AFRIKA FREAK OUT! – FANGNAWA EXPERIENCE CD RELEASE LISTENING PARTY

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October 22, 2012 by joesonotheque

CALLING ALL AF-FREAKS!

Maria’s Package Goods & Community Bar & Strut Records presents

AFRIKA FREAK OUT! –  FANGNAWA EXPERIENCE CD RELEASE LISTENING PARTY

Hosted by DJ King Scratch (aka Joe Bryl)

Friday, November 16 – 8PM-2AM – Free, No Cover

960 W. 31st Street, Chicago, Il. 60608 – 773.890.0588 – http://www.community-bar.com

The monthly African-themed residency, AFRIKA FREAK OUT! on Friday, November 16 at Maria’s Packaged Goods (960 W. 31st) is proud to announce the addition of FANGNAWA EXPERIENCE CD RELEASE LISTENING PARTY run in conjunction with our friends at Strut Records. We will also have various giveaways (limited quantities to the first attendees) of the latest Fangnawa Experience release “Fanga/Maâlem Abdallah Guinéa”.
This Fall, Strut Records will have the pleasure of releasing a project that touches on Gnawa, the sacred music of Morocco and North Africa. The album functions both as an introduction to this rich style, as well as an indication of some of the parallels between Gnawa music and West African Highlife and Afrobeat. Whether you’re completely new to Moroccan Gnawa music or not, the Fangnawa Experience project offers a fresh take on African music and cultural exchange. The album will be released November 13th, and we’ll be sharing music here soon.
Gna•wa:

A term referring both to a North African ethnic group, as well as a ritual musical style and ceremony performed by maâlem (master musicians), traditionally on the qraqab (heavy iron castanets) and the gimbri (three-string lute).
Fang•naw•a:

A cross-cultural musical fusion undertaken by French collective Fanga and Moroccan master musician Maâlem Abdallah Guinéa.

Performed primarily in Morocco and South-western Algeria, a traditional Gnawa ceremony re-creates the genesis of the universe, incorporating trance-inducing music, a clairvoyant, incense, and ecstatic dancing in a complicated liturgy. Gnawa music mixes classical Islamic Sufism with pre-Islamic African traditions, and in recent decades has begun to be performed outside of the traditional closed-door ceremonies, to the wider Moroccan public, and to global music audience at large.

In 2011, the forward-thinking Détours du Monde festival in Montpelier curated a collaboration between French Afro collective Fanga and Moroccan maâlem Abdallah Guinéa, creating a fusion of two distinct musical styles each based in tradition, African rhythms, and drawn-out, trance-inducing arrangements.  “The project appealed to us, especially the trance aspect of both forms,” says Korbo, the Burkina Fasso-born vocalist of Fanga. “Our objective from the sessions was not so much to create an entirely new flow but more to bring the real Gnawa sound to some of our songs – we wanted to make the songs work so neither group’s sound was compromised”

The two styles prove to be naturally compatible throughout, building on compositions from Fanga’s 15-year catalog. Korbo and Guinéa share lead vocal duties, with Guinéa building his trademark ‘Fusion Trance’ through spiritual evocations, and rolling, hypnotic rhythms on the gimbri (three-stringed lute). Korbo’s lyrics serve up food for reflection, touching on the right to be different and promoting harmony between man and nature whilst denouncing the social injustices that result from an economic system out of control and designed to benefit the few.

Rich, thought provoking, and effortlessly funky, Fangnawa Experience is an ambitious piece of work, and another significant chapter in the open-minded and cross-cultural climate for modern world music.

Fanga:

A meeting of complementary personalities and cross-cultural energy, Fanga began to take shape in 1998, as hip-hop producer Serge Amiano returned to France from a trip to Africa with a selection of West African vinyl from the 60s and 70s. The nascent band, including Burkina Fasso-born rapper Korbo on vocals, worked with Tony Allen on his album Black Voices in 2000, and began releasing its own recordings in 2001. Acclaimed by tastemakers like Gilles Peterson, Wax Poetics, and Rich Medina, the band has built a global following based on a dynamite live show, socially conscious lyrics, and an ever-evolving interpretation of classic Afrobeat and Highlife sounds.
Maâlem Abdallah Guinéa:

Descended from a renowned family of artists (his father, Boubker Guinéa, is considered as one of Morocco’s greatest of all maâlems) Abdellah Guinéa began playing the gimbri at age 12, and became a full maâlem and master musician at age 16. Along with his band, Nasse Ejadba, he quickly developed his own musical style, somewhere between traditional and modern Gnawa, which he calls “Fusion Trance.” As well as gimbri, Guinéa plays guitar, banjo and mandolin and has continued the progression of his music by introducing Western sounds into the mix, effortlessly building a cultural bridge between different musical styles.
DJ for this special event is global groove merchant King Scratch (aka Joe Bryl who heads the Jungle Boogie and Secret Disco residencies). Doors open at 8pm and there is no cover for the event. So get your dancing shoes on for this night of explosive African dance rhythms and pulsating pounding beats!

AFRIKA FREAK OUT! mission is to meld and merge the music coming out of the ghettos of Soweto with the techno electronics of Detroit as well as featuring the Haitian dynamite of Les Difficiles de Petion-Ville with the Paris-based Senegalese style of Africando. It is our hope to show that this musical dialogue that emerged from trade routes even before the earliest recordings in the 20th century still continues nowadays with access never imagined before and more immediate effects.
The title AFRIKA FREAK OUT! has been chosen to pay homage to the groundbreaking spiritual jazz release (that includes the track “Afrika Freak Out) by Barney Wilen titled “Moshi” (Saravah 1972) that fused avant-garde jazz sensibilities and American blues with traditional African rhythms.

There is no cover for AFRIKA FREAK OUT! The party begins pounding at 8PM, followed by DJ Joe Bryl spreading the African gospel until 2AM.

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