eMusic Review 0
In June 2005, super-syncopator Tony Allen booked 10 all-night recording sessions in the Ikeja district of Lagos, Nigeria, to update the steamy Afrobeat funk beloved of his erstwhile band master, Fela Kuti. Among a large ensemble of local talent, the drummer enlisted singer Fatai Rolling Dollar, a 76-year-old who sounds a quarter his age. Saxophonists Show Boy and Baba Ani — ex-members of Fela's Afrika 70 and Egypt 80 line-ups — mould elaborate brass fittings, embellished by younger singers from the region including Muritala Adisa, a Yoruba praise-singer who's not averse to a little rap. Together they hymn the virtues and vices of one of the world's most dynamic cities, from the salutation to the local firewater on "Ogogoro" to the dissing of citywide grumpiness on "Morose." On "Awa Na Re Fatai," Rolling Dollar gives thanks for the abundance of pleasures and opportunities offered by this sprawling metropolis.
Despite the fact that Allen has lived in Paris since 1980, the album title implies his unshaken belief that, as a musical capital, Lagos remains rock solid — and that applies to Allen's consummate drumming too. Whether at a loping pace on "Losun" or robotically intricate on "Kilode", it's as tangled but biologically… read more »