Nov 17/07
Before they juju’d
I revived Benn loxo with some Nigerian 70s rock courtesy of Soundway yesterday, so we’ll continue along a similar path with another in my long series of Original Music posts.
Today’s tracks come off one of my favourite Original Music releases that I’ve heard to date, Azagas & Archibogs – The Sixties Sound Of Lagos. The compilation features a collection of Nigerian Igbo, Yoruba and other highlife groups from Lagos. The songs have been (slightly) remastered from 45rpm records released during the early to mid-1960s.
It’s interesting to hear some good Yoruba highlife from this period, before Juju and Afrobeat took over. Most of the Nigerian highlife I know is from the Igbo east of the country, a region that for me, maybe aside from Ghana, produced Africa’s best music during the 1960s. However, it’s clear after listening to this compilation that Lagos’ Yoruban groups definitely had a good thing going as well.
Charles Iwegbue & His Archibogs – Okibo
Eric Akaeze & His Azagas – Adunni

There’s something really sexy about the word ‘rumba’. It’s also a bit of a misnomer in that over the years it came to represent a variety of Cuban-influenced musical styles popular across Africa, not all of them ‘rumba’ in its original sense.
A really quick post before I have to run into work.
One of my favourite Benn loxo readers, one who is responsible for introducing me to a lot of the music on this site, recently turned me on to Ignace De Souza.
I happened to sit beside
Nice to meet yet another Benn loxo
More today from the seemingly endless of supply of great music on the Original Music series.
I’m a total sucker for West African music that starts with a heavily accented, spoken introduction. Maitre Gazonga’s classic of classics, Les Jaloux Saboteurs, springs immediately to mind. (As does dancing our faces off to that track in Brittany last weekend, rocking sunglasses, punch, flip-flops and a whole lotta mustache.) Franco and Sam Mangwana’s Cooperation is another example of a classic spoken intro.
Great time in and around the Place Ste Marthe last night at Paris’ Fête de la Musique. From North African jams and South American dance sessions to aggressive street drummers and some damn fine Andean chicken.
These past few posts have generated a heavier than normal volume of e-mail from Benn loxo readers. Thanks- I always appreciate hearing from you. One note this morning from Johnathan really stuck-out. He runs a site devoted to his 78 collection (that’s right, 78s, not 45s) that includes some real gems, a lot of them African. Check it out over at