Sunday, January 25, 2015

Ebo Taylor - Love and Death

Much of the story of African popular music since World War II concerns African-rooted musics from the New World coming back to the Mother Land and inspiring Africans to fuse these sounds with their own traditional musics.   The sound of hard funk, as developed by James Brown and Sly Stone in the 1960s, became hugely popular in West Africa.   Afrobeat was essentially created by the great Fela Ransom Kuti, a Highlife band leader from the South West of Nigeria, who spent time in the US in the 1960s absorbing and integrating the Brand New Bag with Highlife.  There exist fascinating recordings from this period that illustrate the sound in embryo.

Afrobeat quickly moved from Nigeria to the neighboring countries of the Benin Republic, Togo, and (especially) Ghana.  Ebo Taylor was one of the first Ghanian artists to popularize and develop Afrobeat in that country, adding to that his own distinctive mix of fusion of Highlife with Funk and Jazz.  He established that sound not only through his own recordings, but through producing many other top Ghanian artists. 

Ebo Taylor is still alive and very much active.  This is his seventh decade of activity!  He was already a working professional musician in the 1950s, and was already leading his own band in the early 60s.  He first came into contact with Fela Kuti in 1962 while residing temporarily with his band in London.   His classic recordings from the 1970s and 1980s were reissued not long ago on a highly recommended package: Life Stories: Highlife & Afrobeat Classics 1973-1980.  

Following this period, Ebo Taylor kept a rather low profile on the music scene for a while, but became active again in the first decade of the new century, culminating in his triumphant Love and Death album, which is posted here.  This is pure Ebo Taylor with a crack band.  Fine music!

Ebo Taylor moved to London a few years ago to pursue his career further there.   When I moved to Nigeria, he was still working and playing the clubs in Accra, Ghana.   I had a chance to see him and meet him there, and the experience was unforgettable.  Enjoy!


  






  

8 comments:

Preslives said...

http://www53.zippyshare.com/v/3g3RrMx7/file.html

LAZZ said...

Thanks, PresLives.

A relief to my trials. Being not much excited by the French-Nigerian woman called Asa, I resolved to listen and vet and make my judgements before forwarding any more contemporary chart-African on to the King of Cake for sharing. Right now, that has me listening to all the 2 Face Idibia tracks I have ended up - which so far all seem pretty much what the kids today know as R&B. Seems as if the current post-WWII phase of New World influencing back to Africa might be a creature of MTV.

I am straining not to be too snotty in my attitudes but the insistence of advancing monoculture is a great disappointment - nothing at all like the new Hip Life stuff that attracted my initial interest.

Ebo Taylor will fix me up, I'm sure.

Preslives said...

Thanks, Lazz. I am also not as crazy about Asa as some other people are, although I do like her. "Jalier" has become something of a modern day pop anthem in Nigeria.

Not all 2face is good, and some of his earlier stuff is much more R&B than Highlife. The Nigerian content has steadily increased over time. One of my favorites from 2face is Ihe Neme. Quite a beautiful song (IMO), and with unmistakable Nigerian context. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_vTxQW8k-I

Preslives said...

This is an even more beautiful song: P-Square singing with 2face: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vQ8hgfG5MzY

Preslives said...

And this is more beautiful still - from P Square's last album (with Rick Ross supplying the Rap): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lY2H2ZP56K4

LAZZ said...

A file full of P-Square waits near the far end of the alphabet - in between Petit Pays and The Sagittarius.
Grateful to have escaped the horrible fake snare sound on Face 2 Face and Grass 2 Grace tracks.
A serious curse for a putative producer.

Next up on my listening list is two and a half dozen tracks from 9ice.

Anonymous said...

Seriously groovin'! Gracias!!
-peacenik

christophe said...

Thanks. Nice to see this kind of sound here. Bridges between Africa and and black american music are always welcome.

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