7/30/2025

Franco, Sam Mangwana, Orchestre T.P.O.K. Jazz – The Very Best Of Franco & Sam Mangwana Vol. 1: Où Est Le Serieux?


Chants : Josky Kiambukuta (1949-2021) & Michel Boyibanda (1940-2024)

Orchestre T.P.O.K. Jazz
Band, 1956-1993

OK Jazz, later renamed TPOK Jazz (short for Tout Puissant Orchestre Kinshasa, "all-powerful Kinshasa orchestra"), was a Congolese rumba band from the Democratic Republic of the Congo established in 1956 and fronted by Franco. The group disbanded in 1993, but begin again in 1996. Location The OK Jazz band was formed in 1956 in Léopoldville (now Kinshasa), in what was at the time the Belgian Congo. On independence in 1960, the Belgian Congo became the Republic of the Congo, later Zaire and is now known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo. At one time in the late 1970s and early 1980s the band grew to over fifty members.During that period, it often split into two groups; one group stayed in Kinshasa, playing in nightclubs there, while the other group toured in Africa, Europe and North America. History 1950 - 1959 The musicians who started OK Jazz included Vicky Longomba, Jean Serge Essous, François Luambo Makiadi, De La Lune, Augustin Moniania Roitelet, La Monta LiBerlin, Saturnin Pandi, Nicolas Bosuma Bakili Dessoin and vocalist Philippe Lando Rossignol. They used to play at Loningisa Studios in Kinshasa as individual artists, before they got together to form a band in June 1956. The name OK Jazz originated from the bar in which they played which was named OK Bar, owned by Oscar Kashama. The new band played regularly at a specific studio in the city during the week and on some weekends they played at weddings. In 1957, the lead vocalist, Philippe Lando Rossignol, quit OK Jazz and was replaced by Edo Nganga, from Congo-Brazzaville. Later in the same year, Isaac Musekiwa, a saxophonist from Zimbabwe joined the band. Up to that time the band's leadership was shared between Vicky Longomba, Essous and Franco. 1960 - 1969 In the early 1960s Vicky Longomba and Jean Essous left OK Jazz to join African Jazz. Franco then became the leader of the band. He recruited vocalists Kwamy Munsi and Mulamba Joseph Mujos. Simaro Masiya Lutumba joined OK Jazz in 1961. Essous was replaced by saxophonist Verckys Kiamuangana Mateta. In 1962 OK Jazz visited Nigeria on their first foreign tour. Later that year, Vicky Longomba rejoined the band. Lola Checain, a vocalist who had left earlier also came back. Around this time, the band changed their name to TPOK Jazz. TP stood for "Tout Puissant" (all mighty). Band membership had increased to over twenty. The quality of their music had improved to where they could challenge African Jazz for the position of Congo's premier group. Franco's music appealed to ordinary people mainly because it discussed issues that affect the common man on a daily basis. Franco led other Congolese musicians in using new technology to produce sounds of much higher quality than in any other part of Africa. The new technology included electric guitars, amplifiers and basses. Congo had now assumed the premier position as Africa's leading music nation. During the late 1960s, Kwamy Munsi and Mulamba Joseph Mujos led nine other musicians in a mass defection from TPOK Jazz. A few months later, saxophonist Verckys Kiamuangana Mateta also left. Franco recruited Rondot Kassongo wa Kassongo to replace Verckys. He also brought in solo guitarist Mose Fan Fan. Fan Fan had a new style of guitar-playing called sebene, which was more danceable. This style came to be known as Sebene ya ba Yankees. Fan Fan also composed a number of extremely popular hits including Dje Melasi. 1970 - 1975 During the 1970s Franco and TPOK Jazz consolidated their position as one of the two giants of Congolese popular music, along with Grand Kalle & l'African Jazz. Many musical stars emerged from one or both of these bands. TPOK Jazz was staging concerts all over Africa, including places like Chad and Sudan. The band's finances also improved tremendously. Franco brought on board the composer/vocalist Sam Mangwana. Sam has a Zimbabwean father and an Angolan mother, but was born and raised in Kinshasa, DRC. He spoke English, Lingala, French and Portuguese, along with a number of African dialects. His recruitment energised the band and infuriated Afrisa, where he came from. In early 1970 Vicky Longomba, who was then acting as Co-president of the band left. Mose Fan Fan, the band's flamboyant solo guitarist also left. Then Youlou Mabiala quit and formed Orchestre Somo Somo with Fan Fan. Soon after that Tshongo Bavon Marie Marie, Franco's biological brother died in an automobile accident. The band fell upon hard times with low record sales and as sparsely attended concerts. Franco was grief-stricken and despondent and stopped playing music for some time. Upon his return, he recorded several songs in memory of his late brother. He then began to rebuild the band. This coincided with the restructuring of Congo by President Mobutu Sese Seko under the program of 'L'Authenticite'. The name of the country was changed from Congo-Kinshasa to Zaire. Franco adopted the names "L'Okanga La Ndju Pene Luambo Luanzo Makiadi". During this time, vocalist Mayaula Mayoni came on board, along with guitarists Mpundi Decca, Gege Mangaya, Michelino Mavatiku Visi and Thierry Mantuika. Franco then appointed Simaro Lutumba, as the chef d'orchestre. Sam Mangwana composed his hit Luka Mobali Moko around this time. In 1973 Josky Kiambukuta Londa, a seasoned composer and vocalist joined the band. In 1974, Youlou Mabiala returned to TPOK Jazz. However, Sam Mangwana left and started a solo career in Cote d'Ivoire. Ndombe Opetum was recruited from Afrisa International to replace Mangwana. He came along with hornsman Empompo Loway. In 1975 Franco released yet another classic hit Bomba Bomba Mabe. 1976 - 1979 By the mid 1970s Franco was one of Zaire's wealthiest citizens. He invested heavily in real estate in Belgium, France and in Zaire. He owned Kinshasa's four largest and most popular nightclubs, the biggest of which was Un-deux-trois. TPOK Jazz played there every weekend to a packed house. In 1976, vocalist Zitani Dalienst Ya Ntesa and guitarist Gerry Dialungana were convinced to join TPOK Jazz. Mayaula Mayoni composed a song, Cheri Bondowe which was released in an album that also included Alimatou and Bisalela. In 1977 Franco introduced a handicapped female singer known as Mpongo Love. Despite her handicap which was the result of childhood polio, she went on to become one of the continents most popular singers on the strength of her charming, vivacious voice and her songwriting. Papa Noel Nedule, an accomplished guitarist joined soon after that. Later that year the band represented Zaire in what was Africa's largest ever cultural event, The Festac which was staged in Lagos, Nigeria. In 1978 Franco released two songs Helene and Jacky, that were deemed "indecent" by the Attorney General of his native country. After a brief trial, he was convicted and sent to prison, along with other band members, who included Simaro Lutumba. He was released two months later, following street protests. That same year, Mayaula Mayoni released Nabali Misere (I am married to misery). He quit the band soon after, to pursue a solo career. In 1979 Franco moved his recording base from Kinshasa to Brussels, Belgium to take advantage of superior recording facilities. Franco embarked on a tour of eight West African countries. That same year Josky released Propretaire. 1980 - 1989 This period marked the pinnacle in the success of the band and that of its leader, Franco Luambo Makiadi. The band was releasing an average of four albums a year during this period. The rival Congolese bands, Afrisa International, Orchestre Veve and African Jazz could not keep up with the competition. Life was good.[10] In 1982 Sam Mangwana returned briefly and release an album with Franco called Cooperation. Franco also released several albums with former nemesis Tabu Ley. In 1983 TPOK Jazz toured the United States of America for the first time. That year the song Non featuring Madilu System and Franco, alternating lead vocals, was released. In the mid 1980s the band continued to churn out best sellers including Makambo Ezali Borreaux, 12,600 Letters to Franco, Pesa Position, Mario and Boma Ngai na Boma Yo. By this time, Madilu System had taken over as the lead vocalist. In 1986, Josky Kiambukuta and Zitani Dalienst Ya Ntesa, two vocalists who felt they were not getting enough prime time exposure led another mass exodus to form their own band. Around this time, Simaro Lutumba released an album outside the OK Jazz system, featuring the song Maya. During the same time frame, Malage de Lugendo, a vocalist, was recruited. Also Kiesse Diambu ya Ntessa from Afrisa and female vocalist Jolie Detta came on board. At the beginning of 1987, Franco released a 15-minute song Attention Na Sida (Beware of AIDS). The song is sung mainly in French amid heavy African drums and a kaleidoscope of thundering guitars. The song is moving even if one does not understand all the words. Also in 1987, TPOK Jazz were invited to perform at the 4th All-Africa Games in Nairobi, Kenya. In one of the eight albums that the band released in 1987, called Les On Dit, Franco introduced two new female vocalists Nana Akumu and Baniel Bambo. In 1988, Josky and Dalienst re-joined the band. 1989 was a challenging year for the band. Franco's health was in obvious decline. He had by now moved permanently to Brussels. He did not play much and when he did, could only manage about twenty minutes. The band started to fall apart with the defection of Malage de Lugendo and Dizzy and Decca who returned to Kinshasa to pursue other opportunities. Later that year Sam Mangwana teamed with Franco to release the album Forever. The album sleeve carried a photograph of Franco who appeared emaciated, and obviously in ill-health. It turned out to be Franco's last album. On 12 October 1989, Francois Luambo Makiadi died in a hospital in Brussels, Belgium. His body was flown back to Zaire. After four days of mourning, he was given a state funeral on 17 October 1989, by Mobutu Sese Seko's government. 1990 - 1993 Following the death of Franco, the band members, led by Simaro Lutumba, Josky Kiambukuta, Ndombe Opetum and Madilu System approached the Franco family and agreed to split earnings; (70% musicians and 30% family). This arrangement worked from August 1989 until December 1993. During that period, the band released an album Hommage A Luambo Makiadi, made of songs recorded before Franco died. Josky released an album featuring the song Chandra. Simaro released an album that featured the hit record Eau Benite, sung by Madilu, and another album Somo which included the records Marby composed by Josky, and Mort Viviant Somida composed by Madilu System. The band continued to tour both in Africa and in Europe. More defections beset the band but the majority of the musicians hung in there. Then in December 1993 it all came crashing down. The Franco family was not satisfied with the profit-sharing arrangement in place at the time. The family wanted more money. They could not reach an agreement with the musicians. The musicians returned the musical equipment to the family and went on to form a new band, Bana OK. Thus ended the life of one of Africa's most famous bands of the 20th Century, that lasted over thirty-seven years; from June 1956 until December 1993. Band members TPOK Jazz had many members over the nearly thirty-eight years of its existence. The list of band members reads like the "Congolese Music Hall of Fame Inductees". Many members came and went, with many coming back, some on more than one occasion. Here are some of the members of the band. Francois Luambo Makiadi Aime Kiwakana Empompo Loway Henri Bowane Isaac Musekiwa Jean Serge Essous Josky Kiambukuta Londa Lola Checain Madilu System Malage de Lugendo Mayaula Mayoni Michelino Mavatiku Visi Michel Boyibanda Mose Fan Fan Mpudi Decca Ndombe Opetum Papa Noel Nedule Philippe Lando Rossignol Rondot Kassongo Sam Mangwana Saturnin Pandi Simaro Lutumba Kiamuangana Mateta Vicky Longomba Wuta Mayi Youlou Mabiala Zitani Dalienst Ya Ntesa Albino Kalombo Moniania Roitelet Camille Feruzi Céli Bitshou De La Lune Diatho Lukoko Dizzy Madjeku Djo Mpoyi Edouard Lutula Gege Mangaya Gerry Dialungana Hubert Dihunga Djeskin Jean Malapet Jean Tashamala Piccolo Djeskin Jeef Mingiedi Johnny Bokelo Kwamy Munsi La Monta LiBerlin Leon Bolhen Bombolo Lunuma Mbemba Matalanza Mulamba Joseph Mujos Nestor Diangani Ngiandu Kanza Nyoya Fwala Paul Ebengo Dewayon Pedro Dele Thierry Mantuika Kobi Adamo Seye Kadimoke Alphone Epayo Antoine Armando Brazzos Baniel Bambo Barami Miranda Celestin Kouka Christophe Djali Edo Nganga Flavien Makabi Mingini Celi Bitchoumanou: Georges Kiamuangana Guillaume Mbembe Jean-Felix Pouela Jolie Detta Kapitena Kasongo Kiesse Diambu Ya Ntessa Kongi Aska Lassa Carlito Makonko Kindudi Makos Milanda Barami Monogi Mopia Mpongo Love Nana Akumu Bosuma Bakili Dessoin Simon Moke Tchandala Kosuana Vieux Kalloux Dénis Bonyeme Lokombe Ntal.


Franco, Sam Mangwana, Orchestre T.P.O.K. Jazz – The Very Best Of Franco & Sam Mangwana Vol. 1: Où Est Le Serieux?

Label: Ngoyarto – none
Format: 12 x File, FLAC, Compilation
Country: US
Released: 2019
Style: African, Rumba, Soukous
Source: Digital


1. Alimatou 7:20
2. Assitu (Complète Originale) 10:49
3. Nabala Ata Mbwa 8:52
4. Zenaba (Studio Originale) 5:52
5. Où Est Le Serieux? 4:51
6. Luka Mobali Moko 5:45
7. Tangela Ngai Mboka Bakabaka 6:07
8. Lufwa Lwa Nkandi 5:13
9. Nzuzi 5:45
10. Lukika 5:23
11. Bamasta Bonane 4:48
12. Zenabe (Live) 7:07

7/29/2025

Ray Stephen Oche and his Matumbo – No Discrimination


A revival, a resumption, a revelation… call it as you wish, Ray Stephen Oche is now delivering his musical message: fire, fun, fury, talent and magic. This is music from the African heartland, dense, intense, a genuine fermentation of black African experience in sound, a translation of Ray Stephen’s essence into a soothing, meaningful balm for your eager auditory faculties. Such is this album of “dedications”.

Pan-African rhythms from Ray Stephen Oche -- topped with some great jazzy elements as well. The set's one of Ray's classics from the Paris scene -- a set that draws heavily from his Nigerian roots, yet also takes full advantage of the wider cultural vibe going on in France at the time -- echoes of free jazz in the instrumentation, righteous soulful elements in the vocals, and a complicated rhythmic approach that brings in plenty of funk from the other side of the Atlantic as well. The album's a killer all the way through. -Dusty Groove

Former member of Bobby Benson's group, Nigerian born Stephen Oche recorded two albums in France with his multi-ethnic band Matumbo, while recording sessions with exiled US jazzmen Noah Howard or Alan Silva. An euphorizing Afro-Jazz session!

"[...] The band is composed mainly of African musicians (especially Congolese) and also Togolese, Brazilians, Guinean, french West Indians. His main purpose is to feature the different melodies and rhythmes of Africa. [...]"
The year of issue is unknown, probably 1976.

from the liner notes
"...After the memorable "Festival De Montparanasse", in 1970, Ray Stephen Oche joined "Alan Silva and his Celestial Communications Orchestra" for several concerts and festivals. In 1971 Ray collaborated with "Noah Howard Quartet" and played for the Copenhague Radio and television, at the university of the town and at the "Montmartre Jazz Club" . After having worked extenseively in Germany and Holland. Ray comes back to Paris where he founded his "Freedom Suite Orchestra"..." 

Ray Stephen Oche And His Matumbo – No Discrimination

Label: Favorite Recordings – FVR068
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Reissue
Visit: https://favoriterecordings.bandcamp.com/
Country: France
Released: 1976 / May 28, 2012
Style: Afrobeat, Afro-Jazz, Jazz-Funk, Afro-Funk, Highlife
Source: Digital


1. Ada Ode 3:24
2. Trumpet Calls The People Of Nigeria 3:13
3. Peace Upon Kenemaland 3:51
4. At The Jazz Fountain 2:54
5. Ayipe-Assa 2:52
6. Benue Meditations 3:39
7. Owoicho Oche 6:07
8. Down Beat Special 2:32
9. Kano City Sky 3:49
10. Death Scattered Assa Village 3:12

7/27/2025

The Lijadu Sisters – Urede


"In Nigeria’s male-dominated music scene, the Lijadu Sisters were among the first — and fiercest — popular female artists, groundbreaking not only for their music (a mélange that included folky apala, funky Afrobeat and slinky disco) but also their feminism." —The New York Times

Excitement: This was a hard record to find an original copy. Having never been available for streaming or reissued, Urede is probably the most elusive and least known of The Lijadu Sisters 5 albums. -Numero Group

After decades of mystery and anticipation, The Lijadu Sisters' ultra-rare 1974 album Urede, is finally resurfacing. A true gem that has eluded even the most dedicated collectors, this album offers a long-awaited opportunity to experience the very beginning of the sister's recorded musical journey - an electrifying fusion of Afropop, Funk, and Jazz that began to define their legendary sound.


The Lijadu Sisters, consisting of twin sisters Yeye Taiwo and Kehinde Lijadu, are iconic figures in the world of Afrobeat, emerging from Nigeria's vibrant music scene in the 1970s. Born in 1948 in Jos and raised in Ibadan, their journey into music was inspired by a combination of Yoruba cultural traditions and a rich tapestry of global sounds. Their music, a unique blend of Afrobeat, funk, reggae, rock, disco, and soul, mirrors Nigeria's post-independence cultural renaissance. Their second cousin, the legendary Fela Kuti, also thrived during this era, underscoring the familial and cultural influences that shaped their sound.

The sisters' musical journey began with their mother's encouragement, leading them to write songs that resonated with themes of empowerment, societal issues, and personal experiences. Their first album, Urede, released in 1974, set the stage for their innovative approach to music. The 1976 release of Danger marked a significant milestone, with the title track becoming an impromptu hit born out of a spontaneous jam session during a power outage. This album, along with others like Mother Africa, Sunshine, and Horizon Unlimited, showcased their ability to blend vibrant harmonies with intricate rhythms, often leading with traditional Yoruba drums. Their songs addressed a wide range of topics, from love and personal struggles to political corruption and social justice.

The Lijadu Sisters' music was deeply rooted in Yoruba cultural traditions, often reflecting the role of the Ibeji, or sacred twins, in their society. Their work was a testament to their resilience in a male-dominated industry, pushing boundaries and challenging norms. Despite facing numerous obstacles, including a debilitating accident that affected Kehinde in the 1980s, the sisters' legacy endured. In 2019, Kehinde passed away, but Yeye Taiwo continues to carry their musical torch. The Lijadu Sisters' body of work remains a powerful and timeless testament to their impact on Afrobeat and global music, guided by their mother's enduring advice: “Sing about things that are happening in real time to people in the real world. There’s anger, there’s happiness, there’s marriage, there’s love. Babies come, people die, angels descend, disasters strike. Sing about those things. Those things are still happening because this is life. Do your part to make things better.” Their music continues to inspire and captivate new generations of listeners around the world.

The Lijadu Sisters - Urede

Label: EMI – NEMI (LP) 0060 / Numero Group
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album
Visit: https://thelijadusisters.bandcamp.com/
Country: Nigeria
Released: 1974 / Reissue 2025
Style: Afrobeat, Apala, Funk
Source: Digital


1. Kehinde L'o Gba Taiwo 4:43
2. Araiye Mojuba 6:25
3. Fasiribo (Apala) 6:15
4. Urede (Extract From A Story) 6:50

Credits
Composed By, Written-By – Lijadu Sisters
Engineer – Emmanuel Odenusi

Caleb Sweetback – Zion Here I Come 7''


Caleb Sweetback

Killer mid 70s heavyweight roots two sider, rare as hen's teeth..

Zion here I come x2
Home sweet home x2

I want to go to Zion
So wicked free I now
Send I forward and the Iron bird
Let I fly in the fish
Send I forward and the Iron fish
Let I sail and row down Jordan river
Let me hear you sing 

Zion here I come x2
Home sweet home x2

Wicked don't let I fool you now
Wicked don't let I do things i don't wanna do
Don't tell I you're a black oppressor 
Wicked I & I will be burning with fyah

Zion here I come x2
Home sweet home x2

(Africa) x2

Caleb Sweetback - Zion Here I Come  7"

Label: Black Spade Records – none
Format: Vinyl, 7"
Country: US
Released: 1975
Genre: Reggae
Style: Roots Reggae, Dub


A Caleb Sweetback – Zion Here I Come 4:11
B Zap-Pow & Black Intentions – Zap-Pow In Zion 4:08

7/23/2025

Mamadi Diabate Et Le Super Star International – Karambaleya Vol. 1


Deep Funky Manding Soukous

Mamadi Diabate was born in Kela (Mali) in 1946. He began working as a tailor during the sixties in Bamako where he started playing guitar and singing. Unfortunately, his career was short. He recorded very few LP's, one in 1985 with Kante Manfila and the Ambassadors and this one in 1984.

DJ Daudi
I have listened to this album a number of times and I have been struck by the song Haké.
I wonder if it is a remake or retake on Verckys' classic masterpiece Nakomitunaka?

Mamadi Diabate Et Le Super Star International – Karambaleya Vol. 1

Label: Musique Mondiale – MAD 005
Format: Vinyl, LP
Country: Mali
Released: 1984
Style: Manding Music


A1 Karambaleya 8:51
A2 Sarama 6:11
B1 N'na 8:25
B2 Haké 7:38

Credits
Leader – Mamadi Diabate

7/20/2025

African Jazz, OK Jazz, African Team, Dibango & Pepito – African Jazz invites O.K. Jazz (1961-1970)


The evolution of Congolese popular music in the 1960s and 70s is generally classified into two major schools: African Jazz & OK Jazz. The main representatives of those schools are Joseph Kabasele alias Grand Kallé, founder of African Jazz, and Franco Luambo, co-founder of O.K. Jazz. Two temperaments and ambiances, one commonly referred to as ‘fiesta’, the other as ‘odemba’, both seeking their own sublimity or ideal.

For the very first time, a compilation brings together explicitly the main protagonists of the two bands on the same album, with a collection of their songs recorded in the early sixties for the Surboum African Jazz label, in addition to three tracks made by Kallé’s bands in the late sixties.

The heirs of Joseph Kabasele and Franco Luambo kindly gave permission in Kinshasa to release this original selection on Planet Ilunga about these virtuosi of Congolese Rumba on Planet Ilunga.


There were two main protagonists in the evolution of Congolese popular music in the 1960s: Joseph Kabasele (alias Grand Kallé), founder of African Jazz, and Franco Luambo, co-founder of OK Jazz. Influenced by Afro-Cuban music, both bands can claim to have invented the template of Congolese rumba. The sound would eventually mutate into soukous and several generations of the greatest names in Congolese music at some point passed through one band or the other. Yet the two schools were subtly different in ambiance. Kallé and his band played in a style known as ‘fiesta’ while Franco and OK Jazz essayed a sub-genre known as odemba.

To the best of my knowledge, this is the first time both leaders’ work has been drawn together on one ‘compare and contrast’ compilation, featuring over 14 tracks by Franco’s ensemble and a similar number by African Jazz and its off-shoots. With the exception of three tracks recorded by the latter in the late 1960s, all date from recordings made in 1961-62 for the Surboum African Jazz imprint, the first Black-owned Congolese label, founded by Kabasele himself. As such it’s a joyous trip back to the roots and those first heady days following independence from Belgian colonial rule. - Nigel Williamson


African Jazz invites O.K. Jazz, l’âge d’or de la rumba congolaise

By Aodren, 25/05/2025

In Musique, Réédition, République Démocratique du Congo 

Il fallait bien un double vinyle pour raconter cette rencontre fondatrice, celle de deux écoles, de deux styles, de deux titans. African Jazz invites O.K. Jazz (1961–1970), c’est la bande-son d’une décennie charnière, un album-manifeste qui réunit pour la première fois les figures majeures des deux grandes familles de la rumba congolaise : l’African Jazz du légendaire Grand Kallé et l’O.K. Jazz du géant Franco Luambo Makiadi.

Ce coffret précieux, édité par le label bruxellois Planet Ilunga, ressuscite des trésors sonores enregistrés dans les années 1960, en partie en Belgique, en partie à Kinshasa. Sur la face A du premier disque — soit les sept premiers titres de la version numérique — on entend l’O.K. Jazz dans sa pleine jeunesse, capté en 1961 en Europe, dans un style encore marqué par l’odemba : ce groove lent et majestueux, porté par les lignes de guitare de Franco, qui distille une mélancolie dansante. C’est une rumba de velours, presque solennelle, où le tempo semble suspendu à chaque frappe de cymbale. La voix chaude de Vicky Longomba y dialogue avec les guitares comme dans un rite de passage.

Sur la face B, place à l’African Jazz et à son école fiesta, tout en vitalité syncopée, en chœurs lumineux, en arrangements effervescents. Enregistrés entre 1961 et 1962, ces morceaux illustrent la richesse d’un groupe qui, sous la direction de Kabasele, savait conjuguer le tumulte de l’indépendance et les élans de la modernité congolaise. L’énergie est contagieuse, les guitares plus acrobatiques, les percussions presque espiègles.

Le second disque, lui, explore le reste de la décennie. Du morceau 16 au 21, c’est l’O.K. Jazz qui évolue, s’aventure vers le bolero, ralentit le pas, se fait plus introspectif, plus lyrique. Le style s’enrichit, les arrangements se densifient, et Franco devient conteur, poète, gardien d’une mémoire collective. Puis, du morceau 22 à la fin, l’African Jazz revient pour conclure en beauté : avec des titres de la fin des années 60, moins documentés, mais toujours empreints d’un savoir-faire vocal et orchestral qui impressionne.

Au-delà de la rareté des titres et de la qualité de la remasterisation, African Jazz invites O.K. Jazz est surtout un témoignage vibrant de l’intelligence musicale de ces deux écoles rivales mais complémentaires. Deux visions de la rumba, entre fièvre et élégance, entre effervescence et introspection. Deux chemins pour dire la même chose : la beauté complexe et bouleversante du Congo des années 60.

Translated with DeepL

African Jazz invites O.K. Jazz, the golden age of Congolese rumba

By Aodren, 25/05/2025

A double vinyl album was needed to tell the story of this seminal meeting of two schools, two styles, two titans. African Jazz invites O.K. Jazz (1961-1970) is the soundtrack to a pivotal decade, a manifesto album that brings together for the first time the major figures of the two great families of Congolese rumba: the African Jazz of the legendary Grand Kallé and the O.K. Jazz of the giant Franco Luambo Makiadi.

This precious boxed set, published by Brussels-based label Planet Ilunga, resurrects sound treasures recorded in the 1960s, partly in Belgium, partly in Kinshasa. On side A of the first disc - the first seven tracks of the digital version - we hear O.K. Jazz in its prime, recorded in Europe in 1961, in a style still marked by odemba: a slow, majestic groove, carried by Franco's guitar lines, that distills a dancing melancholy. It's a velvety, almost solemn rumba, where the tempo seems to hang on every cymbal strike. Vicky Longomba's warm voice converses with the guitars as if in a rite of passage.

The B-side features African Jazz and its fiesta school, with its syncopated vitality, luminous choruses and effervescent arrangements. Recorded between 1961 and 1962, these tracks illustrate the richness of a group that, under Kabasele's direction, knew how to combine the tumult of independence with the surges of Congolese modernity. The energy is contagious, the guitars more acrobatic, the percussion almost mischievous.

The second disc explores the rest of the decade. From track 16 to 21, O.K. Jazz evolves, venturing into bolero, slowing down, becoming more introspective, more lyrical. The style becomes richer, the arrangements denser, and Franco becomes a storyteller, a poet, the guardian of a collective memory. Then, from track 22 to the end, African Jazz returns to conclude in style: with tracks from the late 60s, less documented, but still imbued with an impressive vocal and orchestral savoir-faire.

Beyond the rarity of the tracks and the quality of the remastering, African Jazz invites O.K. Jazz is above all a vibrant testimony to the musical intelligence of these two rival but complementary schools. Two visions of rumba, between fever and elegance, between effervescence and introspection. Two ways of saying the same thing: the complex, moving beauty of the Congo in the 60s.


African Jazz, OK Jazz, African Team, Dibango & Pepito - African Jazz invites O.K. Jazz (1961-1970)

Label: Planet Ilunga – PI 12
Series: Les Editeurs Congolais
Format: 2 x Vinyl, LP, Album, Compilation, Numbered
Visit: https://planetilunga.bandcamp.com/
Country: Belgium
Released: May 7, 2025
Style: African, Bolero, Rumba, Merengue, Cha-Cha, Guaracha
Source: Digital


OK Jazz - Style Odemba 1961
1. L'O. K. Jazz – Molinard Danser Cha-Cha 2:50
     Composed By – Kwamy
2. L'O. K. Jazz – Mibali Bakomi Mpasi Na Leo 2:44
     Composed By – Franco
3. L'O. K. Jazz – Soki Ye Te Nani ? “Carra” 2:40
     Composed By – Mujos
4. L'O. K. Jazz – Amida Asukisi Molato 2:50
     Composed By – Franco
5. L'O. K. Jazz – Ya Mbala 2:52
     Composed By – Franco
6. L'O. K. Jazz – Kingotolo Mbuta Ngani Mbote 2:55
     Composed By – Franco
7. L'O. K. Jazz – Muasi Ya Motema Mabe 2:44
     Composed By – Isaac

African Jazz - Style Fiesta 1961-1962
8. L'African Jazz – Para Fifi 2:40
     Composed By – Kalle
9. L'African Jazz – Clarie Télé 2:46
     Composed By – Lutula 
10. L'African Jazz – Moto Na Esika Na Ye 2:52
       Composed By – Damoiseau
11. L'African Jazz– Toponaki Bino Boyokana 2:46
       Composed By – Kalle
12. L'African Jazz – Kongo Ya Bankoko 2:45
       Composed By – Lutula
13. L'African Jazz – Kajinga Victorine 2:50
       Composed By – Dechaud
14. L'African Jazz – Mama Seba 2:45
       Composed By – Kalle
15. L'African Jazz – Ekoti Ngai Hopitalo 2:51
       Composed By – Nico

The African Jazz school - Style Fiesta 1961-1970
16. Dibango & Pepito Et Leur Formation – Pachito Eche 2:45
17. L'African Jazz – Mi Jose 2:47
       Composed By – Nico  
18. L'African Jazz – Bueno Valentina Cha Cha 2:48
       Composed By – Kalle
19. Orch. African-Jazz – Lolango Helena 6:04
       Composed By – Mathieu Kuka
20. L'African Team De Paris – Lolaka Lwa Bale 3:53
       Composed By – Essous
21. L'African-Team – Lalouma De Belen 4:26
       Cover – Don Gonzalo

OK Jazz - Style Bolero 1961
22. L'O. K. Jazz – Liwa Ya Emery 2:47
       Composed By – Franco
23. L'O. K. Jazz – Mboka Mosika Mawa 2:49
       Composed By – Franco
24. L'O. K. Jazz – Zongela Nzela Na Ngai 2:44
       Composed By – Franco
25. L'O. K. Jazz – Motema Ya Fa Fa 2:48
       Composed By – Franco
26. L'O. K. Jazz – Mbanda Mwasi Alingi 2:50
       Composed By – Franco
27. L'O. K. Jazz – Liwa Ya Champagne 2:51
       Composed By – Kwamy
28. L'O. K. Jazz – A Girl I’m Looking For 2:50
       Composed By – Isaac

Sun Ra & His Arkestra – Sleeping Beauty (Expanded Edition)



One of the more delicate recordings of Sun Ra's 28-strong Arkestra, 'Sleeping Beauty' drifts in on a cloud of cosmic dust, sounding unlike anything before or after. With drummer Luqman Ali keeping the narcotic funk, but with dreamy solos from other key Arkestra players like John Gilmore, Michael Ray, and Marshall Allen, no Sun Ra collection is complete without this LP. Inspired space-age lullaby music.

This is the great late-night Sun Ra chillout album you never knew about. The band had been working in a more groove-oriented setting off and on for over a year, as evidenced by the albums Lanquidity and On Jupiter, with both featuring prominent electric bass and electric guitar. Sleeping Beauty picks up right where On Jupiter left off, with the gentle, swaying "Springtime Again" echoing the same mellow vibe of "Seductive Fantasy" from On Jupiter. A skittering intro coalesces as different instruments pick up bits of the melody, which is then fully expressed by the horn section and ensemble vocals. It's a simple two-chord vamp, with beautiful solos that seem to embody the reawakening and rebirth of springtime. "The Door of the Cosmos" starts with a gospel-like chant and handclaps, with comments from Ra's electric piano and electric guitar. A strong bassline enters, very reminiscent of "A Love Supreme, Pt. 1: Acknowledgement," but the accompanying chant celebrates the mysteries of the unknown rather than the universal truth of A Love Supreme. This track builds in intensity, but never loses its groove or becomes nearly as raucous as the Arkestra is sometimes known for. "Sleeping Beauty" is the album centerpiece, taking up all of side two. Ra's beautiful electric piano gets things rolling, and the band falls into a peaceful groove before the vocals enter, led by the wonderful June Tyson. These songs are all built on the simplest of structures, and the playing from everyone is understated and sublime. Sleeping Beauty is truly a high point in an unwieldy discography, and something of an anomaly at the same time. There's a good reason copies of this album go for several hundred dollars on the collector's market, but it really deserves a proper release so more people can hear it. Outstanding. -Review by Sean Westergaard

Le Sony'r Ra (born Herman Poole Blount, May 22, 1914 – May 30, 1993), better known as Sun Ra, was an American jazz composer, bandleader, piano and synthesizer player, and poet known for his experimental music, "cosmic" philosophy, prolific output, and theatrical performances. For much of his career, Ra led The Arkestra, an ensemble with an ever-changing name and flexible line-up. -Wiki

Strut proudly presents a new edition of one of Sun Ra's most celebrated albums, Sleeping Beauty, reissued in its original artwork for the first time. Originally released in 1979 on his independent Saturn label, Sleeping Beauty captures Sun Ra and his Arkestra at their most soulful and serene. A masterclass in cosmic jazz, the album blends lush grooves, celestial soul, and meditative funk with Ra’s singular spiritual vision — a sound both grounded and otherworldly. The album emerged during an extraordinarily fertile period for Sun Ra in late-‘70s New York. Between 1978 and 1982, Ra “occupied” Variety Recording Studios on West 42nd Street, often staging marathon sessions following late-night Arkestra gigs around the city — from the Village Vanguard to Sweet Basil and even a wedding in Central Park. These were not just recordings; they were rituals. Ra and his core players — John Gilmore, Marshall Allen, June Tyson, Michael Ray, and others — would begin sessions mid-morning, often continuing past midnight, much to the dismay of the studio owner. Out of this creative whirlwind came some of his most enduring work, including A Fireside Chat With Lucifer, On Jupiter, and Sleeping Beauty. Across its three tracks, Sleeping Beauty showcases the Arkestra’s gentler side. From the dreamy sway of “Springtime Again” to the funk-deep uplift of “Door Of The Cosmos” and the title track’s meditative drift, this is music that floats, beckons, and unfolds. It’s a record of hypnotic beauty and quiet power — cosmic jazz for dreamers and seekers alike. This new edition features a selected version of the hand-drawn original cover, embossed with the Sun Ra logo and housed in a heavyweight card sleeve. Liner notes come courtesy of Arkestra member Knoel Scott and Sun Ra authority Paul Griffiths. Remastered by Technology Works. “Music is a language. You see, it’s not notes — it’s a language of the spirit. That’s why it’s so important.” – Sun Ra


SUN RA And His Intergalactic Myth Science Solar Arkestra
SLEEPING BEAUTY

By the late 1970s the Saturn record label had become a musical newspaper, keeping the world abreast of the latest developments in the Sun Ra story, for those people lucky or persistent enough to find the few outlets where the albums were appearing. Sun Ra was releasing more records on his own label than ever before – at least six Saturn LPs document his activities in 1979 alone. This however, is the first reissue of any 1979 Saturn album, and will be widely welcomed – Sleeping Beauty instantly became one of Sun Ra’s best loved records, and remains so to this day.

At this period, compared to previous years, Saturn records tended to document more of Sun Ra’s current work rather than older tapes. This was certainly true of one particular group of four albums released simultaneously into Saturn Records’ distribution channels within a year of being recorded: God Is More Than Love Can Ever Be, Omniverse and On Jupiter, and Sleeping Beauty. These all represented facets of Ra’s work during 1979, and between them include everything from piano trio compositions to conducted improvisations to disco music.

Sleeping Beauty features the funkier end of the Sun Ra spectrum. It is a studio recording featuring at least twenty-eight musicians, an enlarged version of the Arkestra which had just crossed the Atlantic to play the 1979 Moers festival. The line up includes both acoustic and electric bass players, and electric guitarists, and the reed and brass sections are both augmented beyond the core members of the Arkestra. The recording session which produced Sleeping Beauty also gave us Strange Celestial Road, released on the Rounder label. The two albums have a markedly different feel, in spite of the common date – according to vibraphone player Damon Choice, the differences perhaps partly stem from later post production, and the addition of vocals. All three tracks on Sleeping Beauty have tenor solos by John Gilmore which can count among his finest work. Other musicians’ work is also very worthy of note: Vincent Chancey’s french hom in particular. The overall textures of the arrangements and also the sound of this particular Arkestra, are unique, found on no other Sun Ra album: listen to the opening to “Door Of The Cosmos”, as vocals and keyboards are joined by guitars and bass, and the hom arrangements cut in around Gilmore’s solo. There are many fine such moments throughout the album.

This album features groove-oriented tracks with sublime multi-instrumental complexity, a large ensemble recording, similar to that found on Sun Ra’s Lanquidity and On Jupiter albums. Sleeping Beauty is a high point in Sun Ra’s discography. The electric guitar and bass play a critical role in driving the music, with hypnotic electric piano, organ and vibe lines that flow with gentle restraint and some beautiful sax solos from John Gilmore and Marshall Allen. This album features gospel-like vocals from the wonderful June Tyson and Rhoda Blount helping to establish the spiritual and mystical foundation of Sun Ra’s music – a totally uplifting and joyous listening experience. -Chris Trent

Album art 2021

A number of sessions recorded by Sun Ra from 1978 to 1980—issued on the albums Lanquidity, On Jupiter, and Sleeping Beauty—reflect the influence on Ra of commercial musical and production trends of the mid- and late-1970s, especially heavy, studio-enhanced dance floor grooves (traceable from soul and funk to disco), and atmospheric New Age "dream" pieces. But Ra neither surrendered to nor fully embraced these styles—he simply added these techniques to his toolkit, always stretching beyond the genres. The only aspect that eluded him was commercial success.

Sleeping Beauty (Saturn 79) was recorded in New York in June 1979 and released later that year. Like many Sun Ra albums from the 1970s and '80s, it was pressed in a limited (and unknown) quantity, packaged with generic (albeit often hand-decorated) sleeves, and distributed by Rounder and sold at concerts. Also like many releases of the period, it was known by a second title — Door of the Cosmos. Those alternate titles derived from two of the album's three tracks. Oddly, "Sleeping Beauty" had an alternate title — "Black Beauty," which was printed on some labels (and typed on others). Affirming that this release should be filed under "Alternative," the band was identified as "Sun Ra and His Arkestra" on most labels and as "Sun Ra Omniverse Jet Set Arkestra" on at least one extant sleeve.

Three additional tracks were recorded at the June '79 session: "Celestial Road," "Say," and "I'll Wait for You." Those tracks were licensed to Rounder Records, who issued them on the LP Strange Celestial Road (Rounder 3035) in 1982. (Note: The Rounder label and Rounder Distribution were related companies, but separate operations. Saturn LPs were distributed by Rounder, but were not released by Rounder. However, there were, in time, three Sun Ra albums issued on Rounder—Strange Celestial Road, Somewhere Else, and Sun Ra Sextet at the Village Vanguard—but none of the three had been previously issued on Saturn.)

Art Yard released an authorized edition of Sleeping Beauty on CD in 2010. (Those rights reverted to Sun Ra LLC in 2021.)

This digital edition combines all tracks from the June 1979 Variety studio session, along with two bonus tracks: an alternate of "Door of the Cosmos" recorded in Philadelphia at the club Grendel's Lair in 1978, and a live version of "Strange Celestial Road" recorded in Detroit in 1980. Both tracks were derived from tapes in Michael D. Anderson's Sun Ra Music Archive. — I.C. 

Sun Ra & His Arkestra – Sleeping Beauty (Expanded)

Label: Enterplanetary Koncepts – none
Format: 8 x File, FLAC, Album, Reissue
Visit: https://sunramusic.bandcamp.com/
Country: US
Released: Jul 19, 2021
Genre: Jazz
Style: Free Jazz, Big Band
Source: Digital


1. Springtime Again 9:15
2. Door of the Cosmos 9:00
3. Sleeping Beauty (a.k.a. Black Beauty) 11:49
4. Celestial Road 7:02
5. Say 12:10
6. I'll Wait For You 16:05
7. Door of the Cosmos (live Grendel's Lair, 1978) 3:06
8. Strange Celestial Road (Live Detroit, 1980) 6:41

Credits
Alto Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone, Percussion – Noel Scott
Alto Saxophone, Flute – Marshall Allen
Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Hutch Jones
Baritone Saxophone, Flute, Percussion – Danny Ray Thompson
Bass – Richard Williams
Bass Clarinet, Flute, Percussion – Eloe Omoe
Drums – Eddie Thomas, Luqman Ali, Reg McDonald
Electric Bass – Steve Clark
Electric Guitar – Skeeter McFarland, Taylor Richardson
Engineer – Mike Dacek (tracks: 1 to 6)
Flute, Bassoon, Percussion [Infinity-Drum] – James Jacson
French Horn – Vincent Chancey
Mixed By – Michael Ray (tracks: 1 to 6), Mike Smith (20) (tracks: 1 to 6), Sun Ra (tracks: 1 to 6)
Percussion – Atakatune
Piano, Electric Piano, Organ, Synthesizer [Synth], Vocals, Composed By [All Compositions] – Sun Ra
Tenor Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone, Flute – Kenny Williams
Tenor Saxophone, Percussion – John Gilmore
Trombone – Craig Harris, Tony Bethel
Trumpet – Curt Pulliam, Walter Miller
Trumpet, Vocals – Michael Ray
Vibraphone – Harry Wilson
Vibraphone, Vocals – Damon Choice
Vocals – June Tyson, Rhoda Blount

7/19/2025

Benyamin Suaeb - Funky Kromong Vol. 1



Funky Kromong is a compilation from the multitalented legendary Betawi artist Benyamin Suaeb. Consisting of ten tracks from the '70s, this compilation is rich with Benyamin Suaeb's eccentric vocals with tongue-in-cheek lyrics and walled with funk and psychedelic and traditional sounds. He made his own humorous style of psychedelic music that everyone could relate. - La Munai Records

A really cool collection of work from Benyamin Suaeb – an Indonesian artist who was as much an actor as he was a singer – a legacy that really comes through in the weirdly offbeat style of this work. The tracks are selected from Benyamin's many albums of the 70s, and they are definitely the funkiest and grooviest of the bunch – often with music that has some of the trippier touches you might expect from the cover, with a hip blend of funky rhythms, exotic organ lines, and riffing guitars – all of which accompany Suaeb's really wonderful approach to the lyrics. The whole thing is fantastic – a musical discovery we'd never have made otherwise, thanks to this collection. -Dusty Groove

Benyamin Suaeb - Funky Kromong Vol. 1

Label: La Munai Records – LMR-009
Format: Vinyl, LP, Compilation, Black Version
Visit: https://lamunairecords.bandcamp.com/
Country: Indonesia
Released: 2022
Style: Psychedelic Pop, Indonesian Music, Gambang Kromong
Source: Digital


1. Terompet 2:56
2. Asal Nguap 2:40
3. Funky Kromong 3:31
4. Empet – Empetan 2:09
5. Luntang Lantung 3:59
6. Superman 2:28
7. Takut 2:25
8. Ma, Minta Makan Ma 2:38
9. Di Undang 2:31
10. Hudjan Gerimis 2:04

7/16/2025

Death In Haiti - Bonus Disc

The original LP disc Death in Haiti: Funeral Brass Band & Sounds of Port-au-Prince (label Discrepant) presented a selection of 36 minutes from 15 hours of recordings of funerals, churches, wakes and Port au Prince ambiences. This new release 6 years later is a free addition to it, a new selection of recordings condensed into 43 minutes of brass bands, crying, masses, voices and field recordings.

The release is offered for free, any possible earned money through BandCamp will get directly to the youngest musician of the bands, living in Port au Prince in difficult conditions.

Visit: https://felixblume.bandcamp.com/album/death-in-haiti-bonus-disc


Félix Blume is a french sound artist, field-recordist and sound engineer. His work explores sound as a medium in public spaces, often collaborating with communities to create installations, actions, and videos. He has participated in numerous international exhibitions and festivals. https://felixblume.com/

Death In Haiti - Bonus Disc


1. Maestro Walter's Brass Band - Si Je Parlais 3:31
2. People Crying At The Cemetery 1:21
3. Maestro Walter's Brass Band - Travèse Dezè A 5:30
4. Singing Accompanied By The Radio 1:16
5. Hearse Horn And Youth Marching Band 2:06
6. Tuning 0:39
7. Funeral Procession - Amazing Grace 4:44
8. Maestro Nadera's Brass Band - Pardon 4:20
9. Mass 1:17
10. Maestro Walter's Brass Band - Miséricorde Insondable 1:53
11. Street Seller 1:11
12. Political Discussion At The Cemetery 1:30
13. Singing And Screaming At The Cathedral - Quand La Mer Se Déchaîne 1:59
14. Maestro Midouin's Brass Band - La Semence D'ici Bas 4:19
15. Coffin's Destruction 0:50
16. Screaming And Crying At St Anne Church 2:33
17. Maestro Walter's Brass Band, Final March - Jezi Ou Konnen 1:33
18. Common Grave At Titanyen 3:02

7/15/2025

Tumblack – Tumblack (1978)

Our first album is dedicated to all our brothers in the Antilles and to every positive soul in the univers.
Dance now to the sound of the KA Drum!!


A killer set from the French scene of the 70s – a record that begins with a highly percussive sound on side one, then adds in all sorts of cool instrumentation on the flipside. The initial tracks are wonderfully stark – lots of ka drums and other percussion – topped with some vocals from Marcel Mania, but mostly keeping a focus on the fantastic interplay between the drums. On side two, all sorts of great guests come into the mix – including Philippe Saisse on Fender Rhodes, Wally Badarou on minimoog, and Francis Cournay on tenor sax – while the group still do their thing at the core, and really keep things kicking nicely. -dusty groove

Release Notes 2025:

https://www.bewithrecords.com/

There's iconic. Then there's *iconic*.

A massive speaker-smashing release, decades overdue. It's been bootlegged - shamefully so, many times over the years - but finally we present the first ever officially licensed reissue of this truly special Afro-disco-not-disco LP from 1979. A favourite of Harvey, Antal, Young Marco and, er, every great DJ to ever play deep records ever, basically. It's not hard to see - or, indeed, *feel* why.

Gem after gem of relentless, irresistibly funky gold, it's an incredibly revelatory album with endlessly complex drum patterns and basslines to dive into, throughout. Truly, this is uniquely fire music, unlike anything else you've ever heard, based on Gwo ka music from the gorgeous islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique. A thrilling synthesis of primal, hypnotic drums - the most tribal of percussive elements high in the mix throughout - with the loping synth pyrotechnics of, amongst a whole host of other greats, Wally Badarou and bass power of disco funk don Sauveur Mallia (Arpadys, Spatial & Co.)

Originally released on the seminal French label Barclay, you'd be hard pressed to even find an original copy in nice condition anywhere, let alone for a reasonable price, so it's high time an officially licensed, remastered reissue came around. It's just the latest in a long line of Be With reissues where the music sounds like the - drop-dead dazzling - cover. This here is a true drum attack. Buy on sight!

Tumblack was a short-lived project, produced and arranged by electronic wizard Yves Hayat and it can certainly be regarded as one of the first examples of Zouk, mixing powerful disco-funk arrangements with Gwo ka, traditional music from Guadeloupe. Gwo ka is an Antillean Creole term for "big drum". You can say that again! It refers to both a family of hand drums and the music played with them, which is a major part of Guadeloupean folk music.Whilst the first side is credited to the exceptional Tumblack band, the flip is given over to "Tumblack & Friends". These weren't just any old friends. Oh no, they were the absolute cream of the French scene (think Arpadys, Voyage, Le Club, Giant, CCPP, Synthesis, Swing Family) such as Sauveur Mallia, Wally Badarou, Marc Chantereau on percussion, Slim Pezin on guitar and Jean-Paul Batailley and Pierre Alain-Dahan handling drum duties.

The urgent, frantic "Fracas" gets things moving straight away with a cavalcade of drums and percussive funk before giving way to the stratospheric "Invocation", one of the album's many, many highlights. It's effectively one long heavenly drum break, a really hard, raw, tribal drum workout without a whole lot else going on - and all the better for it! One to make you sweat, no question. Up next, "Jubilé" is announced with a bellowing accapella voice, chanting the titular name before the heaviest of kicks smashes out your system and lulls you into an absolute state of bliss for nearly 6 minutes. Whoooooosh! Rounding out the sensational A-Side, "Vaudou" is a scratchy, funky patterned drum workout which - yep, yet again - absolutely slays your neck muscles, making them snap and contract in extraordinary fashion. Turn it up!

Ushering in the B-Side, the brief, fidgety, African chant-funk of "Parlement" segues seamlessly, beautifully into "Waka", an overwhelmingly rich gem of percussive funk. You do not want this to end, once it hits its stride. For maximum heavenly drum pleasure, you'd need to go a long way than the moment "Waka" feels like it's fading out before it kick-drum-blend into the mighty "Caraïba (Intro)". It's just staggeringly good. It's a minute-long layered drum prelude to the gigantic track which follows. Indeed, "Caraïba" is arguably the best loved and most well-known cut off the LP. And with good reason...featuring that Mallia bass, warm Rhodes and clavs, synth magic, memorably alto sax lines and, of course, tribal chanting.

Another mighty super-ahead-of-its-time classic, the bouncing bass heavy synth funk of "Chunga Funk" deploys Mallia and Wally Badarou (on Mini Moog) exceptionally well. I mean, come on, that bassline is just ridiculous. Try not to move to this one. This extraordinary record closes out with the more traditional Gwo ka sounds of "Bateau La Passé", the tribal chorus making the hairs on the back of your neck stand up.

Tumblack really is a gorgeous late-70s disco-not-disco essential. It's an absolute monster that will completely blow you away; and, yes, it's as compelling and trance-inducing as the cover. The audio for Tumblack has been carefully remastered by Be With regular Simon Francis, ensuring it sounds better than ever. Cicely Balston's expert skills have made sure nothing is lost in the cut whilst the records have been pressed to the highest possible standard at Record Industry in Holland. The cover of Tumblack is so iconic and we sought special permission from original artist Hélène Majera to recreate this at Be With HQ. It absolutely zings off the print and serves as the perfect finishing touch to this long overdue re-issue.



Tumblack – Tumblack

Label: Keku Wahye Keyah – YE24002CD
Format: CD, Album, Reissue, Unofficial Release
Country: Europe
Released: 1978, Reissue 2016
Style: Gwo ka / Funk, Disco, Tribal Ambient


1. Francas 1:34
     Written-By – Marcel Mania
2. Invocation 5:03
     Written-By – Daniel Losio, Marcel Mania
3. Jubilé 5:54
     Written-By – Marcel Mania
4. Vaudou 4:11
     Written-By – Daniel Losio, Hector Ficadière, Marcel Mania
5. Parlement 1:40
     Written-By – Gérard Pitard
6. Waka 3:07
     Written-By – Daniel Losio, Gérard Pitard, Hector Ficadière, Marcel Mania
7. Caraïba (Intro) 1:13
     Written-By – Yves Hayat
8. Caraïba 3:43
     Written-By – Yves Hayat
9. Chunga Funk 4:22
     Written-By – Yves Hayat
10. Bateau La Passé 2:14
      Written-By – Gérard Pitard

7/12/2025

Bessie Jones, John Davis & The Georgia Sea Island Singers with Mississippi Fred McDowell and Ed Young – The Complete Friends of Old Time Music Concert

 

Captured in April 1965 using a Nagra tape recorder and a Sony condenser microphone by field recordist Peter Siegel, this concert is being presented for the first time. It provides a compelling glimpse at the intersection of Black folk traditions and civil rights activism.

Album review by Corbie Hill, 11 Jun 2024, https://nodepression.org/

The Complete Friends of Old Time Music Concert by Bessie Jones, John Davis, and the Georgia Sea Island Singers with Mississippi Fred McDowell and Ed Young opens with legendary ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax’s assurances that integration and world peace were imminent.

The condenser mic didn’t pick up what the mostly white audience thought of Lomax’s well-intentioned, if naive, introduction to the 1965 concert in New York City. He stood with singers whose coastal Georgia remoteness had allowed their Gullah Geechee music to develop with less white interference than that of many other Southern Black communities. Onstage, too, and lending some star power were cane fife player Ed Young and country blues guitarist Mississippi Fred McDowell.

The folk revival had given these musicians a broader platform, but they remained Black Americans living under Jim Crow’s long shadow. This concert, now presented in its entirety as a Smithsonian Folkways release, documents the sheer force of their musicianship — plus moments of cringe here and there as white academics interpreted their work rather than hearing it.

“My God is a rock in the weary land / weary land / in the weary land,” the Sea Island Singers sing in the Peter Davis-led “My God Is a Rock.” “He’s shelter in the time of storms.” In the gospel number’s chorus, the singers create rich, forceful minor chords. Nonverbal melodies and countermelodies back the verse. Beyond that, there’s little more than clapping and tambourines. Some songs also include McDowell’s acoustic slide guitar and others feature Young’s fife, yet every track on this Sea Island Singers recording feels fully realized. Deceptively effortless polyrhythmic clapping drives “Let my Children Go.” Bessie Jones leads a driving, ecstatic “Sign of the Judgment.”

“Let me buy you a house and home / if you do something for me,” Ed Young sings in his poppy, playful “Chevrolet.” “I don’t want your house and home / you can’t do nothing for me,” Emma Lee Ramsey replies in the song’s back-and-forth. It’s a swinging barebones R&B number, secular and sultry. Elsewhere, McDowell’s slide blues can be languid and spacious like “Going Down to the River” or upbeat and danceable like “Shake ‘Em on Down.”

The Complete Friends of Old-Time Music Concert has the stylistic range of a sampler and surprising sonic fidelity for something recorded 59 years ago through a single microphone. What that mic captured was the interplay and chemistry as a stage full of accomplished musicians took turns stepping to the front.

Review by: 
https://klofmag.com/ 24 April, 2024

Between 1961 and 1965, Friends of Old Time Music (F.O.T.M) brought fourteen concerts of traditional folk music, old-time country music, bluegrass, blues, and religious music to New York City audiences. The founding directors were Ralph Rinzler, John Cohen, and Israel Young. The liner notes to the 2006 Folkways compilation Friends of Old Time Music: The Folk Arrival 1961 – 1965 (SFW40160) revealed how other folk music advocates, musicians, and folklorists made significant contributions, including Mike Seeger, Alan Lomax, Jean Ritchie, and Sam Charters—they all played a major role in developing a new paradigm for the presentation of traditional music in concert. For many, this was the first time that urban “folk” audiences saw the performances by the likes of Clarence Ashley, Doc Watson, Mississippi John Hurt, Maybelle Carter, Fred McDowell, Roscoe Holcomb, and Dock Boggs.

Smithsonian Folkways have today revealed a new release, taken from a key F.O.T.M 1965 Live Concert in the midst of the Civil Rights Era:

The Complete Friends of Old-Time Music Concert by Bessie Jones, John Davis & The Georgia Sea Island Singers with Mississippi Fred McDowell and Ed Young, presents a riveting, historic look at the intersection of Black folk traditions and civil rights activism. Taken from a concert in April 1965, this recording showcases the haunting songs of the Georgia Sea Islands Singers, led by Jones and Davis–Black folk songs and spirituals that have influenced everyone from Jerry Garcia to Afrofuturist Folkways artist Jake Blount.

Bessie Jones featured alongside the Georgia Sea Island Singers on a Folkways album titled Lest We Forget, Vol. 3: Sing For Freedom which featured recordings from the 1964 “The Sing for Freedom Workshop”— described by Folkways as “a remarkable event that brought together the best of freedom singers to share the history of this tradition, better organize the freedom song movement, and enrich an already powerful repertoire of song.” When asked why she sang these songs, Jones is quoted as saying, “Your children are gonna call your music old later on, too… You should know the bottom before you come to the top.”

Even today, the songs of the Gullah Geechee people of Georgia retain deep connections to Africa and were encoded with powerful messages of resistance to slavery and oppression. In our interview with Jake Blount for his New Faith album, he shared how influential the Gullah Geechee were:

“They just have a really incredible body of work song then most other Black people have in this country just because they were able to hold on to more in in that time, so, when I go back and listen to old songs, and I definitely look for songs from everywhere, but I tend to find that a lot of the most wonderful things are songs that come from the Gullah Geechee tradition.”

The concert also featured the country blues of legendary singer and guitarist Mississippi Fred McDowell and Mississippi cane fife player Ed Young. It was a star-studded concert, and the excitement of these seminal musicians joining together on songs and inspiring each other is palpable. But the powerful subtext of this concert was clear even then.

McDowell himself was one of the great stars of the folk revival, first encountered in Mississippi by Lomax right before Lomax returned to the Georgia Sea Islands in 1959. Lomax’s assistant at the time, the soon-to-be famous British folk singer Shirley Collins, said she’d never forget meeting McDowell, remembering the image of him walking out of the woods with his guitar after picking cotton all day. His guitar playing has a tranced-out sound to it, heralding him as a precursor of the Mississippi Hill Country Blues that others like R.L. Burnside and The Black Keys would popularize. Listen to his guitar work opening up the song “Keep Your Lamp Trimmed and Burning.” McDowell lasers in on a much slower, rawer tempo for this powerful old spiritual, while the Georgia Sea Island Singers lift their voices beneath him. From the same region as McDowell, Young’s fife playing is so old as to almost be primordial. It was the oldest Black American instrumental music that had survived, though it had fused with military traditions at a certain point. Young and McDowell weave in and out with the Georgia Sea Island Singers in creative ways throughout this evening’s program, delighting in the collaboration and creating something new and indelible together.

“We’re on the road to world peace, and freedom, and integration,” says famed folklorist Alan Lomax brightly in his introduction to the concert. Behind him on the stage, some of the greatest Black folk singers of their time say nothing. Their thoughts on Lomax’s overly optimistic prediction come through in the songs they presented that evening. Songs that prayed to a Biblical God for justice, songs that spoke of the pure barbarity and horror of slavery, the death and murder of so many brought from Africa over the centuries, songs that spoke of the thousands and thousands of marchers in America at that very time during the Civil RIghts movement. “If I can’t march, I can sing,” said Mable Hillery of the Georgia Sea Island Singers, herself a noted Civil Rights activist and frequent marcher who had stayed back from protests to testify before this crowd of mostly young, white people in New York City. Captured on a Nagra tape recorder and a good Sony condenser microphone by noted field recordist Peter Siegel, the entire concert is presented here for the first time, each song a revelation. “It’s rare that you could put out every song from the concert and they’re all good,” says Siegel. It was also a very visual concert. The Georgia Sea Island singers presented actual religious ceremonies, like the complicated dancing and rhythmic percussion of the ring shout, which brought a lot of energy. Everyone in the audience surely felt this energy during the concert, and you can hear the musicians egging each other on.

That energy of a great live performance is the reason that Siegel left the concert wholly intact, but he was also interested in the larger contexts of the concert. The way Lomax interacts with the performers is key. He positions himself not only as the MC for the evening, but as the arbiter of their traditions. They looked on him kindly, but also recognized the power divide. Davis jokes at one point, after Lomax spun a tale for him about the song he was going to sing, that “all I have to do is do it now!” Lomax was just one in a line of white interpreters who had been presenting Georgia Sea Islands music since the early 1900s. Contrasting starkly with the academic comments and optimistic beliefs  of Lomax as the white intermediary, the songs presented that evening ranged from Biblical to terrifyingly apocalyptic. The Georgia Sea Island Singers, and especially Jones and Davis, knew that presenting traditional music from the time of slavery was a powerful connection to help audiences understand what slavery really was, and they took this as their core mission.

Due to their isolation and their geographical location off the coast of Georgia, the formerly enslaved community of African descent on the islands were able to keep their traditions without as much outside interference as other Black communities endured. The result is that the songs of the Gullah Geechee people of the Georgia Sea Islands have kept powerful undercurrents of commentary in their songs up to the present day. Though many songs have roots in the Bible, they’re interpreted through West and Central African customs and perspectives. Because the Georgia Sea Islands were so isolated, there wasn’t the same threat of death or injury for keeping these traditions alive that other Black communities experienced, so these songs are able to present a direct perspective on slavery and oppression. Knowing this history, Jones, Davis and Mable Hillery all believed that the songs of the past could inform the protests of the present. One song, “Read ‘Em John”, draws a direct parallel to the impending passage of the Voting Rights Act that same year, 1965. Hillery wrote one of the most direct songs of the evening, “Marching on the Mississippi Line,” which directly references the activist work that Hillery was engaging in, fusing Black spirituals with contemporary political movements of the time. Perhaps the most haunting song of the evening, “Buzzard Lope,” is presented at first by Jones as a folkloric dance that people would perform in the fields. But as she points out, the dance portrays buzzards picking the bones of the bodies of enslaved Black people cast into the field to rot. The blood that fed these old folk songs is very real in this recording, not least for Jones, who was the granddaughter of an enslaved person herself.

Mississippi Fred McDowell and fife player Ed Young may not have been as direct in their protests at the time, but their music rings with power. “Don’t Ever Leave Me” brings Hillery’s voice together with McDowell’s powerful guitar, a moment that shows her deep roots in the blues and his empathic accompaniment. McDowell himself was one of the great stars of the folk revival, first encountered in Mississippi by Lomax right before Lomax returned to the Georgia Sea Islands in 1959. Lomax’s assistant at the time, the soon-to-be famous British folk singer Shirley Collins, said she’d never forget meeting McDowell, remembering the image of him walking out of the woods with his guitar after picking cotton all day. His guitar playing has a tranced out sound to it, heralding him as a precursor of the Mississippi Hill Country Blues that others like R.L. Burnside and The Black Keys would popularize. Listen to his guitar work opening up the song “Keep Your Lamp Trimmed and Burning.” McDowell lasers in on a much slower, rawer tempo for this powerful old spiritual, while the Georgia Sea Island Singers lift their voices beneath him. From the same region as McDowell, Young’s fife playing is so old as to almost be primordial. It was the oldest Black American instrumental music that had survived, though it had fused with military traditions at a certain point. Young and McDowell weave in and out with the Georgia Sea Island Singers in creative ways throughout this evening’s program, delighting in the collaboration and creating something new and indelible together.

By bringing out an unheard tradition of Black American music and showcasing the music in such a direct, engaging way, all the performers on stage this one evening in 1965 hoped to leave a lasting mark on the audience. They reveled in playing together, and they found common ground across very different Black communities in the United States. But as Siegel pointed out, they had very clear motives for their music. “Bessie Jones and John Davis were very aware of their mission to help people understand this music,” Siegel says. “Where it came from and how it could inform the future.”

The Georgia Sea Island Singers Inspired a Musical Movement. Now You Can Hear Them Like Never Before. 

The new “Complete Friends of Old-Time Music Concert” features Mississippi Fred McDowell, Ed Young, and other unsung artists who paved the way for folk musicians like Bob Dylan and Joan Baez

By Jim Beaugez / June 14, 2024 / https://gardenandgun.com/

The Georgia Sea Island Singers performing at the Poor People’s March in Washington, D.C., 1968.

The American folk and blues revival that peaked during the 1960s amid the Civil Rights Movement enraptured predominantly white, Northern audiences. But for every Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, and Pete Seeger, there was a trail of long-forgotten Black musical pioneers who developed the nation’s original roots music under largely oppressive conditions.

“At that time, a lot of people in the cities and in New York heard a lot of great folk music,” says folk archivist and music producer Peter K. Siegel. “We heard Pete Seeger and Odetta and all kinds of great people, but we didn’t really get to see the people who represented the communities from which these traditions sprang.”

Even iconic songs that emerged from the movement, like Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind”—which he played at the 1963 March on Washington, just before Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech—were based on old spirituals. “You have these folk artists who are going down South to hear these songs,” Siegel says. “And then you have some of the songs by Bob Dylan influenced by what he’s hearing from these African American songs, these spirituals.”

A man holds a guitar
photo: Alan Lomax
Mississippi Fred McDowell.

Those long-overlooked artists are finally getting their due. Out today, the new Smithsonian Folkways album The Complete Friends of Old-Time Music Concert, featuring Bessie Jones, John Davis, and the Georgia Sea Island Singers, with country-blues artist Mississippi Fred McDowell and fife player Ed Young, resurrects a recording Siegel made of one such performance at New York’s New School in 1965. He hadn’t thought about the tapes for decades until he revisited them as he prepared a three-CD collection released in 2006 as Friends of Old Time Music: The Folk Arrival 1961-1965. Eventually, people began asking what else he had tucked away.

A portrait of a woman with a tambourine
photo: Diana Davies/Rinzler Archives
Bessie Jones.

The Georgia Sea Island Singers, led by Jones and Davis, grew out of the Gullah Geechee culture on St. Simons Island, Georgia, where descendants of enslaved West and Central Africans lived in relative obscurity for hundreds of years.

“Because the island was somewhat isolated from the mainland—the only way you could get there was basically in a rowboat—they passed down these songs pretty much intact,” Siegel says. “So, we get to hear songs passed down from enslaved people about slavery.”

A group of people sit on a picnic table and smile
photo: Alan Lomax
From left: Emma Ramsey, Ed Young, Mable Hillery, John Davis, and two unidentified children.

Denied the use of hand drums and other musical instruments by plantation overseers, Gullah Geechee people developed songs and rhythms as vocal performances, with clapping techniques substituting traditional percussion. The lyrics and movements were encoded with messages of resistance to slavery and oppression. In the introduction to “In That Old Field,” for instance, Bessie Jones explains how the remains of animals were discarded in boneyards on the plantations, and how that practice inspired the spiritual and its accompanying “buzzard lope” dance. “They were telling people they didn’t care what they did with their body,” Siegel says. “They said their soul lived with God.”

Such expressions of the Gullah Geechee people’s collective experience didn’t sit well with everyone in the folk and blues scene of the sixties, when the Georgia Sea Island Singers performed for audiences far beyond the islands where their ancestors grew cotton, rice, and indigo under systems of slavery and sharecropping.

“Many of those in the Civil Rights [Movement] wanted to not sing the old enslaved songs,” says musicologist Dr. Eric S. Crawford, who has authored several books on Gullah Geechee culture. “They wanted to do the more bluesy versions, the more soul versions of songs, and Bessie Jones up and said, ‘These songs got us through the enslaved period, and these songs are equally important now.’ She really was that pivotal force.”

A group of people sing under a tree
photo: Alan Lomax
Members of the Georgia Sea Island Singers. In front row, from left: Willis Proctor, John Davis, an unidentified child, and Bessie Jones.


Siegel, for his part, became somewhat of an accidental archivist for events such as the Friends of Old Time Music concerts. He got permission from Ralph Rinzler, one of the founders of Friends of Old Time Music, to record the performances for his own personal use with just a single microphone and his reel-to-reel tape recorder. But they’ve since become important historical documents.

“It was a very informal thing,” he says. “There was no money involved in it. I bought the tape and brought my own equipment, but I think Ralph understood that if I recorded those concerts, there would be a record of them.”

Jim Beaugez writes about music and culture from his native Mississippi. He has contributed to Garden & Gun since 2021 and has also written for the New York Times, Rolling Stone, Smithsonian, Oxford American, and Outside.


Album Review: June 13, 2024 
https://folkalley.com

On April 9, 1965, Bessie Jones, John Davis, the Georgia Sea Island Singers, Mississippi Fred McDowell, and Ed Young took the stage at the New School in New York City for the Friends of Old Time Music Concert. Field recordist Peter Siegel captured the riveting performances of these singers and  instrumentalists, and his recording showcases the nuances of phrasing, vocal delivery, and rhythmic styles of the songs, as well as the canny storytelling that unveils the multi-faceted meanings inherent in each song. The entire concert is now available for the first time on Smithsonian Folkways as The Complete Friends of Old Time Music Concert.

Folklorist Alan Lomax serves as emcee for the evening, and the concert opens with his introduction to the Georgia Sea Island Singers and the special guests of the evening. At the end of Lomax’s introduction, he declares optimistically that society is on the road to world peace and integration, a feeling that the Singers’ less optimistic and more realistic music betrays. As Lomax concludes, the ensemble “travels” in from the wings to the electrifying accompaniment of Jones’ tambourine playing which sets the cadence for the repetitive harmonic chorus “I got on my travelin’ shoes,” which she punctuates with shouts such as “Lord have mercy now” and “I’m gonna tell the Lord.” Like many of the songs in the concert, this one operates on at least two levels: the movement toward the promise of political freedom and the movement toward spiritual redemption and liberation.

As members of the Georgia Island Sea Singers introduce each song, they take care to introduce the audience to the history and background of the songs, as well as to the their musical styles. The ring shout spiritual “Buzzard Lope (Dance)/In That Old Field (In Dat Ole Fiel),” for example, reenacts the story of the bodies of dead slaves being left in the field or tossed at a crossroads where buzzards would soon come to devour the bones. Davis’ pattering, intricate dance steps (the buzzard lope dance) can be heard on the song as Jones and Mable Hillery lead the group with their calls to the group’s response.

With his resounding vocals, John Davis leads the sea shanty “Goodbye My Riley O,” a tribute to the work of stevedores on St. Simons Island, while on “Sink ‘Em Low,” Jones captures the sing-song rhythms of prison work gang songs that would not only provide a musical pattern to the grueling labors but also a sense of unity and liberation from the harsh conditions imposed by callous and often malicious guards.

Spare and haunting, McDowell’s snaking guitar rhythms and leads and his gravelly vocals evoke a poignant lonesomeness on the country blues “Going Down to the River.” Several of the songs retell various biblical stories—“Once There Was No Sun (Once Dey Was No Sun),” “Adam in the Garden (Adam in De Gyaaden),” “Who Built the Ark (Who Build De Ark)”—using Gullah and West African perspectives and linguistic roots. John Davis leads another ring shout spiritual, “Read ‘Em John,” which opens slowly, building to an urgent rhythmic shuffling—signaled by the drumming—that conveys the necessity of having one enslaved person—in this case, John—read a letter to the gathered slaves concerning their freedom. McDowell’s low moans and stinging slide notes introduce the traditional spiritual “Keep Your Lamp Trimmed and Burning”; he’s joined by the Georgia Sea Island Singers in their ethereal harmonies and shouting and handclapping as they blend their voices in the anticipation of spiritual and political liberation. Mable Hillery’s stirring use of the call and response structure of the spirituals lends force and urgency to the striving for political changes called for and enacted in Civil Rights marches. On “Marching on the Mississippi Line,” she reveals the deep religious dimensions of the ongoing struggles for social justice and freedom from racial oppression.

The Complete Friends of Old Time Music Concert captures the energy of the Georgia Sea Island Singers and their guests; the performances are electrifying, and one can’t help but hear and feel the depths of soul out of which every one of these songs issue. Apart from Lomax’s introductions, this set is a stunning introduction to the Gullah-Geechee music and the West African music traditions the Georgia Sea Island Singers kept alive in their communities.

How a live recording of a concert can preserve one powerful moment indelibly in time.

“We are on the road to world peace, freedom, and integration”, declares ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax in 1965, as he introduces this historic concert. With songs which were encoded with powerful messages of resistance to slavery and oppression, the powerful subtext of the concert was crystal clear, even then. From behind him on the stage, however, some of the greatest Black folk singers of their time say nothing. Their thoughts on Lomax’s overly optimistic prediction were to come through in the songs they presented that evening. Songs that prayed to a Biblical God for justice, songs that spoke of the pure barbarity and horror of slavery, the death and murder of so many brought from Africa over the centuries, songs that spoke of the thousands and thousands of marchers in America at that very time during the Civil Rights movement.

“If I can’t march, I can sing“, said Mable Hillery of the Georgia Sea Island Singers, herself a noted Civil Rights activist and frequent marcher who had stayed back from protests to testify before this crowd of mostly young, white people in New York City. Their collective mission was to help people understand what slavery was, where this music was coming from and how it could inform the future.

The “Complete Friends of Old-Time Music Concert” is not just a live recording but a previously unheard, historically significant document. This unique piece of history that captures the reality of the Black American experience through folk songs is a captivating intersection of Black folk traditions and civil rights activism. In the midst of the Civil Rights Era, they used a range of songs, from Biblical to apocalyptic, to make a potent and specific point about the past horrors and the change needed for justice in the present and future.

The album is a rich tapestry of traditional music featuring a variety of genres from the Island and beyond. It includes stirring work songs, emotionally charged spirituals, jubilant songs for children, and revelatory renditions of Mississippi blues. Four of the songs, in particular, released in advance of the album, provide a vivid narrative of the history these artists aimed to convey, adding depth and context to the overall experience.

“Buzzard Lope (Dance)“, sung by Bessie Jones, John Davis, & The Georgia Sea Island Singers, is one of the most haunting songs on the album. A spiritual dance with African origins, this folkloric song reflects the horror and humiliation of enslaved black people whose bodies were thrown in the fields to rot rather than buried in the time of slavery. Singers would gather in a circle, cloth representing the body; as they danced, individuals would enter the circle and mimic the buzzard by snatching the cloth.

“Read ‘Em John,” sung by John Davis, Bessie Jones, and The Georgia Sea Island Singers, can be traced to emancipation. It speaks of the one enslaved person who could read being asked to read the letter telling the other enslaved people that they were now free. It is a simple but lively celebration packed with sheer joy and enthusiasm.

“Chevrolet“, from the early recorded blues tradition, is a 1930 Memphis Minnie song sung here by Ed Young and Emma Ramsey. Young’s fife playing ties it back to the Mississippi fife and drum tradition that traces back to the Civil War. The fun song, however, is about a brand new Chevrolet and the coming of new technology and was recently made famous when Mary J. Blige sang it a cappella in a 2017 Super Bowl ad.

“Marching on the Mississippi Line” is sung by Mable Hillery and Emma Ramsay. Hillery was part of The Georgia Sea Island Singers, but she was also participating in freedom-song teach-ins in the South during the Civil Rights Era. Having spoken about how she couldn’t be out marching because she was at this concert instead, she brought together Biblical ideals with modern politics for a song that still resonates today.

It was a star-studded concert, and the excitement of these seminal musicians joining together on songs and inspiring each other in this live recording is palpable. They clearly revel in playing together, having found common ground across very different Black communities in America. The spoken introductions to the songs capture the traditions of the time, and the musicality, mainly through handclapping, flutes, and stringed instruments, is wholesome and moving as the performers and audience alike put their all into the evening.

The recognition and foresight of this movement in 1965 were brave and groundbreaking, yet, astonishingly, some sixty years later, the fight for freedom from slavery and oppression in its many forms continues across the globe. Despite being acknowledged for centuries, the release of this live recording is a pertinent, valuable reminder that the job is far from done

Bessie Jones, John Davis & The Georgia Sea Island Singers with Mississippi Fred McDowell and Ed Young - The Complete Friends of Old Time Music Concert 

Artist: Bessie Jones, John Davis & The Georgia Sea Island Singers
CataLogue Number: SFW40258 
Visit: https://folkways.si.edu/
Type: Album, Collaboration
Released: 14 June 2024
Recorded: 9 April 1965
Genres: Spirituals, Traditional Black Gospel, Hill Country Blues
Source: Digital


1. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by Bessie Jones - Introduction by Alan Lomax / Travelin’ Shoes 2:29
2. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by Bessie Jones with Ed Young - Handclapping - Cane Fife 3:07
3. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by Bessie Jones - Buzzard Lope (dance) - In That Old Field 2:12
4. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by Bessie Jones - Josephine 1:14
5. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by John Davis - Goodbye My Riley O 2:41
6. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by Peter Davis - Go Row the Boat Child 1:39
7. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by John Davis - Join the Band 1:26
8. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by Bessie Jones - Sink ’Em Low 2:29
9. Mississippi Fred McDowell - Going Down to the River 3:30
10. Mississippi Fred McDowell with Mable Hillery - Shake ’Em on Down 3:04
11. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by Bessie Jones - Once There Was No Sun 2:40
12. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by John Davis - Adam in the Garden 1:26
13. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by Bessie Jones - Who Built the Ark 1:38
14. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by John Davis - Let My Children Go 3:19
15. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by Peter Davis - My God Is a Rock 4:14
16. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by Mable Hillery with Mississippi Fred McDowell - I Heard the Angels Singing 3:11
17. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by John Davis - Read ’Em John 1:37
18. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by Mississippi Fred McDowell - Keep Your Lamp Trimmed and Burning 3:32
19. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by Bessie Jones - Sign of the Judgement 2:45
20. Ed Young, Emma Lee Ramsey - Chevrolet 4:22
21. Fred McDowell - Write Me a Few of Your Lines 3:29
22. Mississippi Fred McDowell, Mable Hillery - Don’t Ever Leave Me 3:56
23. Mable Hillery with Emma Lee Ramsey - Marching on the Mississippi Line 3:12
24. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by John Davis - Down to the Mire 3:18
25. Georgia Sea Island Singers led by Bessie Jones - Before This Time Another Year 4:56