Kedu America

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Kedu America album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 69:31

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Robert Christgau

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
One of highlife's great stars celebrates the old ways with a gently breathing groove.
Label: Xenophile / The Orchard

Like so many African states, Nigeria is a fiction of imperialism, not an ethnically coherent nation. It's huge, too, and thus has generated a profusion of pop genres. Yet distinct though the main ones — juju, fuji and highlife — may be, they share a similar looseness. They're not songful like South African mbaqanga, or intricate like Congolese soukous or, as happens in Senegal and Mali, reducible to "trancelike" or "circular." They clatter.

Born in 1936, Ibo vocalist-guitarist Osadebe emerged in the '60s as a star of the highlife Nigerians imported from the Ghanaian Anglophones to the west. Guitars played "palm wine" melodies and/or kept the beat, jazz-style brass signified modern affluence and percussionists provided the indigenous polyrhythms that rendered the whole Nigerian. As soukous flash permeated the style, Osadebe trumpeted preservationism on over 200 albums.

Recorded one day in Connecticut in 1994, this collection reprises many chestnuts, notably the opening "Onuigbo" and the big hit "Osondi Owendi," as well as offering up the politely occasional "Kedu America." Osadebe's voice has roughened, but he's still the master of a gently breathing groove in which nothing sounds precision tooled and everything sounds mutually understood. Kedu America is a mood album, emceed by an… read more »

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Shake your booty to this!

SOULJAH-21

Everything thing I've heard from Cheif Stephen Osia is Amzing! If you like that kind of African (Nigerian) music that makes you move your hips side to side, then you'll love this.

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They Say All Music Guide

Most great Ghanaian highlife music exists in the past tense only. So this state of the art studio CD recorded in December 1994 by the self-proclaimed “Doctor of Hypertension” offers bounty beyond expectation. Osadebe’s smoking ten-piece orchestra plays guitar-based dance music with a terrific horn section work and smooth-as-silk lead vocals by one of the best performers in the field. Chief Stephen Osita Osadebe’s Soundmakers rode high in the Ghanian charts in the ’70s and ’80s — only Prince Nico’s international hit album Sweet Mother outsold Osadebe’s Platinum-award winning Osondi Owendi. The liner notes include a great story of professionalism that definitely links this band to another time. Kedu was recorded during a rare North American tour when Osadebe was nabbed for a day of studio recording. When the producer suggested the band might want to cover themselves in the event of any false starts or mishaps by reserving a second day of studio time, Chief Stephen asked with a straight face, just how many records did he intend to make? – Bob Tarte

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