Home » Articles posted by Graham Radley (Page 2)

Author Archives: Graham Radley

Mamer: Eagle [Real World Records]

Dubbed as ‘Chinagrass’ this is music which is steeped in the traditions of Xinjiang, China’s wild, desert province, the heart of Muslim culture in China. Layered, ambient music with traditional throat singing meeting alt country, it might sound strange but it’s a perfectly natural unioun as on ‘Celebration’ with a guest slot for Bella Fleck. The Womad live set was great too.

Beto Villares: Beto Villares [Six Degrees Records]

Well known Brazilian producer and soundtrack composer this is his debut CD and very good it is too, among the top guest vocalists he uses are CeU, Zeila Duncan (Os Mutantes) and Rappin’ Hood. It’s a chilled mix which has a bedrock of bossa and other Brazilian rhythms joined by gentle flavours of reggae and funk. Perfect for all the lovely summer sunshine we should be having.

Ojos de Brujo: Aocana [Warner Bros]

Follow up to the brilliant debut ‘Bari’ and superb second release ‘Techari’ this new release delivers more of that eclectic and vibrant mix. Expect tango, salsa, tabla, scratching, bolero and more all fired up with the passion and spirit which is Ojos de Brujo. Irresistable.

Various Artists: Putumayo presents India [Putumayo]

There’s a couple of Bollywood tracks with A.R Rahman & Chinmayee and ‘Tere Bina’ from ‘Guru’ plus Rajeshwari Sachev’s ‘Maavan Te Tiyan’ together with Indian classical artists of renown Satish Vyas, Bombay Jayashri and Deepak Ram. A more contemporary approach from Kiran Ahluwalia, Niraj Chag, Sanjav Divecha and Susheela Raman through to the spiritual music of Uma Mohan. Good mixture.

Mulatu Astatke/The Heliocentrics: Inspiration Information [Strut Records]

Third in Strut’s ‘Inspiration Information’ series, this one teams Ethiopian veteran jazzer Mulatu Astatke (star of Ethiopiques series) with UK funky jazzers Heliocentrics. Got a nice feel this one with the Ethiopian jazz groove being embellished by Heliocentrics as it flows along sometimes going off at heavier tangents then others hitting the chilled feel of ‘Blue Nile’ . My pick is the funky percussion driven ‘Live From Tigre Lounge’ . Excellent.

Soname: Plateau [World Village]

A album of beautiful Tibetan mountain songs composed by Soname and which reflect the country and culture she had to escape some years ago. This amazing story is told in her book ‘Child of Tibet’, a journey that took her from Tibet to London via India. There’s a strong array of Indian musicians on the CD providing a lovely foil fopr Soname’s captivating voice.

Blick Bassy: Leman [World Connection]

First solo CD from cameroon’s rising star who is part of the Bassa ethnic group (originally nomads from Egypt). He grew up surrounded by music, not only Bassa musical traditions but his familys collection of music from Western soul greats like Marvin Gaye. He then moved to Paris in 2005 where he worked with many top African musicians like Manu Dibango. Those influences now unite on ‘Leman’ with the soulfulness of Gaye enriching his African traditional heritage. Great debut.

Davy Sicard: Kabar [Warner]

Originally from the island of La Reunion but now based in France, Davy’s music is sourced from the Reunionais folk dance ‘Maloya’ which is an amalgm of African slave chants and rhythms plus contemporary European instruments. The special ingredient though is Davy’s beautiful voice which glides across the music like a scrumptious coating, pure sweet and expressive. Good stuff.

Oumou Sangare: Seya [World Circuit]

Brilliant release (first in 6 years although 1996 was her last full international release ) for the Malian star, this really is a superb collection of 11 tracks which leave you wanting more and more. A more mature, harder edge, than previous releases, with a positive flow to the groove and a respect for the tradition which reflects a woman happy in her skin and riding the crest of a musical wave. Superb.

Baaba Maal: On The Road [Palm Pictures]

A retrospective of his acoustic live shows taken from gigs over the past ten years. Listen to the beautiful kora playing of the late Kaouding Cissoko, or Koni featuring Ernest and then drift into Baaba’s divine vocals and find yourself in a very special place, he’s a genius and please can we have a new CD soon.

Tune In

Tuesday

03:00 African FM

04:00 Pool FM
13:00 Dinamo FM
14:00 Ness Radio

Wednesday

19:00 Radio 42
19:00 RauteMusik.FM

22:00 Educa Web Radio

Thursday

22:00 ASSK Radio

Friday

11:00 Ness Radio

15:00 Pattern Radio

Saturday
Sunday