Global Beat Fusion: The History of the Future of Music

Documenting the international music scene via Derek Beres, author of the 2005 book Global Beat Fusion: The History of the Future of Music.

12.06.2006

The African Sound of Harlem

BOLE 2 HARLEM
Bole 2 Harlem Volume One (Sounds of the Mushroom)

Ethiopia has long exhibited a range of folk music, considering each of the 80 tribes have their own slant on regional music. Last century a few key occurrences occurred within all of Africa, affecting both culture and music produced. With the rise of recording and performance technology, state-sponsored orchestras tended to define the music played in each country (in many, as was the case of Ethiopia in the ‘80s, the only music allowed). As the orchestras moved past the ‘70s and drum machines, guitar effects and synthesizers made their way from European laboratories to African soil, the gritty, rootsy folk strains became blaring guitar-driven popular music.

This was not the case everywhere, for the heartbeat of life – percussion – remained relevant, especially in the sounds unique jazz pioneers like Mahmoud Ahmed were championing. While today Ethiopia remains one of the more obscure African genres in America, a few labels and artists have pumped life into standards and breakthroughs, most notably Buda Musique’s Ethiopiques series and vocalist Gigi. Both have journeyed back in time before synth-heavy pop, reissuing unknown classics and recreating new tracks with old influences. And while a burgeoning hip-hop scene exists as well, little has become known overseas compared to the influx of Malian, Moroccan, Senegalese and South African forms.

Enter Bole2Harlem, which makes sense of a few threads of Ethiopia’s rich history. Besides making the obvious African parallel to hip-hop, producer David Schommer and vocalist Maki Siraj inject a bit of dub and reggae: the connection being Emperor Haile Selassie’s influence on Bob Marley and the birth of that song form. The pair does not refuse any sound, Ethiopian or American, weaving strains of reggae, hip-hop, electronica and the familiar horns and call-and-response vocals dear to Ethiopian folklore. With an ear attuned to the importance of bass, Schommer programs an excellent range of soundscapes for this diverse recording.

Joining Siraj on vocals is Tigist Shibabaw, Gigi’s little sister, who cut her teeth in NYC club culture on the progressive Man.De.Ng debut Elektrik. Here she gets to show the strength of those powerful vocal chords, letting fly an infectious hook on the title track; when joined by Fray on the bouncing “Ahmet Bale” the true genius of this fusion emerges. Siraj maintains an inspired performance throughout, although a few sporadic sing-songy verses prove dated. Such disparate elements seep through here and there, making the album a bit more pop-oriented than necessary. But those are only sections or instrument choices, never full songs. The remix near the end could use a little touching up, though a reworking of the title track, this one dubbed “Harlem2Bole,” makes gorgeous use of a lucid kora part and minimal beat architecture.

Credit Schommer and crew for keeping the integrity of such a range of sounds intact, while displaying their own with self-releasing this distinct album. It really cannot fit into any category, as is true of a good amount of electronic-based global music today. Through viral marketing and one damn good volume behind them, Bole and Harlem – chosen because they are entry and exit points in their respective countries for innovative music – once again serve as a portal from past to future sounds.

1 Comments:

At 3:49 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi, I know this is shamefull advertising, but I just wanted to let you lot know about:

www.ethiopiques.info

It's a fansite set up to celebrate the release of a 2CD pack of classic Ethiopian groove.

Good luck with the book, it looks like a good one. I agree with you that 'ain't no point if it ain't modern', but never the less, you gotta dig the old stuff.

Best wishes

 

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