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Nigeria Special: Modern Highlife, Afro-sounds & Nigerian Blues 1970-76
 
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Nigeria Special: Modern Highlife, Afro-sounds & Nigerian Blues 1970-76

Various ArtistsMP3 Download
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

Price: $11.98
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Album Savings: $11.16 compared to buying all songs

  • Original Release Date: November 20, 2007
  • Format - Music: MP3
  • Compatible with MP3 Players (including with iPod®), iTunes, Windows Media Player
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Disc 1:
  Song Title Artist Time Price  
Play   1. Ayamma The Anambra Beats 4:07 $0.89 Buy Track  - Ayamma
Play   2. Okwukwe Na Nchekwube Celestine Ukwu & His Philosophers National 6:10 $0.89 Buy Track  - Okwukwe Na Nchekwube
Play   3. Amalinja The Don Isaac Ezekiel Combination 5:16 $0.89 Buy Track  - Amalinja
Play   4. Akula Owu Onyeara The Funkees 7:30 $0.89 Buy Track  - Akula Owu Onyeara
Play   5. Oja Omoba Dele Ojo & His Star Brothers Band 3:42 $0.89 Buy Track  - Oja Omoba
Play   6. Koma Mosi The Harbours Band 2:56 $0.89 Buy Track  - Koma Mosi
Play   7. Nekwaha Semi Colon The Semi Colon 3:31 $0.89 Buy Track  - Nekwaha Semi Colon
Play   8. Osalobua Rekpama Sir Victor Uwaifo & His Melody Maestros 3:21 $0.89 Buy Track  - Osalobua Rekpama
Play   9. Onwu Ama Dike St. Augustine & His Rovers Dance Band 6:07 $0.89 Buy Track  - Onwu Ama Dike
Play 10. Feso Jaiye The Sahara All Stars Of Jos 4:09 $0.89 Buy Track  - Feso Jaiye
Play 11. Ema Kowe Iasa Ile Wa Mono Mono 6:50 $0.89 Buy Track  - Ema Kowe Iasa Ile Wa
Play 12. To Whom It May Concern Tunji Oyelana And The Benders 2:58 $0.89 Buy Track  - To Whom It May Concern
Play 13. Ugali The Tony Benson Sextet 5:23 $0.89 Buy Track  - Ugali
Disc 2:
  Song Title Artist Time Price  
Play   1. Asiko Mi Ni The Nigerian Police Force Band 'the Force 7' 5:12 $0.89 Buy Track  - Asiko Mi Ni
Play   2. Torri Wowo Godwin Ezike & The Ambassadors 3:09 $0.89 Buy Track  - Torri Wowo
Play   3. Belema Opotopo (easy Kabaka Brown) 6:14 $0.89 Buy Track  - Belema
Play   4. Alabeke Dan Satch & His Atomic 8 Dance Band Of Aba 4:36 $0.89 Buy Track  - Alabeke
Play   5. Arraino Popular Cooper & His All Beats Band 3:04 $0.89 Buy Track  - Arraino
Play   6. Simini-yaya Collins Oke Elaiho & His Odoligie Nobles Dance Band 3:40 $0.89 Buy Track  - Simini-yaya
Play   7. Buroda Mase Bola Johnson & His Easy Life Top Beats 4:57 $0.89 Buy Track  - Buroda Mase
Play   8. I Want A Break Thru' The Hykkers 3:02 $0.89 Buy Track  - I Want A Break Thru'
Play   9. Business Before Pleasure George Akaeze & His Augmented Hits 4:38 $0.89 Buy Track  - Business Before Pleasure
Play 10. Omo Yen Wu Mi Shadow Abraham With Mono Mono Friends 3:29 $0.89 Buy Track  - Omo Yen Wu Mi
Play 11. Blak Sound Leo Fadaka & The Heroes 4:56 $0.89 Buy Track  - Blak Sound
Play 12. Eguae Oba Osayomore Joseph & The Creative 7 4:30 $0.89 Buy Track  - Eguae Oba
Play 13. Akpaison Etubom Rex Williams & His Nigerian Artistes 2:30 $0.89 Buy Track  - Akpaison
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5.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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32 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars Are Only Half Of The Story, February 27, 2008
By 
Classic Gibbon (Over the Rainbow) - See all my reviews
A wonderful and intelligently compiled collection of Nigerian electric highlife and Afro-rock from the early 1970's. With a four panel digipack case, a well written and informative booklet and 2 discs of impossibly rare music, excellently mastered for CD reissue, this is an absolute bargain.

Unlike many of the recent reissue collections of Nigerian music this one bypasses the more well known Afrobeat selections and concentrates on some of the more obscure sounds created in the nation's most fertile period. There is irresistably infectious highlife, there's embryonic Afrobeat style workouts and there are a few straight ahead rock sounds, although with a definite African influence.

The compilers deserve a big pat on the back for releasing such a varied, but consistently excellent album. Hopefully they have plans to extend this series and uncover further selections of some of the most joyous music on the planet.

If you're a fan of Fela, Femi, Franco, Nigerian, Ghanaian or Congolese music there is very little chance you'll be disappointed by this set. And at just over 24 dollars it's an absolute steal
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Free Nigeria and the Funk Will Follow, July 10, 2008
Nigerian music had a brief renaissance in the first half of the 70s, when the country was temporarily between wars and dictatorships. The scene seems to have exploded with experimentation inspired by sounds from the West, mixed with new interpretations of the perennially popular Highlife. I have no idea if this anthology is a representative sample of the scene, or if the best or most important songs and artists have been collected. But I do know that the anthology is uniformly fascinating and will be a real treat for anyone interested in a deeper exploration of modern West African music. While the collection's subtitle indicates "Modern Highlife, Afro-Sounds and Nigerian Blues," that will hardly prepare the listener for the musical variety herein.

Collectors and experts might be able to fit most of the tracks here into the long-term development of Highlife, but adventurous listeners will be astounded by the experimentation found in the anthology's most offbeat tracks. For example, Celestine Ukwu & His Philosophers National, The Don Isaac Ezekiel Combination, and Mono Mono deliver what could be considered dark underground alternatives to Highlife. Tracks by Collins Oke Elaiho & His Odoligie Nobles Dance Band and Leo Fadaka & The Heroes sound like late-period Bob Marley half a decade before schedule. The selection from The Semi Colon illustrates the distant connections between Afro-Cuban and West African sounds, with some rock mixed in. Bola Johnson & His Easy Life Top Beats deliver a strange acid jazz take on authentic regional sounds, and the selection from George Akaeze & His Augmented Hits is heavily inspired by Bo Diddley.

In addition to those enthralling tracks, I for one am also hearing funk all over this anthology. The musicians of the early 70s Nigerian renaissance were clearly hip to James Brown and Sly Stone, and maybe even Funkadelic (who at the time were still fairly obscure even in America). Lowdown maggot-brained funk can be heard here in tracks by The Funkees (who looked like Funkadelic too), The Tony Benson Sextet, The Nigerian Police Force Band (apparently the world's funkiest actual cops), Dan Satch & His Atomic 8 Dance Band of Aba, and The Hykkers (whose lead guitarist was really breaking in one of Africa's newest wah-wah pedals).

For fans of West African music, especially those with a historian/collector mindset or who are simply hungry for new sounds, this is a consistently fascinating collection. Kudos to anthologist Miles Cleret for bringing these crucial sounds to the modern market. [~doomsdayer520~]
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Impossible to Describe or Shake, November 4, 2010
By 
Craig Riecke (East Syracuse, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I've owned this mangificent set a year now, and it's still in heavy rotation. If the phrase "Highlife, Afro Sounds and Nigerian Blues" leaves you going "huh?" I can tell you ... it's no easier to describe the sounds represented here as time goes on. It's kind of like if, 20 years after Elvis, people still hadn't invented the term Rock and Roll.

"Amaninja", for example, skips like a record with a big claw mark swiped across it. I think it's 7/4 time. The voice is squealy, yet has weird low overtones in it. There's a lot of echo. It's that kind of impossible combination of sounds that makes the song indelible, and it describes feelings locked in my consciousness before. That's just one example, but there are lots of others.

What keeps them altogether is this African philosophy of "rhythm as melody". You repeat the notes, but vary the beats underneath. James Brown may have introduced the instruments that make it work here(electric guitar and organ), but the Nigerians take it far beyond funk.

Other Soundways compilations are just as good, but this one set an early high water mark for head-bobbing, brain frying fun. After hearing this, I find Western music just way too boring.
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