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专辑名称: The Best of the Black President
创作艺人: [Fela Kuti]
音乐流派: World|世界音乐
专辑规格: 1碟13首
出品公司: Knitting Factory Records
发行时间: 2009/1/1
官方标价: £8.49 (会员免费下载)
域名语言: [en] (AI检测)
曲目介绍:
Lady
Shakara (Oloje)
Gentleman
Water No Get Enemy
Zombie
Sorrow Tears and Blood
No Agreement, Pt. 2
Roforofo Fight
Shuffering and Shmiling
Coffin for Head of State
I.T.T. (International Thief Thief), Pt. 1 & 2
Army Arrangement
O.D.O.O. (Edit Version)
详细介绍:
Fela Anikulapo Kuti (1938 -1997) was the father of Afrobeat, a political counter-power opposed to the Nigerian government of his day. He was a legendary figure of pan-Africanism and the godfather of contemporary African music. This release could only ever offer an introduction to his prodigious body of work (57 albums). But the 13 tracks on The Best of the Black President give an admirable overview of his output. The collection starts with two tracks which marked one of the peaks of his career: the 1972 release Shakara (Oloje). He made that album with his best ever line-up, Africa %27 70, whose rhythmic keystone was the drummer Tony Allen. Gentleman which followed one year later, was a devastating broadside at Africans who imitated western fashions and lifestyles. This marked the singer-saxophonist%27s début on the piano, an instrument to which he brought a unique approach.
Zombies, an anti-militarist anthem recorded in 1976, was another high point for the Black President. Sorrow Tears and Blood was written 18 February 1977, when the army and the Lagos police force stormed the Republic of Kalakuta, where Fela and his relatives lived. No Agreement, Pt. 2, another afrobeat classic, only the second half of which is presented here, also dates back to 1977, when the American saxophonist Lester Bowie, who co-founded the Art Ensemble of Chicago, came to join Africa %2770. On Shuffering and Shmiling (1978), Fela attacks the power of the monotheistic religions that colonised Africa. Meanwhile, on 1980%27s Coffin for Head of State, he blames the Nigerian government for the death of his mother. This generous compilation ends with an edit of O. D. O. O. (Overtake Don Overtake Overtake), one of his last hits, from 1990. © Benjamin MiNiMuM/Qobuz