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AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #64: TEJU COLE –‘ONE NIGHT IN LASGIDI’

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Teju-Cole-Okayafrica-Earbuds-64
Cover Artwork by Underdog. Mixed by Chief Boima.

For our latest installment of Africa In Your Earbuds, Nigerian-American writer Teju Cole curates the soundtrack to a night out in Lagos. Teju’s mixtape, which we’re co-presenting with The Paris Review, is accompanied by ‘One Night In Lasgidi,’ an original piece from the author that beautifully frames his Nigerian pop selections which feature the likes of D’banj, Wizkid, DavidoNneka, Burna Boy, Wale and many others. Stream AIYE #64, mixed by Chief Boima, and read Teju’s text below.

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One Night In Lasgidi

It doesn’t really get good until about 1 am, but you do want to be there by then, because you’d like to get in at least two solid hours of dancing by the time the clubs shut down. Afterward you run the gauntlet of cops on Falomo Bridge. “Oga, anything for us?” “Ehn, don’t worry, on my way back.” And on the way back, you lie. “Officer, I already saw you before na. You no remember?” Naturally, you’re not trying to drive to the Mainland at that hour. You’ve made arrangements to sleep in some Island neighborhood, assuming you’re not rich enough to already live there: Ikoyi, V.I., Lekki 1, Lekki 2, Lekki 3, Ajah. At this hour, you’re taking the uncannily clear roads at speed, stopping not even for traffic lights. The breeze is blowing, the great lagoon sleeps. Twenty-one million people are in whatever form of shelter they call home, these human energies at rest, numerous as the stars above the endless city. The past two hours begin to come back to you, a blur of moves and bodies, and the two or three things you saw and were reluctant to believe, good things, bad things, badt guys, as Lagosians say, and bad gyals dem.

Day is for thought, and night for clubs. Night I’ve spent in clubs in at least a couple dozen cities by now, in as many countries. American hip hop generally rules the scene, chart toppers mostly. A surprising number of DJs, from Stockholm to Cape Town, know their old school selections. But in the past few years, contemporary Nigerian dance music, “Naija jams,” have been taken in by enthusiastic audiences at out of the way clubs in the US, huge crowds in East African stadiums, and on mainstream radio play in the UK. For the duration of the set, you are transported to Lagos Island on a Friday night. Saturdays are dry because there’s church on Sunday. Sundays are non-existent because there’s work on Monday. Wherever you are, it’s Friday. You are transported to Lagos, Lasgidi, Eko City, the Gidiopolis, as stars like D’Banj, Wizkid, or Davido ignite the floor. You enter a specific space inside the urban Black Atlantic, and only later do you remember that you are, in fact, physically elsewhere: in Brazzaville, in Berlin, in Brooklyn.


AIYE #64: ‘One Night In Lasgidi’ Mixed by Chief Boima.

Like any big and active cultural practice, there’s a basic core of forms that sustains the rapidly changing specifics. Last year’s Lagos playlist isn’t this year’s. This year’s will share elements with next year’s, but no one knows yet what next year’s big hit will be, what minor inflection will introduce a whole new feeling to the music. Such is the rate of change that a song from three years ago already sounds old-fashioned. In that sense, there’s no “typical” Lagos playlist. It must be specific to the date. Tiwa Savage’s Eminado was 2014, Naeto C’s 5 & 6 was 2011, 9ice’s Gongo Aso was 2008.

So, this playlist is a fiction. I mix time periods freely, the same way the music itself (finely mixed for me here by the great Chief Boima) mixes influences: propulsive rhythms, soukous-inflected guitars, coupé decalé beats, Ghanaian flow, Afrobeat interludes, razor-sharp modern production, house, jazz, pop, rap, dancehall. This is a Lasgidi of the mind, representing a meld of many club nights in Lagos and alternate Lagoses through the past decade. It is a cauldron of that vertigionous self-confidence that anyone who knows any Nigerians knows well. It contains a nod towards a genealogy of the form, including some of the early hits of the genre. I’ve also included, for they ought to be included, some key recent moments from the Nigerian diaspora: folks like Wale and Nneka speak to this world as well. This is music that has come a long and joyous way in a very short time. Dance to it—note its persistent tone of joy—then come back and listen to it.

The time is 3.30 am. You find your car—no, the guy who’s going to collect money for nominating himself as your valet shows up and shows you your car. You pay him. One of your gang is the designated driver or, depending on how you roll, you have a driver who has spent the night waiting. (You’re a bad leftist as, from time to time, all leftists in Lagos are.) You leave the club in a great mood, and this time you feel like spreading the love. The police officer flags you down at Falomo Bridge. You roll down your window and, without saying a word, smile, and hand him N500, before you disappear into the night.

Teju Cole is the author of ‘Open City’ and ‘Every Day Is For The Thief.’ His first book of essays ‘Known and Strange Things’ will be published in 2016.

‘One Night In Lasgidi’ Mixed By Chief Boima Tracklist
1) Good Morning (Kid Konnect Remix) – Brymo
2) Pon de ting – Sarkodie ft Banky W
3) Omo pastor – Aje Butter
4) Adonai (Remix) – Sarkodie feat. Castro
5) Yahooze – Olu Maintain
6) Gongo Aso – 9ice
7) Parcel (a BIG Nwa) – Phyno
8) Kini Big Deal – Wale
9) Oyoyo – J. Martins
10) Aye – Davido
11) Eminado – Tiwa Savage
12) 5 and 6 – Naeto C
13) Gobe – Davido
14) Jaiye Jaiye – Wizkid
15) Oliver Twist – D’Banj
16) First of All – Olamide
17) On top your matter – Wizkid
18) Durobucci – The Mavins
19) Thank God – Da Grin ft. Omawunmi
20) Like to Party – Burna Boy
21) Pete Pete – 9ice
22) Walking – Nneka
23) Iba – Asa

Get more African mixtapes from Africa In Your Earbuds:

NICKODEMUSMARAMZADOOKOOM — MIKAEL SEIFUGARTH TRINIDAD — DJ SPOKO — CAPTAIN PLANETTHE HAPPY SHOWCLAP! CLAP!DJ GIOUMANNEALEXIS TAYLOR OF HOT CHIP— CARLOS MENA — ZACH COWIE — ELIJAH WOOD — KOOL A.D. — SOL POWER ALL-STARS — DJ NUNAS — NIC OFFER OF !!! — LARRY ACHIAMPONG — KYLA-ROSE SMITH OF FRESHLYGROUND— THE GTW — RADIO TANZANIA — JON THEODORE — DESMOND & THE TUTUS — MATHIEU SCHREYER II — YOUNG FATHERS — BBRAVE OF AKWAABA — OLD MONEY — DJ NEPTUNE — SAHEL SOUNDS — BEATENBERG — M1 [DEAD PREZ] — BODDHI SATVA — L’AFRIQUE SOM SYSTEME — NOMADIC WAX —  THE BROTHER MOVES ON — LV — BEN ASSITER [JAMES BLAKE’S DRUMMER] — JAKOBSNAKE — CHRISTIAN TIGER SCHOOL — SAUL WILLIAMS — TUNE-YARDS — MATHIEU SCHREYER — BLK JKS — ALEC LOMAMI — DJ MOMA — AWESOME TAPES FROM AFRICA — PETITE NOIR — OLUGBENGA — RICH MEDINA — VOICES OF BLACK — LAMIN FOFANA — CHICO MANN — DJ UNDERDOG — DJ OBAH — SABINE — BROTHA ONACI — DJ AQBT — JUST A BAND — STIMULUS — QOOL DJ MARV — SINKANE — CHIEF BOIMA

The post AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #64: TEJU COLE – ‘ONE NIGHT IN LASGIDI’ appeared first on Okayafrica..


AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #65: DJ UMB

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DJ-UMB-EARBUDS
Cover Artwork by Underdog.

DJ UMB has been a constant influence on this website over the years for the underground electronic findings from across Africa and the globe he publishes on Generation Bass. As a selector and editor, Umb’s been one of the initial champions behind a wide array of global bass sounds including the likes of zouk bass, tarraxo, fodencia, ‘Arabtronix‘ and many more. For the latest installment of Africa In Your Earbuds, DJ Umb put together the haunting 2-hour long African Apocalypse mixtape, featuring selections from DJ Znobia, DJ Marfox, DZC Crew, Bison & Squareffekt, Dotorado Pro, and many other stellar producers (listed below).

“I wanted to create a dystopian scenario… distorted polyrhythmic beats interspersed with static interference, a naiveté and doom laden atmospherics to create a bleak yet enthralling soundscape with vivid imagery,” DJ Umb tells Okayafrica. “The blend of tarraxo, tarraxinha, fodencia, kuduro, afro bass, afrobeat (and lots of stuff I don’t even know what to label) has created an intoxicating & cinematic… journey. For this mix I drew very heavily on the Angolan and Portuguese bass undergrounds. I’ve been a huge supporter of these movements for a number of years. I’ve supported artists on the blog and also curated many of our own digital releases on the Generation Bass label focusing on these underground scenes.”

“I’ve been saying for a number of years that the future of dance music lies in these scenes and that the future generations of super-producers and superstar DJs will come to be dominated by producers in Europe with an African heritage,” adds DJ Umb. “The sound is raw, exciting and fresh and unlike anything I’ve ever heard before. In many instances, the bridge between African dance floors and European dance floors is ‘almost’ complete within the sound of these burgeoning new movements.”

“A lot of the tracks in this mix have been in my vaults for at least 3 years or more. I have decided only now to commit them to this mixtape. I still don’t think the world is quite yet ready for a lot of this material, it’s maybe still at least 3 years or more ahead of it’s time. Some of it we have previously released on our Generation Bass label and a lot of other stuff is either unreleased or floating around on other independent labels. The artists who feature are self-evident from the ID tags that are shouted out on most tracks which reveal the identities of the brilliant and mind blowing producers at work.”

Stream and download DJ Umb‘s Africa In Your Earbuds above and sort through the artists on the mix below. View our previous AIYE releases listed underneath.

Featured Artists On AIYE #65: DJ Umb ‘African Apocalypse’
Dj Znobia
Dj Paparazzi
Bison & Squareffekt
Deejay Anderson
Dj Liu K
Mambos Da Casa
Nigga Fox
Dj Marfox
King Kong
Lx Monkey Beatz
Roulet
Dj Marshall
Nazar
Beat Laden
Dj Doraemon
Dj BeBeDeRa
Dotorado Pro
Dj Lilocox
Dj Finicox
Dj Zulox
DZC Crew
MZK
Dj N.K
Nidia Minaj
Diamond Bass
Dj Satelite
Dj UmbFox
TxiGa Pro
DJ PutOo Helder
Blacksea Não Maya
Deejay KarFoX
Babaz Fox
Power Music Beatz

Get more African mixtapes from Africa In Your Earbuds:

TEJU COLE — NICKODEMUSMARAMZADOOKOOM — MIKAEL SEIFUGARTH TRINIDAD — DJ SPOKO — CAPTAIN PLANETTHE HAPPY SHOWCLAP! CLAP!DJ GIOUMANNEALEXIS TAYLOR OF HOT CHIP— CARLOS MENA — ZACH COWIE — ELIJAH WOOD — KOOL A.D. — SOL POWER ALL-STARS — DJ NUNAS — NIC OFFER OF !!! — LARRY ACHIAMPONG — KYLA-ROSE SMITH OF FRESHLYGROUND— THE GTW — RADIO TANZANIA — JON THEODORE — DESMOND & THE TUTUS — MATHIEU SCHREYER II — YOUNG FATHERS — BBRAVE OF AKWAABA — OLD MONEY — DJ NEPTUNE — SAHEL SOUNDS — BEATENBERG — M1 [DEAD PREZ] — BODDHI SATVA — L’AFRIQUE SOM SYSTEME — NOMADIC WAX —  THE BROTHER MOVES ON — LV — BEN ASSITER [JAMES BLAKE’S DRUMMER] — JAKOBSNAKE — CHRISTIAN TIGER SCHOOL — SAUL WILLIAMS — TUNE-YARDS — MATHIEU SCHREYER — BLK JKS — ALEC LOMAMI — DJ MOMA — AWESOME TAPES FROM AFRICA — PETITE NOIR — OLUGBENGA — RICH MEDINA — VOICES OF BLACK — LAMIN FOFANA — CHICO MANN — DJ UNDERDOG — DJ OBAH — SABINE — BROTHA ONACI — DJ AQBT — JUST A BAND — STIMULUS — QOOL DJ MARV — SINKANE — CHIEF BOIMA

The post AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #65: DJ UMB appeared first on Okayafrica..

AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #66: OWINY SIGOMA BAND

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Cover Artwork by Underdog.

Nairobi-London collective Owiny Sigoma Band is formed by a revolving cast of Western Kenyan musicians and UK artists who seek to explore the sonic relationship between Luo and London through hypnotizing grooves. Earlier this year we premiered their ferocious single “Changaa Attack,” a highlight from their just-released new album Nyanza — a 12-track collection of songs recorded in percussionist Charles Owoko and nyatiti player Joseph Nyamungu‘s home of Nyanza Province.

For our latest installment of Africa In Your Earbuds, Owiny Sigoma Band offer up a large batch of their own unreleased material blended with the likes of 90s Ghanaian highlife-disco act Ata Kak. “This mix features several original and unreleased song sketches,” the band explain. “The opening track is a re-edit from an old cassette we found in a dusty market in the Rift Valley – we added a tiny Casio keyboard drum whilst sitting on our veranda over looking Lake Victoria. Other tracks we found at the bazaar. Ata Kak… is just weird 90s ghanaian dance rap music… an odd ball. We also included some Owiny Sigoma demos including “Fisherman’s Camp Part 2″ – a beat [keyboardist] Jesse Hackett made whilst suffering chronic dysentery.”

Stream and download AIYE #66: Owiny Sigoma Band below and check out the mixtape’s full tracklist underneath. Owiny Sigoma Band’s Nyanza is available now through Gilles Peterson‘s label Brownswood Recordings.

Tracklist
1. Kararu Hits 1 – OSB Edit (unreleased – Kenya)
2. Yemmpa Aba – Ata Kak (Awesome Tapes – Ghana)
3. Kararu Hits 2 – OSB Edit (unreleased – Kenya)
4. Fishermans Camp Pt. 2 – OSB (unreleased – Kenya/UK)
5. The Grasshopper – Elmore Judd + Rowan Park (UK)
6. Track 2 – Charles Owoko (unreleased – Kenya)
7. Lucas Malore (Benny Hill edit) – OSB (unreleased – Kenya/UK)
8. Demo – Albert Sempeke + Jesse Hackett (unreleased – Uganda/UK)

Get more African mixtapes from Africa In Your Earbuds:

DJ UMBTEJU COLE — NICKODEMUSMARAMZADOOKOOM — MIKAEL SEIFUGARTH TRINIDAD — DJ SPOKO — CAPTAIN PLANETTHE HAPPY SHOWCLAP! CLAP!DJ GIOUMANNEALEXIS TAYLOR OF HOT CHIP— CARLOS MENA — ZACH COWIE — ELIJAH WOOD — KOOL A.D. — SOL POWER ALL-STARS — DJ NUNAS — NIC OFFER OF !!! — LARRY ACHIAMPONG — KYLA-ROSE SMITH OF FRESHLYGROUND— THE GTW — RADIO TANZANIA — JON THEODORE — DESMOND & THE TUTUS — MATHIEU SCHREYER II — YOUNG FATHERS — BBRAVE OF AKWAABA — OLD MONEY — DJ NEPTUNE — SAHEL SOUNDS — BEATENBERG — M1 [DEAD PREZ] — BODDHI SATVA — L’AFRIQUE SOM SYSTEME — NOMADIC WAX —  THE BROTHER MOVES ON — LV — BEN ASSITER [JAMES BLAKE’S DRUMMER] — JAKOBSNAKE — CHRISTIAN TIGER SCHOOL — SAUL WILLIAMS — TUNE-YARDS — MATHIEU SCHREYER — BLK JKS — ALEC LOMAMI — DJ MOMA — AWESOME TAPES FROM AFRICA — PETITE NOIR — OLUGBENGA — RICH MEDINA — VOICES OF BLACK — LAMIN FOFANA — CHICO MANN — DJ UNDERDOG — DJ OBAH — SABINE — BROTHA ONACI — DJ AQBT — JUST A BAND — STIMULUS — QOOL DJ MARV — SINKANE — CHIEF BOIMA

The post AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #66: OWINY SIGOMA BAND appeared first on Okayafrica..

AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #67: JIDENNA & NANA KWABENA

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Jidenna-Okayafrica-Mixtape-Africa-In-Your-Earbuds-Nana-Kwabena
Cover artwork by Underdog.

It’s been a colossal year for Jidenna. With the help of radio-hit earworms like “Classic Man” and “Yoga,” the Nigerian-American artist has positioned himself as an emerging star across the U.S. and one of the leading lights of Janelle Monáe‘s Wondaland Records. During his rise, the singer — who was born in Wisconsin to an Igbo father and an American mother — has promoted his Nigerian identity by penning impassioned open letters and crediting “Nigerian excellence” as the inspiration behind his breakout single. It is fitting that Jidenna’s name means “embracing the father” in Igbo.

Though less in the spotlight, Nana Kwabena has played a big role in the rise of the “Classic Man” and the renaissance of his dapper aesthetic. As Jidenna’s DJ, co-producer and member of their social club Fear & Fancy, the Ghanaian-bred musician has earned songwriting & production credits on Jidenna’s two biggest hits to date, as well as formed an integral part of his live show.

“Africa’s influence on American culture has been longstanding.” Jidenna & Nana tell Okayafrica in an email. “Over the past half decade, there’s been a wave of African culture in the American marketplace. Now debates about Nigerian and Ghanaian Jollof have a worldwide Twitter stage; Ntoma has a Tumblr and Pinterest page; Azonto has found its way to Chris Brown’s choreography and Ankara is a part of Beyoncé‘s wardrobe.”

“Africa has long embraced American pop culture and previous American generations have reciprocated that appreciation, particularly within music. From Quincy Jones’ and Michael Jackson‘s cultivation of “Off The Wall” and “Thriller” to Paul McCartney‘s weeping after witnessing Fela play for the first time, to James Brown sending his arranger to The Shrine in Lagos to study Tony Allen‘s drum grooves.”

“Fast-forward and now Africa has solidified a home in America’s mainstream within the millennial generation. It’s about time. ‘Soon come’ has long arrived and, at the risk of preaching to the choir, it suffices to say that Africa is no longer relegated only to the future. It is the here and now. This mix was inspired by the need to continually bridge the gaps within the Diaspora and to allow transcultural diffusion to pave the way for cross-collaboration amidst a new generation of thinkers, tastemakers and social architects.”

Stream AIYE #67: Jidenna & Nana Kwabena above and read the mixtape’s full tracklist below. View our previous Africa In Your Earbuds releases listed underneath.

Tracklist:
01. Fela Kuti – Roforofo Fight [Nigeria]
02. R2Bees – Lobi [Ghana]
03. Rihanna – BBHMM Mavin Remix feat. Tiwa Savage & Reekado Banks [Nigeria]
04. Mafikizolo – Khona ft Uhuru [South Africa]
05. WizKid – In My Bed [Nigeria]
06. Mafikizolo – Happiness [South Africa]
07. Drake – Know Yourself (Fasta & Kid Kayne Afro Bootleg) [Netherlands]
08. Buraka Som Sistema – Komba feat. Kaysha [Portugal]
09. Janelle Monaé – Tightrope (Salah Ananse Remix) [United States]
10. Fela Kuti – Eko Ile [Nigeria]
11. Oscar Sulley – Bukom [Ghana]
12. Seun Kuti – Mosquito Song [Nigeria]
13. Fela Kuti – Colonial Mentality [Nigeria]
14. Fela Kuti – Ariya [Nigeria]
15. Femi Kuti – Look Around [Nigeria]
16. The Lijadu Sisters – Not Any Longer [Nigeria]
17. Sarkodie – Dumsor [Ghana]
18. Jidenna – Classic Man ft. Kendrick Lamar (OxV Official Remix) [United States]
19. WizKid – Ojuelegba Remix ft. Drake & Skepta [Nigeria]
20. Stonebwoy – Baafira ft. Sarkodie [Ghana]
21. Navy Kenzo – Game ft. Vanessa Mdee [Tanzania]
22. E.L – Shelele [Ghana]
23. Iyanya – Applaudise [Nigeria]
24. Patoranking – My Woman, My Everything ft. Wande Coal [Nigeria]
25. Burna Boy – Follow Me [Nigeria]
26. Stromae – Ave Cesaria [Belgium]
27. Four Tet – TTIBPTPKAAATJUIHRAMADPOBR [England]
28. Sauti Sol, General Pype & Sasha P – Mara Hio Hio (Instrumental) [Kenya/Nigeria]
29. Kiss Daniel – Laye [Nigeria]
30. Various Artists – Racines [Cameroon]
31. Timaya – Some More [Nigeria]
32. Criss Waddle – Pepeepe ft Mugeez [Ghana]
33. Alikiba – Chekecha Cheketua [Tanzania]

Get more African mixtapes from Africa In Your Earbuds:

OWINY SIGOMA BANDDJ UMBTEJU COLE — NICKODEMUSMARAMZADOOKOOM — MIKAEL SEIFUGARTH TRINIDAD — DJ SPOKO — CAPTAIN PLANETTHE HAPPY SHOWCLAP! CLAP!DJ GIOUMANNEALEXIS TAYLOR OF HOT CHIP— CARLOS MENA — ZACH COWIE — ELIJAH WOOD — KOOL A.D. — SOL POWER ALL-STARS — DJ NUNAS — NIC OFFER OF !!! — LARRY ACHIAMPONG — KYLA-ROSE SMITH OF FRESHLYGROUND— THE GTW — RADIO TANZANIA — JON THEODORE — DESMOND & THE TUTUS — MATHIEU SCHREYER II — YOUNG FATHERS — BBRAVE OF AKWAABA — OLD MONEY — DJ NEPTUNE — SAHEL SOUNDS — BEATENBERG — M1 [DEAD PREZ] — BODDHI SATVA — L’AFRIQUE SOM SYSTEME — NOMADIC WAX —  THE BROTHER MOVES ON — LV — BEN ASSITER [JAMES BLAKE’S DRUMMER] — JAKOBSNAKE — CHRISTIAN TIGER SCHOOL — SAUL WILLIAMS — TUNE-YARDS — MATHIEU SCHREYER — BLK JKS — ALEC LOMAMI — DJ MOMA — AWESOME TAPES FROM AFRICA — PETITE NOIR — OLUGBENGA — RICH MEDINA — VOICES OF BLACK — LAMIN FOFANA — CHICO MANN — DJ UNDERDOG — DJ OBAH — SABINE — BROTHA ONACI — DJ AQBT — JUST A BAND — STIMULUS — QOOL DJ MARV — SINKANE — CHIEF BOIMA

The post AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #67: JIDENNA & NANA KWABENA appeared first on Okayafrica..

AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #68: YOUNG PARIS

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Cover artwork by DJ Underdog.

Young Paris breaks down his African-influenced electronic sound to its core—a shifting progression from tracks made on handcrafted Congolese instruments to modern West African beats & rhymes—in this new Africa In Your Earbuds mixtape.

The NYC-based artist straddles the modern & classic worlds of rap, electronic music and traditional African drumming. A visit to his live show feels like an entrance into a part-dance performance, part-club night, all presented through a stunning body-painted aesthetic influenced by Young Paris’ Congolese background.

On his hour and a half-long Africa In Your Earbuds mixtape, Young Paris runs through the full spectrum of his music’s background—kicking off with the acoustic Congolese sounds of Kasai Allstars and building up the pace to include Angolan house spinners Renato Xtrova & DJ Malvado, as well as recent huge hits like “Ojuelegba” and “Tchelete (Goodlife).”

“This African mix was inspired by the traditional, the current, and the future of Central & West African Music,” Young Paris explains. “It preludes with the ancient sounds of the Congo forest which was embodied by original handmade instruments known as ‘the ancestors of all music’–displayed by Kasai Allstars.”

“I then moved the ambience into the graduated sound of today by mixing these elements with afrobeat, featuring Renato Xtrova and DJ Malvado, leaving you with the future of afrobeats and African dance music in the realms of Wizkid and Davido. Enjoy.”

Hear Africa In Your Earbuds #68: Young Paris above and read the mixtape’s full tracklist below. View our previous Africa In Your Earbuds releases listed underneath.

TRACKLIST
1. Kasai Allstars – Quick As White
2. Kasai Allstars – “The Chief’s Enthronement”
3. Kasai Allstars – “Thus Spoke The Ancestors” (“Bakulumpa Bambila”)
4. Staff Benda Bilili – Moziki
5. Konono N°1 – Mama Na Bana
6. V Underground – Gelo Wandi feat Mishka
7. Afro Duro – Drums Of Steel
8. Gaia Beat ft Punidor – Uê
9. Mafikizolo ft Uhuru – Khona
10. Puto Prata ft Dj Djeff Afrozila – Broka
11. Dj Malvado ft Edy Tussa – Zenze
12. Dj Malvado Feat Eddy Tussa – Dama Que Nao
13. Dj Nays – African Force
14. Demor-Under Pressure
15. J CAPRI & Charly Black – Whine & Kotch (Rancido Remx)
16. Young Paris – WATAH
17. Young Paris – KAKÉ
18. Davido ft Mafikizolo- Tchelete
19. Wizkid- Ojuelegba

Get more African mixtapes from Africa In Your Earbuds:

JIDENNA & NANA KWABENAOWINY SIGOMA BANDDJ UMBTEJU COLE — NICKODEMUSMARAMZADOOKOOM — MIKAEL SEIFUGARTH TRINIDAD — DJ SPOKO — CAPTAIN PLANETTHE HAPPY SHOWCLAP! CLAP!DJ GIOUMANNEALEXIS TAYLOR OF HOT CHIP— CARLOS MENA — ZACH COWIE — ELIJAH WOOD — KOOL A.D. — SOL POWER ALL-STARS — DJ NUNAS — NIC OFFER OF !!! — LARRY ACHIAMPONG — KYLA-ROSE SMITH OF FRESHLYGROUND— THE GTW — RADIO TANZANIA — JON THEODORE — DESMOND & THE TUTUS — MATHIEU SCHREYER II — YOUNG FATHERS — BBRAVE OF AKWAABA — OLD MONEY — DJ NEPTUNE — SAHEL SOUNDS — BEATENBERG — M1 [DEAD PREZ] — BODDHI SATVA — L’AFRIQUE SOM SYSTEME — NOMADIC WAX —  THE BROTHER MOVES ON — LV — BEN ASSITER [JAMES BLAKE’S DRUMMER] — JAKOBSNAKE — CHRISTIAN TIGER SCHOOL — SAUL WILLIAMS — TUNE-YARDS — MATHIEU SCHREYER — BLK JKS — ALEC LOMAMI — DJ MOMA — AWESOME TAPES FROM AFRICA — PETITE NOIR — OLUGBENGA — RICH MEDINA — VOICES OF BLACK — LAMIN FOFANA — CHICO MANN — DJ UNDERDOG — DJ OBAH — SABINE — BROTHA ONACI — DJ AQBT — JUST A BAND — STIMULUS — QOOL DJ MARV — SINKANE — CHIEF BOIMA

The post AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #68: YOUNG PARIS appeared first on Okayafrica..

AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #69: DELE SOSIMI

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Cover artwork by DJ Underdog.

Dele Sosimi is one of the most important voices in the current afrobeat scene. After spending several years playing keyboards for Fela Kuti’s Egypt 80 and acting as the musical director & bandleader of Femi Kuti’s Positive Force, Dele now regularly plays with his own Afrobeat Orchestra in London.

Much like the influences on his latest record You No Fit Touch Am (his first album in over a decade), Dele’s selections on his Africa In Your Earbuds mixtape are packed with socio-political messages and guided by classic 1970s Nigerian afrobeat, Ghanaian highlife, Cameroonian funk and South African jazz. The high-flying mix runs through tracks from K. Frimpong, Manu Dibango, Hugh Masekela and Fela himself.

“These 10 tracks were selected specially for a reminder to all of the joy in the diversity of music,” Dele tells Okayafrica about his mixtape. “Starting with ‘Awareness’ and ending with ‘Long Ways from Home.’ The inspiration behind the selections come from the state of affairs world wide today, negatives and positives.”

“Without challenges, we will not realize potentials we possess to overcome, progress, evolve and live together. Listen to the music and let it speak to your souls, massage away your aches and recharge your whole being in a positive way.”

Stream AIYE #69: Dele Sosimi, recorded live at a vinyl DJ session with Koichi Sakai at Dalston, Hackney’s Ghetto Lounge Studios, below.

TRACKLIST
1. Monomono – “Awareness Is What You Need”
2. K. Frimpong & His Cubano Fiestas – “Hwehwe Mu Na Yi Wo Mpena (Look and choose your woman)”
3. Jonas Gwangwa & Africa Explosion – “Going Home”
4. Fela Kuti – “Gbagada Gbagada Gbogodo Gbogodo”
5. Haruna Ishola – “Pariboto Riboto”
6. Rail Band – “Nantam”
7. Orchestra Baobab – “Kelen Ati Leen”
8. Manu Dibango – “Senga”
9. Ramblers International – “Grazing In The Grass”
10. Hugh Masekela – “Long Ways From Home”

Catch Dele Sosimi at the Soundcrash Funk & Soul Weekender May 13-15 alongside Roy Ayers, Afrika Bambaataa & more.

Get more African mixtapes from Africa In Your Earbuds:

YOUNG PARISJIDENNA & NANA KWABENAOWINY SIGOMA BANDDJ UMBTEJU COLE — NICKODEMUSMARAMZADOOKOOM — MIKAEL SEIFUGARTH TRINIDAD — DJ SPOKO — CAPTAIN PLANETTHE HAPPY SHOWCLAP! CLAP!DJ GIOUMANNEALEXIS TAYLOR OF HOT CHIP— CARLOS MENA — ZACH COWIE — ELIJAH WOOD — KOOL A.D. — SOL POWER ALL-STARS — DJ NUNAS — NIC OFFER OF !!! — LARRY ACHIAMPONG — KYLA-ROSE SMITH OF FRESHLYGROUND— THE GTW — RADIO TANZANIA — JON THEODORE — DESMOND & THE TUTUS — MATHIEU SCHREYER II — YOUNG FATHERS — BBRAVE OF AKWAABA — OLD MONEY — DJ NEPTUNE — SAHEL SOUNDS — BEATENBERG — M1 [DEAD PREZ] — BODDHI SATVA — L’AFRIQUE SOM SYSTEME — NOMADIC WAX —  THE BROTHER MOVES ON — LV — BEN ASSITER [JAMES BLAKE’S DRUMMER] — JAKOBSNAKE — CHRISTIAN TIGER SCHOOL — SAUL WILLIAMS — TUNE-YARDS — MATHIEU SCHREYER — BLK JKS — ALEC LOMAMI — DJ MOMA — AWESOME TAPES FROM AFRICA — PETITE NOIR — OLUGBENGA — RICH MEDINA — VOICES OF BLACK — LAMIN FOFANA — CHICO MANN — DJ UNDERDOG — DJ OBAH — SABINE — BROTHA ONACI — DJ AQBT — JUST A BAND — STIMULUS — QOOL DJ MARV — SINKANE — CHIEF BOIMA

The post AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #69: DELE SOSIMI appeared first on Okayafrica..

AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #70: DJ CUPPY

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Africa In Your Earbuds #70 cover artwork by DJ Underdog.

Lagos-born DJ Cuppy cooked up her ‘Neo-Afrobeats’ sound, a blend of electro-house and afrobeats, spinning at nightclubs and fashion parties in London while she was attending college. That global dance sound propels her popular mixtape series House Of Cuppy, which also echo influences from her new home of New York.

The Nigerian DJ, producer and songwriter takes the reins on our new Africa In Your Earbuds, delivering a mixtape that pairs classic club anthems from around the world with the best from Nigerian pop, including tracks by Wizkid, Davido, Olamide, Yemi Alade, Patoranking, Timaya, Dr SID and more.

“This mix is an amazing expression of my experiences,” DJ Cuppy tells Okayafrica. “The music is a fusion of Afrobeats and Western House. Living in London and Lagos, and now New York, I soak in so many cultures so this mix allows me to display an array of varieties!”

Stream AIYE #70: DJ Cuppy below and see the full track list underneath.

TRACK LIST
Steve Angello “Show Me Love”
Club Anthems “Satisfaction”
Funky Dee “Are You Gonna Bang Doe?”
L.A.X “Ginger” Ft Wizkid
Major Lazer & Vybz Kartel “Pon de Floor”
Wande Coal “Baby Hello”
Davido “Skelewu (Uhuru Remix)”
Alex Gaudino “Destination Calabria”
Yemi Alade “Johnny”
DJ Snake & Lil’ Jon “Turn Down For What”
Timaya “Sanko”
Montell Jordan “This Is How We Do It”
Patoranking “Girlie O”
Major Lazer “Watch Out (Bumaye)”
Olamide “Durosoke”
Dr SID “Surulere”
Lil Kesh “Shoki (Remix)” Ft. Davido & Olamide
MC GalaxySekem
Olamide “Story For The Gods”
Uhuru “Y Tjukutja” Ft Professor Oskido & Dj Bucks
Wizkid “Show Me The Money”
LMFAO “Let the Bass Kick In Miami Girl”
Wande Coal “The Kick (Feat Don Jazzy)”
Pitbull “Give Me Everything (Tonight)”
Sean Tizzle “Sho Le”
LMFAO “Party Rock Anthem”
DJ Vetkuk vs Mahoota “Via Orlando (Uhuru Remix)” FT Dr Malinga
Cuppy “I Love My Country” ft Tunji Oyelana

Get more African mixtapes from Africa In Your Earbuds:

DELE SOSIMI — YOUNG PARISJIDENNA & NANA KWABENAOWINY SIGOMA BANDDJ UMBTEJU COLE — NICKODEMUSMARAMZADOOKOOM — MIKAEL SEIFUGARTH TRINIDAD — DJ SPOKO — CAPTAIN PLANETTHE HAPPY SHOWCLAP! CLAP!DJ GIOUMANNEALEXIS TAYLOR OF HOT CHIP— CARLOS MENA — ZACH COWIE — ELIJAH WOOD — KOOL A.D. — SOL POWER ALL-STARS — DJ NUNAS — NIC OFFER OF !!! — LARRY ACHIAMPONG — KYLA-ROSE SMITH OF FRESHLYGROUND— THE GTW — RADIO TANZANIA — JON THEODORE — DESMOND & THE TUTUS — MATHIEU SCHREYER II — YOUNG FATHERS — BBRAVE OF AKWAABA — OLD MONEY — DJ NEPTUNE — SAHEL SOUNDS — BEATENBERG — M1 [DEAD PREZ] — BODDHI SATVA — L’AFRIQUE SOM SYSTEME — NOMADIC WAX —  THE BROTHER MOVES ON — LV — BEN ASSITER [JAMES BLAKE’S DRUMMER] — JAKOBSNAKE — CHRISTIAN TIGER SCHOOL — SAUL WILLIAMS — TUNE-YARDS — MATHIEU SCHREYER — BLK JKS — ALEC LOMAMI — DJ MOMA — AWESOME TAPES FROM AFRICA — PETITE NOIR — OLUGBENGA — RICH MEDINA — VOICES OF BLACK — LAMIN FOFANA — CHICO MANN — DJ UNDERDOG — DJ OBAH — SABINE — BROTHA ONACI — DJ AQBT — JUST A BAND — STIMULUS — QOOL DJ MARV — SINKANE — CHIEF BOIMA

The post AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #70: DJ CUPPY appeared first on Okayafrica..

Sufyvn’s Mixtape Takes You Through Different Eras Of Sudanese Music

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A couple of months ago we introduced you to Sufyvn, the Khartoum-based producer transforming vintage Sudanese cassettes into some of the best beats we’ve heard this year.

Since we were so enthralled by his productions, we asked Sufyvn to take the helm on a new installment of our Africa In Your Earbuds series.

For his mix, the skillful beat maker takes listeners through a 40-minute lesson on Sudan’s musical history, ranging from vintage sounds to present popular songs.

“Sudanese music has always been very diverse throughout the years,” Sufyvn tells Okayafrica, “which is a direct reflection of the country’s accumulating heritage, and Khartoum being [a] melting pot, as well as the presence of external influences. It’s natural for artists to present a colorful mix of different styles in their work.”

“In this mix, I tried my best to include a wide range of some of my favorite tones from different parts of the country. It starts with older songs, and gradually moves to newer ones as the mix goes, and ends with one of my own beats.”

Hear Sufyvn’s all-Sudanese Africa In Your Earbuds mixtape and see the full track list below.

Track List
Hamad Al Rayah – Shahr, Shahrein
Mohamad Merghany – Geib Alai
Abu Obaida Hassan – Sayed Albalad
Salah Ibn Albadya – Washwashni Al Abeer
Sharhabeel Ahmad – Lessa Ma Arfeen
Abd El Azim Harakah – Ana A’ayyan
Abdel Gadir Salim – Quidrechinna
Hamad Al Rayah – Shalo Alkalam
Sinkane – Warm Spell
Alsarah & The Nubatones – Nuba Noutu
Sufyvn – Careless

Cover artwork by Underdog.

The post Sufyvn’s Mixtape Takes You Through Different Eras Of Sudanese Music appeared first on Okayafrica..


Hear DJ Poizon Ivy’s All-Kenyan Mixtape for ‘Africa In Your Earbuds’

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Nairobi-born DJ Poizon Ivy comes through with an expansive, all-Kenyan double hitter for the latest installment of our mixtape series Africa In Your Earbuds.

Having relocated from Nairobi to Texas when she was young, Poizon Ivy will soon become the official DJ of Dallas’ new WNBA team the Dallas Wings. She’s also recently been featured on radio shows like Sway In The Morning, Dash Radio, and regularly contributes mixes to Nairobi’s popular station 103.5 Homeboyz Radio.

For her AIYE, Poizon Ivy surprised us by delivering not one, but two high-energy mixtapes, which she charges to her “unbounded Kenyan pride.”

“I was born and raised in Nairobi, Kenya. I am a Nai girl,” DJ Poizon Ivy tells Okayafrica. “I have recently discovered that so much of who I am, as a lover of music and as a DJ, was subliminally created during my youth while riding matatus that blasted local music with my grandmother, while walking through town, and even through the integration of music into the school system. Nairobi is a very much a melting pot of so many cultures, tribes, and people as is evidenced in the music.”

DJ POIZON IVY okayafrica
‘Africa In Your Earbuds’ cover artwork by DJ Underdog.

“Most recently, Kenya has been in the news for both positive and negative happenings,” she adds. “Every nation in this world has its up and downs but with an upcoming election next year, I am choosing to use my platform as DJ to ignite a sense of pride amongst my generation, both those in the country and diaspora.”

“If you listen to this mix, it is very patriotic and also nostalgic for those who are familiar. But I am also hoping to spark the interest of those who are curious to know more about this wonderful East African nation—more about the people, the culture, and the music,” Poizon Ivy continues.

“This is an ode to those who have helped to ‘inua na ku jenga jina la taifa yetu.’ As in, an ode to those who have helped to lift up and to build our nation’s name, from the past to the present. Both musicians and others alike. President Barack Obama, Lupita Nyong’o, Sauti Sol, Just A Band, and the list goes on.”

Stream DJ Poizon Ivy’s two “Kenya takeover” mixtapes below and see the full track list underneath.

AIYE KENYA TAKEOVER PART 1 TRACK LIST
1. Intro (Auma Obama’s introduction of President Barack Obama at Kasarani Stadium on July 16, 2015) X African Sunset – The Bata Shoeshine Boys
2. Dunia Mbaya – Princess Jully
3. Mariru – Albert Gacheru
4. Fundamentals – Ken wa Maria
5. Tiga Kumute – Salim Junior
6. Mtoto Si Nguo – Johnstone Ouko Mukabi
7. Feel It (Robba Doba Doba) – Yunasi Ft. Wyre
8. Koolio – Stella Mwangi
9. Furi Furi Dance Remix – Jimmy Gait & D.K.
10. Party Don’t Stop – Camp Mulla Ft. Collo
11. Coming Home – Nameless
12. Wazee Wakatike – Them Mushrooms
13. Kenya Nchi Yangu – Habel Kifoto
14. Kwangu 254 – Ali B, Bahati, Bwana DNA, Collo, Size 8, Suzzana Owiyo, Wahu
15. Sura Yako – Sauti Sol
16. Aoko – Jabali Afrika
17. Ndambararia – Kayamba Africa
18. I’m Not Sober – Jamnazi Afrika (Awilo Mike)
19. Chonga Viazi – Boomba Clan
20. Najivunia – Trapee Ft. Avril
21. Tushangilie Kenya
22. Leta Wimbo – Sema
23. Adhiambo C – Deux Vultures
24. Kinyaunyau – Deux Vultures
25. Kibow Wow – Wahu
26. Ninanoki – Nameless
27. Amenitendea
28. Zuzu Remix – Elani
29. Lini – Rabbit Ft. Rich Mavoko
30. Hello Baby – Avril Ft. Ommy Dimpoz
31. Teso – Tattuu
32. Mateke – Size 8
33. Lingala Ya Yesu – Pitson
34. Tam Tam Remix – Willy Paul Ft. Size 8
35. Bajuka Remix – DJ Flip Ft. DNA
36. Welle Welle Remix – Timmy Ft. All Stars
37. Dandia – Kristoff Ft. Frasha, King Kaka
38. She Say Dat – Wyre
39. Shika More – Longombas
40. Anisa – King Stone Ft. Bed Bug
41. Jaa Jaa – Mr. Lenny
42. Julie – Redsan
43. Hepi (Huku Nairobi) – Historians
44. Furahi Day – Nonini Ft. Nameless
45. Baby Don’t Go – Kunguru Ft. Mr. Lenny
46. Atoti – Gidi Gidi Maji Maji
47. Amka Ukatike – C’Zars
48. Hela – Juliani Ft. L.C.
49. Why Lie – Nameless Ft. Big Pin
50. Juala – Circuit & Joel
51. Weka Weka – P-Unit
52. Ting Badi Malo – Gidi Gidi Maji Maji
53. Shake – DNG
54. Deadly – Nameless
55. Tukawake – K-Rupt
56. Swing Swing – Kleptomaniacs
57. Githurai (Remix) – Mr. Googz, Vinnie Banton & Mr. Lenny
58. Kamata – E-Sir
59. Tafuta – XYZee
60. Karibu Nairobi – Jua Cali
61. Paulina – Rhaptaz Ft. Jimwat
62. Kiboko Changu – Amani Ft. Radio & Weasel
63. Bank Otuch – Vicmass Luodollar
64. Dumbala Reloaded – Jay A Ft. Sage, Kenrazy, Visita, Madtraxx & DNA
65. Dabotap – The Kansoul
66. Unbwogable – Gidi Gidi Maji Maji
67. We Be Happening (All Stars Remix) – Khaligraph Jones & Kristoff Ft. Frasha, Abbass, Nessa, Wyre, Ulopa & DJ Joe
Mfalme
68. Tokelezea – Abbas Ft. Chantelle
69. Kenya National Anthem

AIYE KENYA TAKEOVER PART 2 TRACKLIST
1. Intro (Lupita Nyong’o’s 2014 Acacdemy Awards Speech X My Land is Kenya – Moipei Quartet)
2. Usilete Compe – Bamboo
3. Jambo Bwana – Them Mushrooms
4. Keep It Moving – Shadz O’Blak
5. Wild – Xtatic
6. Dunia Ina Mambo – Just A Band Ft. Octopizzo and Stan
7. Oh Ndio – Five Alive
8. All The Way – Victoria Kimani Ft. Khuli Chana
9. Hakuna Matata (Mpenzi) – Swahili Nation
10. Bounce – Bamzigi
11. Mapenzi Tele – Nikki Ft. Kalamashaka
12. Songa Hapa – Kalamashaka Ft. Nikki
13. Sitaki – Mercy Myra Feat. K-South
14. Dandora Love – Zaka na Kah Ft. Kabee
15. Tuendelee – Kleptomaniaxx
16. Mama Milka – Kenzo
17. Mwikulu – RuffTone
18. African Princess – Sentimentah
19. Otongolo Time – Poxi Presha
20. Dunda – Bucaneers
21. Vanity – Daddy Owen
22. Kare – P-Unit
23. Talk To You – Patonee Ft. Amani, Big Pin
24. Kioo – Jaguar
25. Moto Moto – Amos & Josh
26. Risasi Ft. Suzuki – Mr. DJ
27. Kenyan Girl Kenyan Boy – Necessary Noize
28. Naskia Utamu – The Bugz
29. Doesn’t Really Matter – Redsan & Kaz
30. Tetemesha – Redsan
31. Nibebe – Nonini Ft. Nyota Ndogo
32. Uhiki – Hardstone
33. Prezzo – Prezzo
34. Halo Halo – Wakimbizi
35. Double – Ukoo Flani Mau Mau Ft. Wenyeji
36. Feelo Ft. Bug – Mtoto Wa Kicole
37. Uliza Kiatu – H_art The Band
38. Tabia Mbaya – K-South
39. 4 in 1 – Darling P
40. Kiswahili – Idd Aziz

The post Hear DJ Poizon Ivy’s All-Kenyan Mixtape for ‘Africa In Your Earbuds’ appeared first on Okayafrica..

AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #73: DOTORADO PRO

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Back in 2014, when he was 16-years-old, Dotorado Pro burst onto the Portuguese club scene with the track “African Scream,” an infectious synthesis of marimbas, pitched-up vocal samples and a shuffling afro-house beat that became a huge underground hit across Lisbon and has racked up millions of plays on Youtube and Souncloud.

The single led him to sign with Buraka Som Sistema’s record label Enchufada.

Since then, the teenage producer has been releasing a consistent stream of bangers that have reframed the marimba as an instrument made for club dance floors.

Dotorado Pro’s recently-dropped Rei das Marimbas EP incorporates the sounds of afro-house, tarraxo, and kizomba throughout five songs that see the young beatmaker making a pretty compelling claim of being the true new ‘King of Marimbas.’

DOTORADO PRO AFRO-HOUSE EARBUDS 73
Cover artwork by DJ Underdog.

The producer takes the wheel in the latest installment of our Africa In Your Earbuds mixtape series, showcasing his deeply Angolan-influenced dance style in a mix that mostly highlights his own creations.

Dotorado Pro writes to Okayafrica: “The idea was to make a mix of almost exclusively my own material to introduce listeners to my style, from old tracks to new and a few unreleased ones as well. Also I wanted to give an idea of what I do when I DJ, mixing different styles like afro-house and baile funk.”

Stream AIYE #73: Dotorado Pro below and see the full track list underneath.

TRACK LIST
01 – Dotorado Pro – Playboy Aqui Sou Eu (ft. Mc Junior)
02 – Branko – Louca (ft. Mc Bin Laden)
03 – Dotorado Pro – Funk da Terra
04 – Dotorado Pro – Nossa Vibe (ft. MBROS)
05 – Dotorado Pro – Minha Terra
06 – Dotorado Pro – Marimba Rija
07 – Dotorado Pro – Paculamento (ft. Mira King)
08 – Dotorado Pro – Rei Das Marimbas
09 – Djeff Afrozila – Reborn (ft. Homeboys)
10 – Dotorado Pro – African Scream (Marimbas)
11 – Homeboyz – Marimba (Hard Remix)
12 – Dotorado Pro – I’m In Love With The Coco (Remix)
13 – Dotorado Pro – Ewe
14 – Dotorado Pro – Afro-Indian
15 – Dotorado Pro – Work (Remix)
16 – Dotorado Pro – Novo Ano, Novo Mambos (2015)
17 – Dotorado Pro – Mãe Dessa Miuda (Remix)
18 – Dotorado Pro – Tira o Pé Do Chão
19 – Dotorado Pro – 7 Anos De Produção

The post AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #73: DOTORADO PRO appeared first on Okayafrica..

AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #74: MsAfropolitan

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For the latest installment of Africa In Your Earbuds, we asked writer Minna Salami, founder of the MsAfropolitan blog, to pick out some all-female song selections for a ‘feminist’ episode of our mixtape series.

Check out Minna’s mixtape, which was expertly put together by DJ Cortega, below and read about the Yoruba inspiration behind her feminist mixtape. 

Here you are heard

There is an ancient Yoruba legend about Aje, a mysterious cult of women who were bestowed with supernatural gifts which they passed from mother to daughter or sold to women who wished to be initiated. The legend tells that they used their powers to both heal pain and destroy evil.

Fela Kuti once said that all women are Aje in the spirit world. “My mother is Aje, and so are all our sisters and wives,” he mused. With the introduction of the English language, Aje was translated into “witches” emphasising our fear of women who are not bound by conventions of obedience.

It was therefore the essence of Aje that I conjured when curating the Feminist Africa in Your Earbuds playlist. Aje are a representation of protofeminist Africa and I wanted to imagine what the song of Aje might sound like in the twenty-first century? What contemporary music reflects the triad—woman, spiritual power and Africa?

So the playlist is feminist in its mood rather than in its content. Which is not to say that its content is not ideologically aligned or that the artists included aren’t feminist. It’s just not the focus. Rather the focus is to sonically explore emotions that are superglued into the female consciousness.

In my head, feminist Africa sounds like this: sultry, transformative, ethereal, revolutionary, unshackled, wild, spiritual, healing and wise. But like feminism itself, it is a contradictory sound. It is vulnerable and loving, but also frustrated and rebellious.

There is jazz to evoke sultry sensuality, there are synthetic beats whose loopy drums evoke rituals of fertility, there’s the explosive expression of desert blues as well as nurturing soulful tones, there’s the community spirit of hiphop. There’s beats too, as in afrobeats, and alternative R&B so go ahead an play it in the midnight hours. I imagine the modern-day Aje dancing by the flames to this melange of harmonious sounds.

Throughout, there is a call to connect with your feminine energy. Even if you are male. Create space for sublime beauty in your life. Be aware of all your senses – taste, touch, sound, smell and sight. Don’t forget the sixth sense too. Connect with nature. Dance. Wail. Ground yourself. Let go of yourself. Be free…

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Cover artwork by DJ Underdog. Photo by àsìkò

Track List
Simphiwe Dana – Zandisile – South Africa
Kelela – All The Way Down – Ethiopia/US
Tanya Stephens – It’s A Pity (eTas remix) – Jamaica
Jojo Abot – Lom Vava – Ghana
Thandiswa Mazwai – Ingoma – South Africa
Ayo Awosika – City By The Sea – Nigeria/US
Ibeyi – Oya – Cuba
Shishani – Clean Country (Produced by G-Do) Namibia
Somi – Ginger Me Slowly – US/Uganda/Rwanda
Nneka – Still I Rise – Nigeria
Jhene Aiko – The Worst – US
Angelique Kidjo – Bahia – Benin
Fatoumata Diawara – Musso – Mali
Chiwoniso – Rebel Woman – Zimbabwe
Falana – Start Again – Nigeria
Yemi Alade – Na Gode – Nigeria
Seinabo Sey – Younger (Kygo Remix) – Gambia/Sweden
Mayra Andrade – Storia, Storia – Cape Verde
Jah9 – Avocado – Jamaica
Miriam Makeba Homeboyz Muzik edit – Zulu Song – South Africa
FKA Twigs – Mothercreep – UK
Bumi Thomas – Walk with me – Nigeria/UK
Noura Mint Seymali – Tzenni – Mauritania
Speech Debelle – The Work featuring Miss Baby Sol – UK/Jamaica/Zaire

The post AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #74: MsAfropolitan appeared first on Okayafrica..

AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #75: Nigeria’s National Football Team

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We’ve all thought about what our favorite footballers do as they prepare to defend their club or country.

We’ve all seen the live TV images of players walking down the tunnel into packed stadiums around the world with their headphones on, dead-focused on the match ahead.

It made us wonder: what songs do these players listen to as they get ready for the big game?

The answer—well, the Nigerian answer—lies in this new installment of our mixtape series Africa In Your Earbuds.

For these special selections, we asked Nigerian football stars John Obi Mikel, Alex Iwobi and Kelechi Iheanacho to share the tracks they listen to as they get ready to take the field to represent the Super Eagles or one of their elite Premier League clubs.

Nigeria’s captain John Obi Mikel, a veteran of the national team and Chelsea F.C., threw us a bit of a curveball by revealing that his favorite song currently is Sia‘s “The Greatest” featuring Kendrick Lamar. He also told us that he’s a fan of Tekno‘s “Wash,” Desiigner and Drake.

Arsenal winger and forward Alex Iwobi, who elected to represent Nigeria over England internationally last year, shares that his go-to tracks are Wizkid‘s “Murder” featuring Wale, Banky W‘s “Yes/No,” and Duncan Mighty‘s “Obianuju.” On top of those Nigerian bangers, he regularly bumps hits from French Montana, Fat Joe, and Tory Lanez.

Lastly, striking talent Kelechi Iheanacho, a rising force up top for the Super Eagles and Manchester City, told us that he plays P-Square, Flavour, Yemi Alade, Kcee, and, even, Celine Dion.

Check out all of the selections from these Nigerian stars in AIYE #75: Nigeria’s National Football Team above— expertly mixed by DJ/producer Kashaka—and see Mikel, Iwobi and Iheanacho’s track list below.

The mix is the first in a group of special articles Okayafrica will be releasing, in partnership with Nike, to promote the 2016 Nigerian National Football team and its new kits as part of our #NaijaBrilliance campaign.

AIYE #75: Nigeria’s National Football Team Track List
Tekno “Pana”
Wizkid ft. Wale “Murder”
Banky W “Yes/No”
Duncan Mighty “Obianuju”
Flavour “To Be A Man”
P-Square ft. J Martins “E No Easy”
Tekno “Pana”
P-Square ft. 2face “Possibilities”
Kcee “Limpopo”
Yemi Alade feat. Selebobo“Na Gode”
Tekno “Wash”
Splash ft. Charass “Onye?”
Wizkid “No Lele”
Sia ft. Kendrick Lamar “The Greatest”
Fat Joe “All The Way Up”
French Montana “Drink Freely”
Wale ft. Neyo “White Linen”
Drake ft. PartyNextDoor “With You”
Drake ft. Wizkid “One Dance”
Yxng Bane ft. Kojo Funds “Fine Wine”
Duncan Mighty “Hand of Jesus”
Desiigner “Panda”
Tory Lanez “Luv”
MIST “Ain’t The Same”
Celine Dion “I’m Alive”

The post AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #75: Nigeria’s National Football Team appeared first on Okayafrica..

AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #76: Teju Cole x Chief Boima

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For our latest Africa In Your Earbuds, Nigerian-American author Teju Cole continues where his ‘One Night In Lasgidi‘ mixtape left off.

Instead of Lagos, Teju’s new selections—which are expertly mixed here by Chief Boima—soundtrack one of his nights out in New York City. “For a Lagosian like myself,” he explains in his accompanying original short text, “New York City is a continuation of Lagos.” 

Get lost in Teju Cole and Chief Boima’s AIYE #76 mix of Nigerian, West African, and Caribbean sounds below and read Teju’s thoughts about the his nights out in NYC underneath. 

One Night in New York City

It’s a trick title, of course, since there’s no single “one night in New York City” that can stand in for them all. There are sixteen million nights in New York City every night. But it’s also true that “one night in New York City” might make people think of the downtown scene of the ’70s, or CBGB, or The Factory.

They want you to think New York at night is white people doing white people things, the same way they fooled the world into thinking Sex and the City, Friends, and Seinfeld represented this place. Or, if black, then we are talking about African-American culture: the Bronx, Brooklyn, Harlem, jazz clubs in times gone by, and the glory days of hip-hop.

But we all live in a highly particularized “now.” I’m thinking now about something the novelist Aleksandar Hemon said, if he was the one who said it, if my memory is correct. He’d written something, in his brilliant and unconventional way, and an editor had said, “Actually we don’t say it that way.” Hemon had responded: “Well, now we do.”

What is one club night in New York City? Highly subjective. Mine are many and varied. But more and more, they’re neither white nor, in any simple way, black. What they are is Nigerian, and West African, and African. They are Caribbean, and African-American, and black diasporic, all mixed up together.

This playlist reflects one such night, crammed largely with recent Naija pop. In a strange sort of way, for a Lagosian like myself, New York City is a continuation of Lagos, and it’s only logical that my New York City playlist continues seamlessly where my Lagos playlist ended.

With each passing year, there are more and more spots in the city where this precise combination of sounds—Afrobeats, hip-hop, coupé decale, dancehall, ndombolo, and R&B—is the order of the night. Are you in Bed Stuy or Harlem or Victoria Island? It gets hard to tell. Just about everyone in the crowd has a flexible foot in some other world.

These, by the way, are the places where you meet the most insouciantly gifted dancers in town. If someone is tempted to say that maybe that’s not really classically New York City enough, I’d spin Hemon’s line and say: now it is.

Shout out to the brother Chief Boima for his mixological ear and his international heart.

Catch Chief Boima playing with Kondi Band at Transmusicales Festival in Rennes on November 30.

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AIYE #76 cover artwork by DJ Underdog.

The post AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #76: Teju Cole x Chief Boima appeared first on Okayafrica..

AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #77: Olugbenga

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For the latest Africa In Your Earbuds, Nigerian-born, UK-based songwriter, producer, DJ and Metronomy bassist Olugbenga shares a new mix ahead of his South Africa tour.

Olugbenga Adelekan is a restless musician. You might not hear it in the measured tone of his speaking voice, but a listen to any his mixes quickly reveals the truth. It’s something he hinted at when talking about his Olu’s Omniverse mixtape from 2015, which he assembled shortly after the birth of his first son. “I haven’t seen the inside of a club in months,” he wrote in an email to Okayafrica at the time. “I’ve spent hours (and hours!) listening to tunes from all over the world, panning for gold.”

None of this is surprising, of course, when looking at his career and influences. Between playing bass for Metronomy and adding production to projects like Solange’s latest masterpiece, A Seat at the Table, Adelekan still finds time to be a forward-thinking electronic producer and, as a club DJ, a prolific dispatcher of African dance music. This isn’t even to mention the constant remix work he’s commissioned—of particular note, Janelle Monae’s “Dance Apocalyptic” and Laura Marling’s “Devine” have both received the Olugbenga treatment.

“I started, like a lot of black people I guess, making music in church,” he says of his early years. “I was singing in the choirs and then started taking piano lessons at school… We also listened to hip-hop and R&B when our parents weren’t listening with us. I had never made the connection about how music was made. Not how it was played, but the process of actually recording and making the kind of thing you heard on the radio.”

Moving to the Netherlands from his native Lagos when he was eight and attending an international school there meant easy access to an entirely new world of popular music—pushing his ear towards the sounds of the late grunge and pop rock scenes.

Adelekan’s output since then reflects this—once he worked out the mechanics of record-making. Rock and gospel influences are nestled together with rap, electronic and even classical forms. This already unwieldy set of sounds would be pushed even further through the type of curiosity a restless mind welcomes. “It was a mystery to me how electronic music like Aphex Twin and stuff worked, and I was listening to a lot of that in my late teens. Guys like Aphex Twin, Boards of Canada, even Radiohead when they started being influenced by the stuff coming from Warp Records, but I didn’t know how any of that got made.”

This curiosity, combined with a move to the UK at age 16 and a friendship with the dubstep producer Ean, led to him discovering the world of Ableton and digital production. “It was also a practical thing” he adds when I press him on his move towards the electronic. “I started playing with Metronomy at the time and it wouldn’t make sense for me to form another band, but I still wanted an outlet for music I was writing. That’s how I gravitated towards electronic.”

Courtesy of Olugbenga.
Courtesy of Olugbenga.

What’s happened recently with his style has been a wonder to watch. Using mixes and mixtapes as a medium, Adelekan has begun to define himself as a curator of production from his continent of birth—putting that gold he’s been panning for on full display.

“Lately I’ve become more keen on fitting stuff by African producers into my DJ mixes and sets. The way that I came across what was happening in South Africa with the music and the producers was literally talking to all my friends who were DJs and looking out for anything electronic that was from Africa in interviews that I read. Gradually I was beginning to piece together that there was a scene in South Africa. That was the thing I had been looking for.”

His Olu’s Omniverse series of mixtapes has served as a journal during this new phase of music discovery from the African Diaspora—each with a geographically-differentiated focus. While South Africa might have been mentioned by name when we spoke, his mixes have struck pay-dirt in a number of scenes—including the afro-Lusophile revolution happening in Lisbon. The third edition of his mix series, Nairobi Live, managed to weave its way from Aero Manyelo through to Bicep and back.

While the idea of a mixtape as its own medium is not a new one, Adelekan approaches his in an uncommonly conceptual way. His second Africa In Your Earbuds seems, on paper, as if it should be disjointed, but hearing him describe it invokes images of a P.I. connecting clues on a board.

“Conceptually I wanted to put one of the interludes from the Solange album on, and they’re all about black taking pride in being black. Which made me think of this Jay Z and Jay Electronica song [“We Made It“] because Jay Electronica’s verse touches on a similar themes of black empowerment. Which also made me think of this song he did with Don Jazzy, so I thought I could add it and flip from the Jay Z to the Don Jazzy. And then it’s just about picking stuff that fits well together.”

It fits, and more than well.

This month, Adelekan is taking on his first tour of South Africa, his latest muse, in collaboration with the Cape Town-based agency, Black Major.

Olugbenga’s South Africa dates: 25 November, Yoh! (Cape Town) / 26 November, Park Acoustics
(Pretoria) / 26 November, KCB presents: Olugbenga DJ set (Johannesburg)

AIYE #77: Olugbenga Tracklist

Solange – “Interlude: Tina Taught Me”
Jay Z & Jay Electronica – “We Made It”
Don Jazzy ft. Reekado Banks, Di’Ja & Jay Electronica – “Get Down”
Babes Wodumo ft. Mampintsha – “Wololo”
Moonchild Sanelly – “Vuma”
Jumping Back Slash – “Hit the Gold”
Olugbenga – UNKNOWN REMIX????
Mim Suleiman – “Mwaitoma”
Dotorado Pro – “Marimba Rija”
10010 x MONVCO – “64o (ZUFU Remix)”
Baloji – “Capture (Olugbenga Remix”
Eyal Talmudi + Roy Chen ft. Miss Red – “Bla Bla (NDV REMIX)”
Olugbenga – “Elite Habitat”

The post AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #77: Olugbenga appeared first on Okayafrica..

AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #78: Los Rakas

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“Rakataka” is a Panamanian derogatory term for someone from the ghetto.

It’s from that Central American country that cousins Raka Rich and Raka Dun, better known together as Los Rakas, hail from.

Growing up in Panama, the two eventually reconnected in Oakland, California where they formed their musical project in the mid-2000s, taking the Los Rakas moniker as a way to uplift the overlooked communities back home.

Los Rakas look to represent the voice of el pueblo, as well as their Afro-Latino and Californian heritage, rapping in both Spanish and English over a sonic bed that fuses hip-hop with reggaeton, bachata, dancehall and several other styles.

They’re black, proud and Panamanian & holding down the Afro-Latino sound.

Within the duo’s goals is also a desire to educate people about black Latino culture and promote solidarity across the continent.

“We get treated the same as if we were African-American,” the group told Okayafrica in an interview. “We’re the same thing here. But we feel the same, the only difference is that we are educating people and letting them know that there are black people who speak Spanish and come from different places.”

“I remember when we started not a lot of people knew that we spoke Spanish, just because of our color. Many people don’t know about the existence of Afro-Latinos.”

Los Rakas take the wheel in this latest installment of Africa In Your Earbuds. Their selections “were inspired by the music we listen to everyday that has deep roots from African culture,” the duo tells us.

Stream AIYE #78: Los Rakas, mixed by Young Fiyah, above and check out the track list below.

los-rakas-okayafrica

Track List
wizkid ft drake & skepta – ojuelegba – nigeria
korede bello – do like that – Nigeria
tekno ft flavour & phyno Nigeria
timaya ft Machel Montano – Shake Your bum bum – Trinidad
yemi alade – johnny- Nigeria
teddyson john – allez- St. Lucia
olatunji – oh yay Trinidad
don omar ft lucenzo – danza kuduro puerto rico
aldo ranks – latino – panama
2 face idibia – African queen – Nigeria
kafu banton ft almirando – morena – panama
el kid – ciencia cierta – panama
ismael rivera – las caras linda – puerto rico
grupo niche – gotas de lluvia – colombia
joe arroyo – rebelión – colombia
el general – muevelo – panama
tego calderon – loiza – puerto rico
ayo jay – your number – nigeria
los rakas – africana – panama
los rakas – me enamor – panama
masterkraft ft flavor & sarkodie – finally – ghana
celia cruz – la negra tiene tumbal – cuba
davido – aye – Nigeria
kiss daniel ft davido & tiwa savage Nigeria

The post AFRICA IN YOUR EARBUDS #78: Los Rakas appeared first on Okayafrica..


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