Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Broken Flowers


Mulatu Astatke: Sabye
From Ethio Jazz (1974)
Mulatu Astatke - claviers/keyboards
Fekade Amnde Maskal - tenor sax and flute
Mogus Habte - tenor sax
Yohannes Tekolla - trumpet
Andrew Wilson - guitar
Giovanni Rico - bass
Temare Haregu - drums

Mulatu Astatke: Munaye
From Ethiopian Modern Instrumental Hits (197?)
Mulatu Astatke - claviers/keyboards
Fekade Amnde Maskal - tenor sax and flute
Mogus Habte - tenor sax
Yohannes Tekolla - trumpet
Andrew Wilson - guitar
Giovanni Rico - bass
Temare Haregu - drums



In the late 1990s the French label Buda Musique released Volume Four of it’s Ethiopiques series; a series that focused attention on the fertile but overlooked musical era of Ethiopian popular music (1968 to 1974), for which band-leader/composer/arranger/musician Mulatu Astatke was a pivotal figure. This volume was the first in the series to focus on an individual artist, as well as the first to be made up entirely of instrumentals.

What Mr. Astatke created during that era was a unique amalgamation of musical ideas -- successfully integrating the melodies of Ethiopia with the jazz and Latin music he fell in love with while performing and studying abroad -- that comes across as something like what the house band at Rick’s Place might have sounded like had Booker T. Jones been the musical director. His compositions, beautiful in their simplicity, have a smoky late-night vibe; while his arrangements combine percolating Latin percussion, choruses of swirling Middle Eastern horns, Hendrix style guitar sounds and his own liquid organ and vibe playing to form a dense and intoxicating groove.

Read more about Mulatu Astatke:
NPR: Jazz from the Horn of Africa: 'Ethiopiques'

1 Comments:

Blogger jazztheo said...

I so happy I found your blog, especially with your post on Ethiopia. I was just there this year and have fallen in love with the country and the people. Thanks for adding a jazz link to this beautiful country as well.

jt
www.jazztheologian.typepad.com

7:29 PM  

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