Blogtrotters

Friday, January 24, 2014

Faytinga - Numey [2000] [eritrea]




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Dehab Faytinga






         Faytinga comes from the Kunama people, one of Eritrea''s many tribes, where women enjoy equal rights with the men. Her father was war hero Faïïd Tinga, and at the age of fourteen she had already joined her country''s armed struggle for independence from neighbouring Ethiopian rule. Faytinga grew up surrounded by her uncles and aunts singing and playing instruments, in accordance with the Kunama tradition. Her dream was to be a singer, and it came true when she was sent to entertain the troops at the front, using her songs as a message of hope and determination. 

         Faytinga composes her own material as well as performing work from well-known Eritrean poets and composers, playing the krar, a small lyre, in accompaniment to her songs. An accomplished and elegant dancer as well as talented singer, Faytinga is a leading figure and source of inspiration for the men and women of her country. In 1990 she undertook a tour of the United States and Europe as a member of an Eritrean group, touring for the first time as a solo artist in 1995 when she released her first album on cassette. It took until 1999, and an appearance at the Africolor festival, before she recorded her first CD. 


       Unlike many leading female vocalists from Europe, Africa, Asia and yes, even the Americas, Faytinga is her own auteur, not the creation of an ambitious marketing-savvy producer. 
       She adapted the ritualistic songs "Numey" and "Kundura" from traditional lyrics and music, and she also integrates the verse of Eritrean poets Agostino Egidio, Arodi Tulli, and Agostino Petro into fresh and metrically varied music fleshed out by the tastefully sparse arrangements of Joel G., who blends traditional instruments and female chorus. Brought in to the Studio Adamas in the capital city of Asmara in April of 1999 to help arrange and engineer this compelling recording, Joel G. leaves no stamp of external ego upon these smoothly crafted studio sessions.

       Faytinga's aural vision of Eritrea, from ancient to modern manifestations, is well worth making time for. As a battle-hardened ambassador of peace and creative growth, with the artistic intuition to make expressive use of her country's multi-lingual elements, she recalls another young woman at the far end of the Red Sea, Phalestinian poet-diva Aml Murkus. Murkus, whose own debut recording AML/HOPE presents an Arabic canvas of a historically rooted new nation being born, similarly stresses the creative potential of a bio-regional cultural scene that includes all tribes, rather than excluding those on the wrong end of nationalistic, rather than, racial or tribal enmity. Let us hope Faytinga is the harbinger of an Eritrean cultural renaissance.



01. Faytinga - Numey (3:29)

02. Faytinga - Milobe (3:31)

03. Faytinga - Amajo (4:00)
04. Faytinga - Lagala Fala Fesso
05. Faytinga - Kundura (3:24)
06. Faytinga - Aleyda (4:36)
07. Faytinga - Alemuye (4:14)
08. Faytinga - Milomala (4:15)
09. Faytinga - Asamen Gana
10. Faytinga - Salada God (4:27)



Faytinga:  vocals 
Arbisha:  percussion

Hassan:  krar
Wasi:  wata
Kahsai:  krar bass
Arodi:  bengala
Chachi:  krar bass (Track 4 & 5)
Adengo, Ahmed, Jacob:  Backing Vocals (Track 8)

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Trio Kazanchis - Amaratch Musica [2012]





        The Trio Kazanchis manages to produce a hi-energy mix which finds it's roots in ethiopian groove, having traditional melodies and songs as a starting point. However they can as easily follow a melodic line and traditional rhythm as drop it and letting the dynamics of the moment decide. 




      Improvisation, a hardly known angle in traditional Ethiopian music, plays a substantial part. The sometimes Hendrix like krar mixes great with the pure farfisa sound, Wyatt resonant, and Fabien's forward drumming style. 



        These three musicians already succesfully explored their common musical interests on stage in January 2009 in Addis. 




1. Trio Kazanchis - Nanu nanu ney (7:47)
2. Trio Kazanchis - Hay loga (3:41)
3. Trio Kazanchis - Bertukane (4:16)
4. Trio Kazanchis - Ayne hulgize yesasaleshal (5:15)
5. Trio Kazanchis - Ende eyerusalem (5:10)
6. Trio Kazanchis - Rumba amhara tche belew (6:39)
7. Trio Kazanchis - Qeddus mekina (6:13)
8. Trio Kazanchis - Etetu beredegn (8:40)



 Personnel: 


Jeroen Visser   (vocals, baritone saxophone, 
farfisa, organ)

Fabien Duscombs    (vocals, drums)
Mèssèlè Asmamaw   (krar, vocals)

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Sahra Halgan - Somaliland [2012] [somalia]





         Great-granddaughter and granddaughter of traditional singers, Sahra has been singing the repertoire inherited from her ancestors since her childhood. Despite her parents' disapproval and the discredit attached to women musicians in her native Somaliland, she has grown up and has started her career accompanying bands and playing in musicals.

       When the war burst out in 1988 in Somaliland territory situated in north-eastern Somalia and formerly a British protectorate "Little Sahra" (Sahra Yart) commits herself and sings by the Walalo Hargeysa's sides, soldiers fighting for the independence of their country. On the front lines, Sahra acts as nurse for the Red Cross. In the middle of the jungle, she sings to allay the sufferings of the wounded soldiers. 

          "Little Sahra" then becomes "Sahra the combatant" (Sahra Halgan), a nickname given to her by a separatist radio of the country. In a tight social and political context, she runs off the country in 1992. 






                Political refugee settled in Lyon, she is still actively supporting the cause of her country, self-proclaimed independent in 1991, but so far unrecognized by the international community. 

            Since then, she is considered as an absolute musical icon of the country and as the voice of the Somalilandese community dispersed to the four corners of the world. Her unique and atypical vocal identity has largely contributed to this recognition. 

        Characteristic of the territories of eastern Africa, where the influences of the Middle-East and of Africa are intermingling, her voice surprises by its suppleness, its timbre and its originality; combining throat-voice, tribal inflexions, ululations and oriental ornamentations. Since her arrival in France, Sahra Halgan has staged her atypical route and her musical family inheritance with the complicity of African musicians settled in Lyon. 



       After the release of her first album in 2009, she has covered the stages of Europe and of the world, and she has endeavoured to make the very unrecognized somalilandese culture discovered by the European audience. "I haven't left Somaliland to go sightseeing, I didn't had the choice" says Sahra, in one of her song.  

         True ambassadress of her country's music, Sahra sings the nostalgia, the memory and the rips of the exile. With lightness and in shows full of emotions, she becomes a vibrant echo of Somaliland and sings love, peace and war. On stage, this great east-African voice with an incredible stage presence has a gift to take the audience to a unique journey where good mood and shared smiles are blending...

Sahra Halgan   (lead vocal)
Aymeric Krol    (percussions, chorus)
Mael Saletes    (guitar, chorus)



01. Sahra Halgan - Nabad (2:04)
02. Sahra Halgan - Gaadh (3:30)
03. Sahra Halgan - Hadagan (4:32)
04. Sahra Halgan - Botor (3:08)
05. Sahra Halgan - Deeq (5:06)
06. Sahra Halgan - Somaliland (3:10)
07. Sahra Halgan - Ahaa, Ahaa, Ahaa (6:07)
08. Sahra Halgan - Teeri (4:29)
09. Sahra Halgan - Matis (3:10)
10. Sahra Halgan - Mataan (3:42)
11. Sahra Halgan - Qaraami (3:46)


v.a. - Hasabè [2012] [ethiopia]





        Absolutely killer compilation of Ethiopian R&B from the golden age of Ethiopian music. 

     Classic performances by Lemma Demissew, Tilahoun Gessesse, Seifu Yohannes, Bahta Gebre Heywet, Teshome Meteku, Mahmoud Ahmed & Alemeyahu Eshete

      All songs never reissued on vinyl before. A nonstop party record that we can recommend without any reservations. The 3rd LP in continuing series of releases culled from the monumental Ethiopiques series.  









01. Lèmma Dèmissèw - Astawesalèhu (2:30)
02. Tilahoun Gèssèssè - Yèhagèré Sheta (3:52)
03. Sèifu Yohannes - Mèla Mèla (3:26)
04. Bahta Gèbrè-Heywèt - Gizié (4:01)
05. Tèshomè Meteku - Hasabé (3:57)
06. Mahmoud Ahmed - Aynotché Tèrabu (4:04)
07. Lèmma Dèmissèw - Adrashash Tèfabegn (2:52)
08. Alèmayèhu Eshèté - Ayalqem Tèdenqo (3:20)
09. Bahta Gèbrè-Heywèt - Tèssassatègn Eko (4:06)
10. Tèshomè Meteku - Gara Ser Nèw Bètesh (3:12)


Imperial Tiger Orchestra - [2010] - Live in Amsterdam's Occii, 20/11/2009]

originaly posted at : http://noiseproblems.blogspot.com/




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01. Imperial Tiger Orchestra - Etu Gela (5:12)
02. Imperial Tiger Orchestra - Che Belew (5:55)
03. Imperial Tiger Orchestra - Emnete (6:01)
04. Imperial Tiger Orchestra - Djemeregne (6:33)
05. Imperial Tiger Orchestra - Lebesh Kabashen (5:50)
06. Imperial Tiger Orchestra - Yedao (7:20)
07. Imperial Tiger Orchestra - Aha Gedawo [feat. Etenesh Wassie] (6:36)
08. Imperial Tiger Orchestra - Shinet (6:39)
09. Imperial Tiger Orchestra - Lale Lale (5:28)
10. Imperial Tiger Orchestra - Imperial Tiger Orchestra 10 (10:04)


Monday, January 20, 2014

Alamin Adbulatif [or Abdeletif or Abdellatif] - Fatna Zahra [eritrea]






          Another great eritrean singer. Alamin is the role model for every new and upcoming Eritrean singers.

         Unfortunatelly I can't find any decent piece of information about Alamin Abdulatif, or Abdelatif, or Abdellatif. But, here is the music, and that's the main thing.

          Nine untagged songs, nearly an hour of beautiful eritrean music in modern arrangements.