Psychedelic Sounds of West Africa

Matos_W.K.

Active member
it is in fact on Luaka Bop but I've not seen it yet myself, no other info I know of :-(

The Music in My Head/Etoile de Dakar thirded! LORD what great albums . . .
 
sufi said:
I got a copy of this album - i got the track listing but no other info
& my goodness its' a lovely one -
Orchestre Regionale du Kayes - that's a place in Mali..
& some other splendid tracks

anybod know where this compilation originated??? are there any more like this???

i'd love to see the sleeve
i checked goog but it have nothin.........#

i saw this in a record store, it's sleeve is pretty bizarre, some surfer girl against a blue tinted sleeve. looks more like one of those psych-punk records than your regular african reissue. and i heard it too! not entirely blown away, but a few good tracks. thanks for offering it up here soofi.
 

Diggedy Derek

Stray Dog
Someone else who's got the 'Music In my Head' CDs! Thought I was the only one for a while there. Thione Seck's 'Laye M'Boup' pretty much blew my head off - quite apart from the divine backing, the drums are ruff on that track. I searched out some other stuff by him, but nothing hit the spot quite like that.

I discovered those compilations completely by accident- living in Archway in London, I was talking to my neighbour who turned out to be compiler Mark Hudson. He gave me a CD, and (like you do with a new aquaintance), you think "yeah, yeah, I'll give it one listen to be polite". And that stuff damn near blew my head off.

I like the fact that it's African "pop", know what I mean? Not just dance or soul or folk music (nor merely psychedelic) but it unifies all of these things. That's my sort of pop.
 

dominic

Beast of Burden
For NYers, I came across "Psychedelic Sounds of Africa" at Kim's Video @ St Mark's Place. Didn't buy it because most of the tracks were out of South Africa (too white & 3rd-rate) and not nearly as good as the few tracks featured from places like Zambia (brilliant & singular & informed by African rhythms). Cannot remember any names of artists/bands, but the album notes indicated that the label intends to put out more albums (from places like Zambia) in the series. So I intend to keep an eye out. The album cover, as somebody stated above, has a blonde surfer chick standing on the beach
 
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dominic

Beast of Burden
Matos_W.K. said:
it is in fact on Luaka Bop

not the one that i saw, which John Bitumen also seems to have seen, on his side of the Atlantic, the album with the surfer girl on front . . . . the label was definitely not Luaka Bop. more like a specialist psych label, but with a very "generic" name -- which is why i'm at a loss as to its proper name
 
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AshRa

Well-known member
The album with the girl (wearing tights?! http://www.dustygroove.com/prip/5/9/360795i.htm) in the sea on the cover is "Love Peace & Poetry - African Psychedelic Music" on Normal Records http://www.normal-records.com/start.php. I've not really got into most of the garagey psyche on it but there is one fantastic track on there that I can't get enough of - "Cool Sounds For Heads" by Abstract Truth (cheezey name I know!) COSMIC JAZZROCK of the highest order! :eek:

PS Dominic you nearly hit the nail on the head with "generic" label! :D
 
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Matos_W.K.

Active member
yeah, there's a Luaka Bop comp (I read about it on Jeff Chang's blog and had seen/heard one of the tracks off an MP3 blog, forget which one--not Jeff's he doesn't upload MP3s) as well as the Normal one; they're separate.
 

iueke

Active member
on the same tip i recommend:

ASSALAM ALEIKOUM AFRICA "progressive and popular music from west Africa" vol 1 & 2 (antilles)
 

sufi

lala
closure:

clubberlang said:
Isn't the World Psychedelic Classics thing Luaka-Bop? Os Mutantes was Volume One. The website doesn't list this, but it sounds like something they would put out.
spot on!
Love’s A Real Thing, World Psychedelic Classics 3: The Funky Fuzzy Sounds of West Africa
big up from man like sfj
release date apparently not til march 2005 oops!
product-1002_1103319867_1103319867_IC2.jpg

A hip-shaking, foot-tapping compilation of psychedelic West African rock music. Delving deep into West Africa’s funky polyrhythmic take on psychedelia, this album is the third in the critically and commercially acclaimed World Psychedelic Classics series.
The twelve tracks on the record explore West Africa’s groove-heavy assimilation of the psychedelic revolution, albeit a few years (and a couple thousand miles) removed from 1967’s Summer of Love. Spanning countries such as Mali, Gambia, Benin, Nigeria, Ghana, and Cameroon, this collection spotlights a time of incredible creative fermentation, reflecting on colonialism’s more fortunate byproduct: the fascinating and unique intersection of hallucinogenic, distorted Western psychedelia and local, traditional African music. This phenomenon of Afro-Rock is what lies at the heart of Love’s A Real Thing.
The record kicks off with the funk/soul inflections and James Brown-style shrieks of Benin’s Orchestre Poly-Rythmo de Cotonou Dahomey, followed by Gambia’s Super Eagles, with their electric keyboards, sitar-like guitar and affinity for pedal effects, updating progressive fusion with African roots in the title track. Known for wearing Sergeant Pepper-style uniforms, Super Eagles was a hugely popular group – their cover of Hey Jude was as well known in Gambia as the original. Cameroon’s Manu Dibango provides insight into the altered state element of psychedelic music through a moody, atmospheric marimba-based theme from the Senegalese film “Ceddo.” Representing Mali, Sorry Bamba’s masterful arrangement of keyboard, brass, and electric guitar, “Porry,” modernizes a comic, self-aggrandizing drinking song.
No. 1 de No. 1 de Guinea’s elaborates a transcendentally rhythmic groove with Cuban-influenced trumpet and Hendrix-styled guitar, and, given the time, an unusually restrained and effective use of the wah-wah pedal in “Gualira Ven.” From Nigeria, Lagos-based William Onyeabor’s “Better Change Your Mind” juxtaposes politically conscious lyrics condemning the imperial powers of the time with a thumping bass and soaring keyboards. A frequent collaborator with ex-cream drummer Ginger Baker in the early 70s, Nigeria’s talking drum specialist Gasper Lawal concocts a dreamy percussion-heavy chorus-chanting paean with “Awon-Ojise-Oluwa.” Closing out the record, ten-piece Malian band Orchestre Regional de Kayes, led by Harouna Barry, hint at yet another cultural transmigration with the Arabic-tinged vocal rounds of “Sanjina.”
Luaka Bop’s celebrated World Psychedelic Classics series began in 2000 with Volume 1: Brazil, a compilation of the inimitable genre-melding Brazilian band Os Mutantes, entitled Everything Is Possible! Volume 2: California Soul, released in 2001 as the third solo record from multi-instrumentalist Shuggie Otis (Inspiration Information), successfully reintroduced Shuggie to the world at large.
tracklist here suggests my copy is missing a track or 2 so maybe not closure after all....
 

sufi

lala
meanwhile, in same vein, been appreciating at super high volume the utterly fantastic:
Super Biton de Segou & Super Mama Djombo#
highly recommended! :D
 

sufi

lala
bumping my old favorite thread

I have another ID request:
i have this album called 'Afro Mix'
it's lush, really afro = kinky funky & jazzy, kinda 70's feel but with some groooovy disco echo effects, i can't tell if it's one group or several, some sounds solid west african afrobeat, maybe tony allen or even fela hisself, some swahili lyric, some sunny ade influence, some could even be saff afrikan for all i know???.... my question of course, what is dat pleeeeease???

Track List as follows:
Fever
Africa
Kyen Kyen Bi Adi Mawv
Yala
Orera Oljigbo
Pem Dwe
Greeting
Ikon Alla
Kita Kita
Agboju Logun
Ja Fun Mi
Yebo Edi Pachanga


I did post up Kyen Kyen Bi Adi Mawv as the last post on my now demised blog a couple of months back, and i'd love to drop some more online ... got no space or conexion right now, but lemme know if anyone's interested

love & peace
soofka
 

jambo

slip inside my schlafsack
Have people been checking the Analog Africa releases of 70s afro-funk from around Benin & Togo?

Afro-beat, funk, highlife, disco, soul, latin, psych...

There's a couple of mixes to be had up on their blog, I think The Wire hosted one of them originally. Also this insanely groovy video of the Orchestre Poly-Rythmo de Cotonou.

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Analog_Africa-Selection_Vol_1_vb.jpg

Download Vol. 1

Analog_Africa-Selection_Vol_2-1.jpg

Download Vol. 2
 

zhao

there are no accidents
i have 2 volumes of "psych sounds of west africa". not sure if either one is what the original post or any of the other people are on about... all i know is that it is some of the most beautiful and wickedest shit i have ever heard on this and every other earth in all the millennia of my dimensional travels.
 

hucks

Your Message Here
What about these African Pearls compilations,Mali 70, Congo 70 or this one? Anyone know much about them, or able to recommend one above the others?
 
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