He’d lean-back and his eyes would glaze-over as he remembered his highlife music past: Jim Lawson, Celestine Ukwu, Chief Stephen Osita Osadebe… These are some of the older kings of the genre, while more contemporary highlife musicians usually just copy the music of the elders. That’s fine by me since the sound ages well. If I play some hard-core fuji to my kids in 10 years, however, they might look at me kinda funny.

Today’s track comes off one of the stronger highlife compilations out there, The Kings Of Highlife, put together by Wrasse Records. It’s a good survey of 1960s and 70s highlife music from Nigeria and Ghana. Paulson Kalu from today’s pick is an Igbo from Nigeria who played with the best of them during the golden age of West African highlife music. If you like what you hear you can get some of his albums at Stern’s.

Have a nice, lazy Sunday.

Paulson Kalu – Okwudili

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Feb 15/06

Catchy flat horns

Matt Yanchyshyn @ 19:16

Orlando Julius & His Modern AcesI finally checked-out The Constant Gardener and really enjoyed it. In my opinion both this and Lord of War do a good job of portraying some of the darker sides of sub-Saharan African life.

A few people I spoke with thought that the movies were too negative and further reinforced negative stereotypes of life in Africa. I can see how you can argue that, but I think it’s fair of me to say that I’ve seen corruption and extreme poverty first-hand in Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Mali, Senegal, Burkina Faso and a host of other African countries, and that it’s not pretty. So maybe it’s a good idea to educate your average Western movie-going joe public about the true realities of every day life for millions of Africans. In my opinion these movies paint a much more accurate picture of sub-Saharan African life than a weepy Worldvision commercial or whatever other exposure most people get.

This reminds me: if you want to read a first-hand account from the perspective of a child growing up in Biafra during the Nigerian Civil War, you should check-out my friend Dulue Mbachu’s recently released book, War Games. You can buy it on Amazon. More information about Dulue and the book are available at the publisher’s web site.

So I guess it’s now time to turn our attention to some positive sides of life from the continent. Happy-sounding Nigerian highlife springs to mind. Re-released by (the now defunct?) AfroStrut records in the UK in 2000, Orlando Julius and His Modern Aces’ 1966 album, Super Afro Soul, is a classic.

Julius’ style mixes his mid-60s Nigerian highlife with American rnb. This is best represented in their funny, if not so musically amazing, rendition of The Temptations’ My Girl.

If you’re into this album also check-out the 2004 Ekosound release, Orlando Julius & his Afro Sounders – Orlando’s Afro Ideas.

Orlando Julius & His Modern Aces – Olulofe
Orlando Julius & His Modern Aces – My Girl

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Aug 11/05

Laid-back highlife royalty

Matt Yanchyshyn @ 11:26

Celestine UkwuWhen I was in Boston a few weeks ago K surprised me with a great gift: Celestine Ukwu. Now, if you’re a big music guy like myself I don’t think there’s anything sexier than a cute girl with good taste in West African highlife. Thanks, Kate.

During the 1960s Rex Lawson and a host of other Igbos popularized highlife music before it fell out of favour during the civil war of 1967-70. By the mid-1970s, however, the Nigerian highlife scene had started up again with bands like the Oriental Brothers, Prince Nico and perhaps most importantly, Celestine Ukwu.

Ukwu’s style is slightly different from that of his contemporaries; he was apparently a soft-spoken, relaxed kind of guy and this is reflected in the music he plays. You’ll hear slower rhythms and even things like steel slide guitar poking up from beneath the palmwine acoustic. Even the name of his band is pretty chilled-out: Professor Celestine Ukwu and the Philosophers National. Why don’t bands give themselves names like that anymore?

You can pick-up today’s track at Stern’s on Celestine Ukwu Best Collection Volume 1.

Celestine Ukwu – Ife Sina Chi

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Dec 26/04

Highbeat

Matt Yanchyshyn @ 17:30

discoWith an egg nog aftertaste and wrapping paper all over the floor, Benn Loxo is back…

In 1973 highlife music was in trouble. The old-school were being pushed out the door by cheap disco and funk music from Nigeria and the States. Lucky for us a group of young highlife believers refused to let it die. Some started trying new forms of guitar-heavy highlife, dropping the horns and slow-dance rhythms of old in favour of a faster, harder music. Others created new forms of highlife-funk fusion. It was almost afrobeat, but still highlife. A new funky twist on a great sound.

One of these funk stars is Charles Kofi Amankwaa Mann (C. K. Mann) from Ghana. He took the traditional Ghanaian osode highlife beat and remixed it for the new generation. Add some whriling organ, fat bass lines and highlife harmonies and you get some seriously cool new music.

C. K., as he’s known in Ghana, is a self-taught guitarist and ex-sailor. He got his break playing for Kakaiku’s Guitar Band in the 60s. Once he established himself he started his own band, The Carousel 7. They had a mega-hit in ’69, Edina Brenya, which propelled C. K. into stardom. It’s around this time that C. K. began to develop his new osode sound and incorporate disco and funk into highlife.

Today’s track was released in 1975 as part of a long-playing party LP. It was a big it, and directly responsible for reigniting the public’s waning interest in highlife music. Personally I listen to it while washing the dishes (combined with dancing) after a few glasses of wine and a good party.

ps- During the 80s C. K. Mann saved highlife again, but this time by mixing its traditions with gospel music. In present-day Ghana highlife is alive and well, though gospel-highlife is the sound of the moment thanks in part to people like Mann.

C. K. Mann – Funky Hi-Life

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Nov 22/04

Big-band Broadway

Matt Yanchyshyn @ 11:23

Africa Dances - 1972A few posts ago I mentioned that highlife started out as more of a big-band thing, ie orchestras and horn sections rather than rhythm guitars. Something about my Monday morning coffee makes this kind of sound fit the bill for today’s post.

The Broadway Dance Band is a classic big-band highlife group out of 1950s/60s Ghana. I wish it was easier to find bands and concerts featuring this kind of music these days since if you put a few whiskeys in me I love dancing to the stuff. High-heeled ladies and guys in white-collared shirts wilting in the humidity, sleeves rolled up.

Got this track off that great 1972 pan-African compilation, Africa Dances. I was going to post another track off this album today but I’m a touch shy on bandwidth so I might wait until tomorrow. Stay tuned.

Broadway Dance Band – Broadway Special

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