Blogtrotters

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Arki Sound - Arki Sound [2015] [usa+eth]






Arki Sound




Arki Sound - 'Jazeta' (Tezeta)



Influenced by the classic recordings made in Ethiopia in the 1960s and 1970s, Arki Sound performs music for your dancing and listening pleasure.



























01 - Arki Sound - Bemen Sebeb Letlash (5:31)
02 - Arki Sound - Ere Mela Mela Dubby Spoil (2:51)
03 - Arki Sound - Ere Mela Mela (5:02)
04 - Arki Sound - Gaddis Addis (4:18)
05 - Arki Sound - Hedetch Alew (3:26)
06 - Arki Sound - Jazeta Love a Dub in Outer Space (5:29)
07 - Arki Sound - Jezeta (6:32)
08 - Arki Sound - Kulun Mankwalesh (5:22)



Formed in New York City in 2009, Arki Sound consists of:

Marcus Cummins - alto and soprano saxophones
Frank Marino - drum kit
Samson Kebede - bass
George Taylor - guitar
Andy JordanTexas - tenor (emeritus)









Nazarenes - Rock Firm [2008] [ethiopia]



   R   E   U   P   L   O   A   D  






       The Nazarenes sound is a fresh and vibrant blend of Roots-Reggae with an array of melodies and savvy arrangements that are complimented by haunting vocals. The music is both spiritual and inspirational and carries a much-needed message of love, hope, pride and respect for one another.






       Their debut album "Orit" was released in 2001 by Insteel Sounds and the much anticipated second album "SONGS OF LIFE"  was released in Europe (autumn  2004) by Heartbeat/Rounder Europe. The album is also released in USA & Canada (summer 2005) by Heartbeat label.  

     Their music is a unique and powerful addition to the ever expanding Diaspora of reggae music as well as a stunning tribute to the talent and dedication of this duo.  

       Since the release of, Orit, Nazarenes has built up a solid reputation throughout Europe and have consequently developed large and devoted followings of fans.  The duo is especially well known in Europe and their unique talent has also gained them recognition in England, Canada, U.S.A. and the world wide reggae scene.  After the release of their first album, Nazarenes have been touring and performing at many of the larger festivals in Europe, such as, Summer Jam (Germany), Roskilde festival (Denmark), Oslo world music festival (Norway), Rototom Sunsplash (Italy) and Uppsala reggae festival (Sweden), to name few. Their powerful stage presence and extraordinary musical arrangements has won them the title of being one of "The most excellent, hypnotic and unforgettable" live act of every festival and concert in which they perform.






        Growing up in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia in the mid 70´s among a large close-knit family, the two brother’s love of reggae distinguished them from their peers. Reggae was considered underground, not mainstream, and was not featured on the radio or played in the cafés and clubs that dotted the city.  Despite the scarcity and the lack of due promotion, the hypnotic rhythms and conscious message of the music engulfed the heart and soul of the entire Tewolde family. It was around this time that 12-year-old Medhane received his first guitar and began to scratch. The course of the Nazarenes was set.
       Over the years many precious experiences have been gained. In the 80´s, Medhane and Noah played with various bands in Europe (mainly Sweden and Germany) with Medhane on guitars and lead vocals and Noah on bass and back vocal.
       In the 90´s, Medhane teamed up with some well known Jamaican Reggae bands including Iqulah, Culture Knox and Mamma Booker (Bob Marley´s Mother!) for a European and African tour. 





       At this time, Noah took up lead singing and in 1992 he was discovered in Gothenburg, Sweden.  A solo record deal with Virgin Records followed along with the release of three singles, one of which became a big hit in Sweden. In 1994 Noah´s debut album was released through Virgin Records under the name Anbessa.
       In 1996, Medhane and Noah reunited their forces and engaged on a new venture, which encompassed their own style and vibe as well as their spiritual and conscious views of life. 
      The culmination of this partnership is the phenomenal Nazarenes, musical pioneers that are going forward to blaze a trail for a music that they have made their own. 







01 - Solid As A Rock 
02 - Same Shit 
03 - Don't Let Me Down 
04 - Roots 
05 - Let's Chill Down 
06 - Walking In The Rain 
07 - Crash Dem Wid Love 
08 - I Wanna Shout Loud 
09 - Your Time Is Up 
10 - Marvellous 
11 - Our World 
12 - We Stand Firm 
13 - Jungle


Michael Belayneh - Ante Godana [2005] [ethiopia]



   R   E   U   P   L   O   A   D   





       For Michael Belayneh, becoming a musician was not something that happened with a stroke of luck, it was a dream he lived through his teenage years. Michael, who was fully intent to realize his dream, first took to the stage, to perform for a live audience, at the Concord hotel as a replacement for an English music singer. From that day on, his music career was off to a promising start. A variation of the stories we are usually told, Michael Belayneh chose to lead the life of a musician rather than pursuing other occupations. 






       He originally graduated from Bahirdar Poly Technique University which then was followed by a degree in Political Science from the Addis Ababa University. The singer who was born and raised in the heart of Ethiopia, Addis Ababa, performed with various bands in Addis as a part timer, until he finally answered his real calling and become a full time musician. 


     The HIV awareness campaign song, "Madebabes Yekir" as it was known by the public, was his first exposure to a very large audience. This melody for this very popular song was written by this gifted artist and was performed in collaboration with various popular young Ethiopian musicians. Being inspired by the song and the reaction of the public, he immediately started working on his first album. He became an instant sensation across Ethiopia after making his debut album “Ante Godana” in 2005. The album which was written and produced by Michael Belayneh was composed by Elias Melka. The overwhelming support from music fanatics made the album a huge success. The songs had been on the most requested lists of both local TV and FM stations since the album’s release.

       After signing up with Adika Communication and Events, a company who has been termed by many as the rising star in the entertainment industry of Ethiopia, Michael Belayneh is all set to drop his second studio album in the market. Titled “Nafekeot ena Fiker”, meaning “yearning and love”, Michael Belayenh’s new album is ready to capture the heart of music lovers once more. Done with delicacy and innovative creativity this album took 2 years to complete. With 13 mesmerizing tracks Michael is ready to share his love for music with the world. This new album features the works of celebrated artists like Geberkerstos Desta and Tewodros Tsegaye, along with other works of aspiring talents. The music is arranged by Michael Hailu, who has also shown his exceptional ability in arranging music through the works of Teddy Afro, Abel Mulugeta and Zeritu Kebede. Full of passion and love, it’s easy to envisage that “Nafkot ena Fiker” will become a thriving hit.

       Michael’s works are done under the concept of delivering better sound, mostly thinking of quality music, believing the audience is in search of good music and new feelings. The singer who is rarely at a loss for words when he talks of his passion for music, writes the melody for most his songs.

      As a leisure pursuit, Michael Belayneh prefers listening to music, reading, spending time in the company of his friends and enjoys the serene feeling of driving on a long, quite road. 

       He’s grateful for all his fans for their love and support throughout his music career and is sure that the new album will meet up their expectations.




01. Michael Belayneh - Neggeregn (4:27)
02. Michael Belayneh - Lekas Lebego New (6:22)
03. Michael Belayneh - Mesenbet Degu (4:25)
04. Michael Belayneh - It'ebik'ishallo (5:09)
05. Michael Belayneh - Ante Godana (4:54)
06. Michael Belayneh - Yefik'ir Mirch'aye (5:33)
07. Michael Belayneh - Yemin T'al T'al (4:54)
08. Michael Belayneh - Liyewa Liyew (4:41)
09. Michael Belayneh - Sik'e Ishenjishallo (6:42)
10. Michael Belayneh - Hullum T'iru Yihonall (4:58)
11. Michael Belayneh - Mushiraye (4:24)
12. Michael Belayneh - Salayew Beker (4:44)
13. Michael Belayneh - Sayish Esasalehu (5:11)


Thursday, March 26, 2015

Abud Mu'tazz - Ethiopian Soul & Jazz Selecta! [ethiopia]




Abud Mu'tazz, São Paulo

Abud (SP/BR) Dj, crate digger and producer highly influenced by Jazz, 70's Funk, Latin Soul and Afro Brazilian music.






      The Middle Eastern music has always been present in my life. My mother, born in Aleppo, Syria, put K7 tapes of Arabic music when I was little. I had my first contact with the Ethiopian music some 10 years ago, when a friend put a CD written with no name and no cover to listen. At that moment, I was totally mesmerized by this music, with a Semitic dialectlike the songs that my mother listened. It was kind of James Brown singing in a different Arab progress with mysterious scales and very powerful metais. 

       A arrangements from that day, I began to research and figure out where it is coming this kind of music, until one day I heard a vinyl collection made by a French label and there were the answers to my questions. Had finally found the source of that mysterious music. Ethiopia came directly! 

       After my discovery, names like Alemayehu Eshete, Mulatu Astatke and became part of my set in jazz dances, at the time of the Berlin Club, in Barra Funda, where he was residing. Even without understanding what is said in the song, the way these artists sing is very expressive. It is essential as repertoire and cultural background to the development of my personal production. This mix down to my song search of Ethiopia, a very specific material selected especially on vinyl for you to travel without leaving your seat.



Abud Mu'tazz, São Paulo


Abud Mu'tazz - Ethiopian Soul & Jazz Selecta! (38:07)



Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Bill Laswell / Sacred System - [2002] - Book of Exit - Chamber 4 [usa+eth]








      It's difficult to think of a musician more prolific than Bill Laswell. Every year, this guy's name comes on the spine of three to seven albums, not to mention being buried in the credits of probably a dozen more. His brilliance isn't really up for debate-- the sheer consistency of his releases guarantees that-- but after a while, consistency can get a bit numbing. Laswell is excellent at what he does, but truly definitive statements, like the amazing Invisible Design, are rare in his catalogue; his best work is spread out over too many discs to count, instead of being concentrated in one place.




Bill Laswell / Sacred System - Ethiopia




      This is where Laswell's project, the preposterously named Sacred System: Book of Exit; Dub Chamber 4, comes in. Over the years, Laswell has released a veritable pantsload of dub-themed releases, and this new one follows in the much the same vein: deep bass, slow tempos, cavernous echo, and a nebulous sense of composition. As dub releases goes, it's fairly minimal; while there aren't piles of freaky samples-- in fact, there's really no clutter at all to speak of-- it's nothing Laswell hasn't explored many times before.


       The album's six tracks are split evenly between Laswell-composed tests of a dub autopilot machine he's apparently been working on, and three songs he wrote with Ethiopian singer Ejigayehu "GiGi" Shibabaw. While Laswell's chilled-out dub instrumentals aren't bad by any means, they don't hold a candle to the vocal tracks; I'm not sure what language GiGi is singing in when she leaves English behind (Ethiopia has six major languages-- the principle being Amharic-- and several more minor ones), but in the context of the music, it's beside the point, as her mellifluous delivery is ultimately what cuts through the dubby haze.


        Beyond GiGi herself, there's a certain drive to the three tracks she sings on that seems missing from the others. Percussionists Karsh Kale and Aiyb Dieng are consummate craftsmen, but on the dub tracks they're limited to a small window, making it difficult for them to break things up with the virtuosity they're known for. They're given a freer hand on the vocal tunes, though, which invariably results in a much more palpable sense of urgency and fire.


      Ultimately, it's most interesting to think of what could come of a full-scale collaboration between GiGi and Laswell: as it stands, half of this album is electrifying, the other merely passable. Under usual circumstances I might recommend this, but if you don't already own Laswell's essential releases like Psychonavigation, Invisible Design, or the various and excellent records by his other projects Praxis, Tabla Beat Science, Material, and Massacre, Sacred System can easily wait. If you're reasonably well versed in Bill's oeuvre, proceed as you wish, but know what to expect: Laswell dub by-the-numbers.



  1/  Ethiopia - (Laswell,Shibabaw) (6:14)
  2/  Lower Gound - (Laswell) 7.34
  3/  Shashamani - (Laswell)  7.29
  4/  Bati - (Laswell,Shibabaw) 7.47
  5/  Land of Look Behind - (Laswell) 6.45
  6/  Jerusalem - (Laswell,Shibabaw) 12.29



Bill Laswell - bass, guitar, keyboards 
Ejigayehu "GiGi" Shibabaw - vocals 
Karsh Kale - drums, tabla
Aiyb Dieng - percussion



..................................................................................

REVIEWS :


       One of the most prolific men in music, Bill Laswell doesn't release albums under his own name as often as he once did, which makes Book of Exit, the fourth in his "Dub Chamber" series, especially worthy of attention. While the previous "Dub Chamber" releases leaned more toward hard Jamaican-style dub music, with instruments dropping in and out and plenty of reverb and delay, this is altogether a different beat, in large part due to the vocals of Ethiopian singer Gigi. And what Laswell, Gigi, drummer/tabla player Karsh Kale, and percussionist Aiyb Dieng end up with is really ambient dub -- something lighter and more flowing because it adapts itself to the vocals. And Gigi is in excellent form, possibly better than on her own debut, whether on "Ethiopia" or the memorable, beautiful "Jerusalem," which mixes a slight R&B inflection with dub for something outstanding, beautiful, and ethereal. Laswell's light hand at the controls (even the disc's heaviest track, "The Lower Ground," is hardly the stuff of Lee "Scratch" Perry and King Tubby) works subtly -- shifts happen gradually, making for a sense of movement and focus about the pieces. And his work on guitar, bass, and keyboards is as accomplished as his colleagues. Slightly unearthly but always lovely, this dub chamber is a place worth exploring.
Chris Nickson (courtesy of the All Music Guide website)


.................................................................................


       Mr. Bill Laswell, one of the world’s busiest producer/performers is at it again. This fellow’s got his fingers in so many diverse musical pies of his own and others (who’s baking he supervises) it’s dizzying – and therein lies the rub, bub. With all the stuff he puts out (under his own name or a nom de musique) - not even counting the myriad sessions he produces - Laswell may as well have his own Disc of the Month Club, the downside being all the output can’t all be good. But he’s thrown us a curve w/ his latest, and it’s a humdinger.

       The latest in his Sacred System: Dub Chamber series, Book of Exit, is something of a radical departure from the others. They all feature dense, dark, jazz-, reggae- and Middle Eastern-inflected dub – similar approach here, but this ‘un lets a bit of light in. For one thing, it’s got a vocalist: the excellent Ethiopian singer “Gigi” Shibabaw, who has an entrancingly high, translucent, ethereal voice (a wee bit like Flora Purim), with strong Middle Eastern/North African overtones (though with a heart-rending touch of modal Irish-ness on the closer “Jerusalem”), though she does not overdo the melisma common to most Arabic singers. This stuff is as heavily rhythmic as before (re: the other fine discs on R.O.I.R.) and Laswell still uses the holy language of Dub to communicate, but it’s not as ominous and bass-heavy, more spacious and a little brighter. The instrumental sounds seem to gently, gracefully soar over (and occasionally down) yawning chasms. Laswell plays a few guitar lines encompassing shades of both West African guitar music and the late Jerry Garcia. You can actually listen to this one in the daylight, while the other volumes are definitely for night or darken rooms. (That’s not a put-down, btw.) This particular Book I’ve been able to sit through twice in one sitting, and there’s not many discs out there that have that power. Highly Recommended, this one is.

Mark Keresman (courtesy of the JazzReview.com website)

....................................................................................


       Bill Laswell is one of those "everywhere-at-once" musicians—producing, engineering and playing bass on countless albums for other artists, as well as maintaining an absurdly prolific release schedule of his own music. This album is mysteriously billed as 'Dub Chamber 4,' and since I haven't heard the first three Dub Chambers, I'm questoning my qualifications to write this review. However, this album does bear quite a resemblance Laswell's 'RadioAxiom: A Dub Transmission' album, a collaboration with Jah Wobble released early last year. Like that album, 'Book of Exit' is a highly polished series of superlative ethnic music workouts, utilizing heavily percussive dub as a backbone. This strategy has worked for Laswell many times before, and it works here again. Three of the six tracks contain beautiful, serpentine vocals by Ethiopian singer GiGi, who also sang on 'RadioAxiom'. GiGi's seductively epic vocal style works wonderfully in this context, but as Laswell's music always floats dangerously close to New Age/Worldbeat territory, it's difficult for me to completely surrender to its beauty. There is something a little enraging about white westerners who shamelessly co-opt the music of other cultures and blend them into a super hi-fi pastiche that loses its meaning and context, and serves as stereo test fodder for thousands of yuppie bachelor pads. The only things that save Laswell's music from being relegated to this hall of shame are his incredible grasp of composition, subtlety, and his ear for rich, captivating production. It is this amazing ear that transforms the opening track "Ethiopia"—a combination of cleanly plucked acoustic guitar, tabla, multitracked voice and echo chamber—from an easy cliché into an alarmingly beautiful experience. Most of the album follows this same basic formula, until things get a little bone-shaking and mind-bending towards the end, with the one-two punch of "Shashamani" and "Land of Look Behind." The album concludes with the long-form heroic pop of "Jerusalem," an achingly lovely paean to an ancient holy land, rife with war and division. GiGi sings mostly in English this time, and her sad and timely refrain of "Jerusalem, Jerusalem/You are so undone/Oh, what have you done...?" leave no doubt of this album's worthiness.


courtesy of the Brainwashed website




Melkamu Tebeje - Greatest Hits [2001] [ethiopia]








       When talking about the pioneers of Ethiopian music, there are artists who never fail to get mentioned. One such artist is Melkamu Tebeje





Melkamu Tebeje - Besak Bechaweta





          Born in the Sidamo region of Ethiopia in 1946, Tebeje has had an incredible music career with over 30 years of music to his name. Known for such songs as Awassa Langano, Baburu and Dehna Hugni, Tebeje and his brand of culturally influenced soul music has influenced many Ethiopan and international artists.




01 - Melakamu Tebeje - Techewach Nech Chebcheb (6:00)
02 - Melakamu Tebeje - Dehna Hugni (7:20)
03 - Melakamu Tebeje - Libe Berha New (3:37)
04 - Melakamu Tebeje - Be-Inba Teleyayen (4:08)
05 - Melakamu Tebeje - Ande Amet Wededkuat (3:22)
06 - Melakamu Tebeje - Negn Wey Lanchi Kifu (5:37)
07 - Melakamu Tebeje - Tabot Yimeslal (7:41)
08 - Melakamu Tebeje - Anchi Temari (3:12)
09 - Melakamu Tebeje - Lela Indaygebabet (3:44)
10 - Melakamu Tebeje - Sintun Asiefnew (4:01)
11 - Melakamu Tebeje - Initarek (3:52)
12 - Melakamu Tebeje - Alguaguam (4:22)
13 - Melakamu Tebeje - Akuri Bahl Alegn (2:51)




Friday, March 20, 2015

AIYE #60 : Mikael Seifu - Africa In Your Earbuds [ethiopia]




       Mikael Seifu is an Ethiopian electronic music producer & performer. Seifu fuses both the secular Ethiopian music of nomadic folk musicians, known as Azmaris, and the sonics of Tobia with garage & his own dream brew, which he calls “Ethiopian electronic.”

     Born and raised in Addis Ababa, Seifu attended the French school Lycee Guebre-Mariam as a child, and went on to study music production & the music industry at Ramapo College of New Jersey, a small school about 45 minutes outside of Manhattan. Here, Seifu studied under avant-garde composer, trumpeter and inventor of the “Mutantrumpet,” Ben Neill. “He opened me up to another way of thinking about music,” says Seifu.




Mikael Seifu - Yarada Lij




      After his time at Ramapo, Seifu traveled back to Addis Ababa where he currently runs his recording studio, a central hub for the perceptive & open-minded local musicians of Addis Ababa, and continues to cultivate & curate the local electronic & Ethiopian experimental music scene.

His debut EP, Yarada Lij, draws from a long list of musical influences including Ethiopian & African Folk, the Addis Acoustic Project, Ben Neill, Burial, Zion Rebels, Air, Röyksopp, reggae and R.F.


“My music is about vibrations…it does something to me and I want to immediately share that with people. It’s not Eastern, Western, Martian… it’s about that impact. If that impact is not shared, it doesn’t matter.” - Mikael Seifu





       Ethiopian beatsmith Mikael Seifu made his impressive debut this year with the 4-track Yarada Lij EP and loose single “Tuff Ruff” — a striking hybrid of house & UK garage production with secular azmari folk and sacred music traditions of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church. The Addis Ababa-based producer, who cites labelmate Endeguena Mulu, Burial, traditional Ethiopian folk, and Scott Storch as his influences, is the torch-bearing artist on the newly formed Washington, D.C. imprint 1432 R.What do you think?


      For his Africa In Your Earbuds mixtape, Mikael Seifu delivers an astounding, hazy journey through reinterpreted Ethiopian folk sounds. The producer mentions, “The last two songs are the only unaltered from the mix. I basically went for it and picked artists of Ethiopia or who are Ethiopian. That being said I used bits and pieces of their works and composed on top of that for the mix. One can say the majority of the mix is technically original stuff with it’s major influence and theme being Ethiopian folk."










Mikael Seifu - AIYE #60: Mikael Seifu (19:47)



Samples Used For Mix/Tracklist:

Ethiopian Folk

Tommy T - Oromo Dub(Cushitic Dub)
Gash Abera Molla - Enkutatash & other
Emahoy Tsegué-Maryam Guèbrou - The Last Tears of a Deceased
Addis Acoustic Project - Soundcheck at Jazzamba Club
Hailu Mergia - Ambassel
Seifu Yohannes - Yekermo Sew
Zion Rebels ft. Lion Heart Soldiers, Tiger & Black Haze -  Dess Yebelesh
Lema Guebre-Hiwot - Medina Zelessegna


Alexo & Friends -Hulètshih [2013] [ethiopia]




More dub music from Ethiopia.







 Alexo & Friends - 01 - Hulètshih 1 (04:52)  
 Alexo & Friends - 02 - Hulètshih 2 (06:56)  
 Alexo & Friends - 03 - Hulètshih 3 (03:59)  
 Alexo & Friends - 04 - Hulètshih 4 (03:11)  
 Alexo & Friends - 05 - Hulètshih 5 (03:35)  
 Alexo & Friends - 06 - Hulètshih 6 (05:56)   
 Alexo & Friends - 07 - Hulètshih 7 (04:36)





Hulètshih 5 was previously released on "Molécules 5" vol.IV (Sous le manteau, 2009) titled "Wolayta" & on Ethiosonic's "Noise & Chill Out - Ethiopian Groove Worldwide" titled "Tètchawètu!" (Buda Musique, 2011) 




Composed & arranged by Leyekun Zewdu & Alexo 

Words by Helina Feqadu 

Vocals by Sertse Fresebhat 
Washint by Yonas Asrat 
Messenqo & krar by Leyekun Zewdu 
Alexo: bass, kebero, dubmaster 



Recorded in Alliance Ethio-Française of Addis Abeba by Covalesky & Alexo in 2007 
Sound artwork by Alexo & Covalesky 



Thursday, March 19, 2015

Amen Dunes - Ethio Covers [2010] [EP] [usa+eth]




     Amen Dunes is the project of Damon McMahon, whose mix of folk, psychedelia, and atmospherics has drawn comparisons to Roky Erickson, Syd Barrett, Chris Knox, Suicide, and Royal Trux.



     

   Ethiopian pop is one of the world's strongest vernaculars, mainly because the guitars always sound wonderful and the singing is quite lovely and trembly. A far more astute analysis of one the country's vast archives is available through Buda Music's Ethiopiques, but Ethio Covers 7" by Amen Dunes is a nice entry point. Damon McMahon covers three unknown songs he found on a tape, layering sheened history and musicality with intelligence and depth. It's quite, quite lovely.




Amen Dunes - Ethio Song II


      The self description of the Ethio Covers 7″ from the Amen Dunes website is that it is a “downer take on three Ethiopian tracks culled from unnamed tapes.” 

      Anyone familiar with music from the Ethiopa knows that the pop music exported from the country is a often jubilant music that simmers with heat and high energy vocal arrangements.  These traits are not long for this world in the hands of McMahon.  He strips most the sun from these tracks and leaves a final product that is more detached than simmering. The three tracks, titled “Ethio Song I,” “Ethio Song II” and “Ethio Song III,” are sweetly meditative songs that do an excellent job of recreating the sweltering setting where McMahon first heard the originals.

      The three tracks are foggy yet sensual, with the ambient nature of the songs allowing for empty spaces where the listener can imprint their own feelings into the song (as good ambient songs are known to do).

     “Ethio” is all reverb guitars and wobbly vocals, creating an eerie ambiance that is somehow both soothing and unsettling. 

      “Ethio II” is more muted and restrained, with a haunted organ riff that dances around a skeletal drum beat and some truly warped vocal styling.  The three song 7″ is wrapped up with “Ethio III,” which splits the difference between the first two, with slightly more life than “Ethio” but more flesh and bone than “Ehthio II.”  

       All three tracks allow the listener to fall into a dream like trance and be swept up into the ether created by McMahon.  The songs still capture the vibrancy of the original Ethiopian tracks, but are surrounded and engulfed by the sonic textures that McMahon is so deft at creating.  The 7″ flies by in a brisk 11 minutes, but the time is well spent and the songs are packed full of life, showing again that the best ideas can really come from the most surprising places, even through the walls of your apartment.



01 - Amen Dunes - Ethio Song (5:03)
02 - Amen Dunes - Ethio Song II (3:31)
03 - Amen Dunes - Ethio Song III (2:26)