Tabla Beat Science - Tala Matrix (2000)
Posted by Sisca Cute Love U in *Asia and Middle East*, *Europe*, *Music*, *North America*, England, India, U.S.A. on Saturday, March 28, 2009
«The North Indian drums know as the tabla were said to have been invented in the 13th century by Amir Khusrau, a disciple of the Sufi saint Hazrat Nizemuddin Aluya. At the time, Khusrau sawed a pakhawaj (a single two-headed wooden drum) in two. Though no one may never know exactly why Khusrau felt it necessary it to saw a pakhawaj in half, his act gave birth to the tabla. Since that time, the
Lokua Kanza - Wapi Yo (1995)
Posted by Sisca Cute Love U in *Africa*, *Music*, Congo (Democratic Republic of ) on Friday, March 20, 2009
Pascal Lokua Kanza was born in Zaire, the first of eight children. After his father died tragically while captaining a ship at sea, Kanza helped provide for his family by taking part-time jobs while he was still in school. Setting aside a few hours each day to teach himself guitar, he soon began playing with friends in local bands. As he got older, his approach to music grew more serious. After
The Roots of Chicha - Psychedelic Cumbias from Peru (2007)
Posted by Sisca Cute Love U in *Music*, *South and Central America*, Peru on Friday, March 13, 2009
An amazing compilation! Guaranteed: you’ll love Chicha! «Chicha started out in the late 60’s, in the oil-boom cities of the Peruvian Amazon. Cumbias Amazonicas, as they were first known, were loosely inspired by Colombian cumbias but incorporated the distinctive pentatonic scales of Andean melodies, some Cuban guajiras, and the psychedelic sounds of surf guitars, wah-wah pedals, farfisa
Jean-Luc Ponty - Tchokola (1991)
«Every eight years, it seems, Jean-Luc Ponty picks himself up, gives himself a good shake, and switches direction. In 1967, he made his first life-changing visit to the U.S.; 1975 found him going solo permanently as a jazz/rock icon; 1983 marked a switch to sequencer music; and in 1991, Ponty discovered African music. Taking advantage of the huge interest in African music in France, Ponty
Le Palm-Jazz de Macenta - Les Palmes du Succes (1979)
A great and very hard to find Syliphone (SLP 73) release from Guinée-Conakry. More to come!«Guineans celebrated the dawn of a new era in 1958, waking up to their newly won independence. But once the celebrations had died down, President Sékou Touré was faced with a harsh reality. After years of French cultural influence, the former colony had totally lost touch with its musical heritage and its