

Album: Music With No Name Vol.3
Title: Vibrations from the Motherland
Record Label: Melt 2000/Electric Melt
Reviewed by: Kwelagobe Sekele
Music With Name was the first remix album to have Drum & Bass remixes of South African songs. That was in 1998, just a few years after the genre emerged from the U.K. underground scenes. One of the tightest tracks from that album was the Drum & Bass remix of Kwazulu’s profound veteran guitarist Madala Kunene’s ‘Ubombo’, which is a hit in the alternative scenes even here in South Africa, where Drum & Bass still appeals to a very small niche. That was then and this is now. 2008 brings you Music With No Name Volume 3, 8 years after the second volume and ten years after the first volume and it is far from the first two. Not far from the quality of sound and the overall repertoire, which is what Melt2000 has prided itself in from day one, but in a good way. This album is sticking to the times just like it’s predecessors. But it’s not the poppy Pop and latest inaccessible, high school rebellion genres you can expect from this album. And you are more than welcome to give this music whatever name you can think of.
Titled ‘Vibrations from the Motherland’ this album features remixes by some of Europe’s renowned producers of Dance, Electro and Funk to reverberating some stand out recordings that have come out of Melt. The album opens with Cape Town based toaster/rapper Teba Shumba, former member of Skeem and one of South Africa’s heavy weight artists. He opens the album as if opening ways to the world of Music with No Name with ‘Abaphantsi’, a fiery political rap for change done over Sangomas chanting, now this has never been done before and Teba was definitely the best man for the job. The Sangomas recording ‘Siya Dengelela Ngonyama’ is itself a plus decade old recording and was also featured in Volume 1 and is here remixed by Maga Bo, straight out of U.K. German Dance producer Henrik Schwarz, who is big in the house scene is also on this album with a remix of the Langa township international world traditional group Amampondo. There’s actually more than one Amampondo remix on this album and Amapondo’s Mother Mantombi Matotiyana also celebrated. The old Uhadi and Xhosa mother of music Madosini is also honored with a remix.
Other artists such as Mabi Thobejane, Bernard Mndaweni and Comoros Mayito are also celebrated. This album is the new day for the dance scene and a freshly polished dance floor. Be sure to catch one stand out Deep House track on this album, number 11 ‘Distant Djembe’, also an Amampondo remix and is slowly becoming a hit amongst local house deejays. This album is clearly a tribute to our greats and also features other U.K based producers such as Adam Hurst, John Kennedy.
It’s a pity that our local radio doesn’t play good music, listeners will miss out on this baby. But if you buy music then make sure you get this Music With No Name.
Tidal Waves is Afrika! This band should raise the South African reggae flag worldwide. They will surely follow in the late South African Reggae father Lucky Dube’s footsteps with their uniquely African Reggae sound and they’ve already started giving Europe a taste of their export dish. They are back with their fourth album with some previously recorded and released tracks notably ‘Kia-Ora’, a previously released song and a favourite at Tidal Waves performances.
The album is ‘roots-rock-reggae’, as reggae head would label it. Their music has this Southern African reggae feel to it, reminding one of Lucky Dube himself, the many unknown and underground Reggae bands of Venda and Peter Tosh. They are earthed, rooted, traditional folk – Live – with that mouth organ, keyboards and sung in Xhosa, Tswana, English and even Maori. I expected at least an Afrikaans song but I guess I’ll just have to catch their next show. There has been a change in the band with the passing of their keyboardist but their sound still lives on. May his soul rest in peace; he will be greatly missed by Tidal Waves fans.
This album is also very lyrical and obviously topical, touching on political and social issues such as government corruption, promotion of hard work, abuse, love and the decriminalization of the ‘herb’.
The first song on the album ‘Bing-Bong’ is a war-cry that will surely hook you; a political protest against the plague called war. Tidal Waves are anti-war, true Rastafari style. ‘Money’, their famous track at concerts is also on the album as well as ‘Kia-Ora, with a chorus in the native New Zealand Maori.
Although the album is very lyrical, the vocals could have been more complex but if you prefer them raw, rooted, natural and simple then you got it. The instrumentals are on point, the synthesizers/pads soft and smoky and sunny (and No I’m not a stoner). The chorus on the track ‘Rapolotiki’, which means Mr. Politics, is a rock classic filled with a head banging feel and scratchy vocals with simple guitar riffs. This song is a satire and a word-play in Setswana; get a Tswana friend to translate…Tswana not Sotho.
The album is a rich African reggae classic and I expect to hear it on the airwaves hopefully. It is South African Reggae and it is Tidal Waves. GOD BLESS AFRIKA!
Book: Still Grazing
Written by: Hugh Masekela
Publisher: Johnson Publishing Co.
www.amazon.com
Reviewed by: Kwelagobe Sekele
The book takes you to Alexandra where his family moved after his father got a job, a place he says wasn’t as good as Witbank. He paints a picture of the streets of Alexandra back then with images of street fighting, the dusty streets and the neighbors. The images just put you there and reading this book will make one feel like the legendary Hugh Masekela is talking to you in person. There’s also accounts of his moving to a boarding school where he was exposed to Jazz, Bebop, sex, shoplifting, cigarette smoking, Father Trevor Huddleston and getting his first trumpet, shipped from the U.S., a gift from Satchmo (Louis Armstrong) himself – who he meets years later. The picture on the cover of this book is of Bra Hugh leaping and jumping high in joy on the day he got the trumpet. His sense f humour is bountiful with the account of how he met the legendary Miriam Makeba who was already a house-hold name then, how he charmed her, their on and off affair and their not so successful and very dramatic marriage years later while in exile in New York. There’s also humorous accounts of how he met legends such as Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Jimi Hendrix, Thelonious Monk, Harry Belafonte, Bill Cosby, Fela Kuti and the great times he spent with all these legends. When talking about these legends, people like poet and Professor Willie Kgositsile, trombonist Jonas Gwangwa, composer & songwriter Caiphus Semenya and Mama Letta Mbulu, and other legends such as Todd Matshikiza make up the long list of legends.
Some interesting parts of the book are the hectic life of drugs, booze, parties, self-indulgent and self-destructive life he lived, he has been through the roughest of times and has survived it all and lived to tell. The drug busts, the failed marriages and the endless women in his life. Talking about women, he has dated the beautiful, famous and movers & shakers in his life, but I wont reveal much. Politically, Bra Hugh has played big a role like most political activists and South African exiles of then, with his music previously banned by the apartheid regime and his image nearly destroyed by its media propaganda. Musically, he has paid his dues, played with the most respected, shared the stage with greats, toured, played at the most prestigious festivals and released many albums and hits. One outstanding hit was ‘Grazing in the Grass’, which made it big in the charts in the U.S.A. making Hugh Masekela a bit timer and a big-shot in 60s L.A. particularly. His accounts of his musical journey, in U.S.A and the African tour which crossed his path with the likes of Fela Kuti – who had wanted to play with Bra Hugh so much, Franco of Zaire (the now Congo) and how he got to perform with the young Tshepo Tshola are classical stories.
In this book he takes you through his experiences with the likes of Don King and James Brown during his involvement with the Zaire-Congo ‘Rumble in the Jungle’ boxing match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman and how he met Malcolm X and the young Bob Marley and doing a session on the reggae icon’s first album. Bra Hugh is one of the pioneers of World Music and all-embracing credit should be given to him and people like him. He went to the United States with a strong urge of playing jazz and bebop and once there was advised by particular people like Miles Davis not to be one of the jazz statistics. He then fused jazz with indigenous African sounds, especially South African elements, the music of BaPedi, MaNdebele and Zulu, including folk songs and traditional healers songs, filled with political text and came with the sound that we today know as World Music. Read the book and see how the musical turned movie Sarafina, one of the best South African musicals since King Kong came about, how its songs came about, how Hugh Masekela touched the life of Madiba and vice-versa. It’s a book about music, the history of South Africa and apartheid. The bottom line is that Still Grazing is an excellent read and should grace non-fiction and autobiography shelves of every library, be included in school’s South African and music history curriculum and your book collection if you are proud African-South African reader and music lover. The book has a compilation c.d. of Hugh Masekela’s earliest songs, something you can play in the background while reading the history of this legend. It’s a great read – period! And should kill all the negative publicity you’ve heard about Bra Hugh. Someone should turn this book into a movie, and I’ll do it if no one sees the potential I’m talking about.
Album: Alien Hip Triangle: Beyond the Lounge
Artist: Various Artists (South Africa, London, Brazil)
Label: MELT200.Phase Two
Review by: Kwelagobe Sekele
No this album is not about Aliens, aliens’ hips nor is it about crop circles or illuminati or geometric shapes. MELT2000 brings you a compilation of hip tracks from their huge catalogue. This compilation features known, unknown and underrated artists from South Africa, London, Brazil and L.A. based Brazilians. That geography is what makes up the ‘Triangle’. The idea of this compilation is to introduce MELT and its Worldly music catalogue to a younger audience. It features the likes of piano genius Moses Molelekwa, London female keyboardist extraordinaire Jessica Lauren, Brazilian Master percussionist Airto Moreira and his family, wife Flora Purim, daughter Decibel and son-in-law Krishna Booker. The first song, by Square Window, a project by London drummer-producer Andrew Missingham is a nice lounge song titled “Talk becomes Mantra” and features South African exile born Nomvula?. It’s a good icebreaker. There are big songs you should look out for such as “Open your eyes, you can fly” by Flora Purim which has been redone by the likes of Vanessa Williams. There’s our Jozi own Kwani Experience with “Seed of Life” from their debut album, who though not from the MELT stable, fit into this compilation like a Greek fits into any Mediterranean crowd.
One would expect Moses Molelekwa’s to add a jazz flavour into this compilation but nah…his song “Asim’dumise” is nostalgic of a black South African gospel T.V. show from the 90s. He brings his production, studio-head brains with some 50:50 Kruger-national keyboard flutes and synthesizers on this one. This particular track is not a very well known Molelekwa number, so something fresh right there. There’s an early 90s rap song by D.R.E.A.M, a group by The Dream and Krishna Booker for you old school Hip-Hoppers. Talking about Krishna Booker, he appears again on here with wife Decibel (D.B) as Eyedentity, their Western Trip-Hop duo with “No denying”. D.B. is a natural vocalist, exchanging personas between singer and rapper. The compilation closes with “See you later”, a remix of a song from Killer Bees an unrehearsed album by Gods of Jazz (Airto Moreira, Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, Stanley Clarke) from the 90s. Even though your ordinary popular culturists might not know most artists on this compilation, they are worth checking out, if you want something new in your life, something out of the world you are bombarded with, get Beyond the Lounge. Look for a pink C.D. front cover in stores. If they don’t have it order it, they’ll have it in a couple of days.