Blogtrotters

Sunday, January 14, 2018

Mahmoud Ahmed - Ere Mela Mela [1976] vinyl version [ethiopia]




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        Mahmoud Ahmed sang at weddings and family gatherings from a very early age, but while he was still a child, his family became homeless when his father lost his job. Forced to work as a shoeshine boy, the young Ahmed’s education inevitably suffered and he was expelled from school for poor attendance. Following his headmaster’s advice that his only possible salvation lay in music, Ahmed soon became known locally for his powerful voice as well as his skills as a dancer of the twist and calypso. He worked as a painter’s assistant and kitchen porter at the Arizona Club, a fashionable Addis Ababa nightspot. One evening, he begged his way into performing a song with a band at the club, receiving rapturous applause and launching his musical career. He became the vocalist with the Imperial Bodyguard Band in the early 60s, subsequently remaining with them for 11 years.

        Ahmed’s first album was released in 1972 and he has since made numerous recordings for the local market as well as performing with many of Ethiopia’s top bands and musicians. In 1986, the Belgian record label Crammed Discs released Erè Mèla Mèla, a compilation of Ahmed’s recordings from the 70s and one of the first albums of modern Ethiopian music available in the west. Critical response was highly favourable and a European tour followed a year later. Soul Of Addis was originally released in Ethiopia in 1985 and, while not as intense as the 70s recordings, nevertheless offered a fine showcase for Ahmed’s spellbinding voice. The Paris, France-based label Buda Musique has also released several Ahmed albums in their Éthiopiques series.

       Something of a local institution, Ahmed still performs regularly in Addis Ababa, as well as owning and running a record label and a nightclub. He sings in a variety of local and international styles but consistently returns to the tizita (a slow and intense local form of the blues). His multi-octave voice is similar to that of Pakistani singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan (who died in 1997), a veritable force of nature that combines the ecstatic devotional pleading of qawwali with the precise tone and phrasing of Western jazz singers.






Mahmoud Ahmed  - Ere Mela Mela (Full)





1 - Mahmoud Ahmed - Sidetegnash Negn/Samiraye
2 - Mahmoud Ahmed - Indenesh Gedawo
3 - Mahmoud Ahmed - Bemin Sebeb Litlash
4 - Mahmoud Ahmed - Abay Mado/Imbwa Belew
5 - Mahmoud Ahmed - Atawurulogn Lela
6 - Mahmoud Ahmed - Ohoho Gedama
7 - Mahmoud Ahmed - Ere Mela Mela/Metche New
8 - Mahmoud Ahmed - Fetsum Dink Lidj Nesh



10 comments:

2b0rn0t0b said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
2b0rn0t0b said...




http://www.mediafire.com/?p9m3i5m32dliud4

Anonymous said...

mediafire Said: Permission Denied."Embwa Belew" by Mahmoud Ahmed may be available for download from Amazon.

try 4shared.
anyway. thanks.

2b0rn0t0b said...

can't beleive !!!! they removed link in an hours. fu..ing internet police!

Deepአቢሲኒያ said...

I'm lucky..thank you so much !

Anonymous said...

thank u so much! - stay strong against babylon

Dedé said...

Just found your blog. Amazing job, thanks for this one.
Greetings from Brazil!

2b0rn0t0b said...



@ Dedé : tanks, man ..enjoy in researching


Unknown said...

fantastic! thank you!

subharmonia.blogspot.com said...

Link is dead. Reup?