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African Scream Contest: Raw & [VINYL]
 
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African Scream Contest: Raw & [VINYL]

Various Vinyl
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Vinyl (30 Jun 2008)
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Label: Analog Africa
  • ASIN: B00165RDJY
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 55,214 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Product Description

BBC Review

In the 1970s there was no 'world music'. Benin was a Marxist republic recently born out of Dahomey and Togo was in the first decade of what would turn out to be the epic dictatorship of General Gnassingbé Eyadéma. Unless you were born in one of these countries, you'd never have got to hear the voodoo funk music that was being conjured up in what must be two of the richest cultural melting pots on the planet.

Fusion is almost as abused a term as folk. But this is what it sounds like. Pick a track. Mi Kple dogbekpo, the opener, has Cuban brass, a Congolese chorus, a psychedelic riff shaped solely for shaping. On the next one, Mi Ma Kpe Dji, the spirit is blues, but moulded by James Brown and Nigerian High Life. It's A Vanity is more soul, more sex. The band on this, as well as two other tracks, is the Orchestre Poly-Rythmo de Cotonou, who took the Afro sound to new levels by ensuring that even while they copied Western rhythms, there was always a fiery injection of Beninese passion or, when relevant, politics. Their big hit, Gbeti Madjro - track five here - was written during a period of turmoil and stirred up its own revolution in the local music scene.

Ouidah, on Benin's Atlantic Coast, is home to a large Brazilian community - the Agoudas, descendants of slaves who returned from Brazil at the end of the 19th century. They brought back dances and proto-samba sounds, which worked their way into the mix in the 70s.

These artists also heard French chanson, Johnny Hallyday - an icon in the West African university scene - US funk, as well as local rhythms on the radio. Out of this chaos, comparable at the time to the far more widely known Brazilian coastal music scene, came great riches. Everything, somehow, gels. Why, it's harder to fathom. Few of these musicians were trained, and all had to learn how to blast their way through out-of-tune solos and off-beat drummers. Perhaps it's the screams and the psychedelic state that holds together the random elements and disparate talents. After all, Benin is the birthplace of Vodun, as in voodoo, which was all about melting pots and losing yourself in wild traditional rhythms such as Sakpata, Sato, Agbadja, Tchenkoumé, to name only a few.

Africa Scream Contest - what a title - is the third compilation to come from Analog Africa compilation. Like the others, this disc proves that music doesn't have much truck with geopolitics. When New York slicksters thought they were at the centre of the universe - Studio 54, say - these bands were taking the coolest parts of funk, soul and disco, reinventing it and, at the same time, transforming their own music and culture. A lot of the reaction to West African blues has focused on origins and a going-back-to-roots, but the groove in Benin and Togo was far deeper and far more inventive than that. --Chris Moss

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CD Description

Amazing collection of Psychedelic Afro Sounds from Benin & Toga finally available on extremely LIMITED gatefold vinyl double LP. 'Stunning!' Side A Lokonon André & Les Volcans - Mi Kple Dogbekpo / Picoby Band D’Abomey - Mi Ma Kpe Dji / Gabo Brown & Orchestre Poly-Rythmo – It’s a Vanity / El Rego et Ses Commandos Side B Se Na Min / Napo De Mi Amor et Ses Black Devil´s - Leki Santchi / Orchestre Poly-Rythmo - Gbeti Madjro / Roger Damawuzan - Wait For Me / Ouinsou Corneille & Black Santiagos - Vinon So Minsou / Orchestre Super Jheevs des Paillotes Side C Ye Nan Lon An / Tidjani Kone & Orchestre Poly-Rythmo - Djanfa Magni / Discafric Band - Houiou Djin Nan Zon Aklumon / Le Super Borgou De Parakou - Congolaise Benin Ye Side D Vincent Ahehehinnou - Ou C’est Lui Ou C’est Moi / Les Volcans De la Capital - Oya Ka Jojo

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
No Contest 25 April 2010
By degrant TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
On current form Analog Africa are unlikely to fall foul of the Trade Misdescription Authorities for this fantastic release is raw, psychedelic, likely to provoke a scream of joy or astonishment and very, very fine. There is little to add to the above two reviews. Analog's first six releases have been my musical discovery of 2010 and ASC is the ideal place to start. The music is indeed a melting point and all the stronger for it and makes much western funk of the same (or indeed any) period tinny, plastic and disposable. ASC provides incredible quality and value for money over its 70 minutes. The whole product is lovingly compiled from the evocative sepia-tinged photos and engaging and informative sleevenotes to the incredible consistency of output. There are no weak tracks but newcomers can do no worse than the opening "Mi Kple Dogbekpo" with its rousing call to arms refrain and almost mariachi-sounding brass or "It's a Vanity" by Gabo Brown & (the very wonderful) Orchestre Poly-Rythmo. Brown's wonderfulm rich voice soaring over that incredible backing track. In short, African Scream Contest: Raw & Psychedelic Afro Sounds from Benin 7 Togo does what it says on the tin and then some. Wonderful.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
...anyone can move to this!

I can only re-iterate what the first reviewer has said. Influences from James Brown, High-life and Voodoo added to the local sounds of Benin and Togo make for a thrilling album. There are some fabulous 1970's African compilations around at the moment and this is another. Classic sounds from the cradle of music.
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28 of 32 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
I almost choked on my cornflakes in delight when I put this record on.

Samy Ben Redjeb has certainly done some hardcore searching, sifting through thousands of dusty vinyl stored in scorpion-infested warehouses to put together a compilation of such high quality it's left me scraping around for superlatives. I'm trying to think of ways to fault this record to provide some balance but, in truth, the best I can come up with is the usual problem with compilations, particularly African ones, in that each track leaves me begging for more of the same artist, yet with little clue as to how I'm going to get hold of it.

That aside, it's also pretty difficult to describe. Imagine mooching about in Benin or Togo [I think I need to revisit these countries and do some musical exploration of my own], looking East and West at your more illustrious neighbours. I'm hungry. A dollop of Juju, a smattering of Highlife, mix it all up with Afrobeat sauce and sprinkle in some funk and soul from the States. Maybe add a little Congolese guitar, just to taste, and a tiny bit of the prevailing Cuban sound. Hmm. Something's missing. Oh yeah - whack in the meat; local styles and beats such as Sato, Agbadja, and...BAM! The result is a musical feast that will blow you away and make you want to shake your derrière in the kitchen window without a care in the world about what the neighbours think.

From the very first track, this album explodes into life and doesn't give up. It comes highly recommended. More, please!
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