Weekend Music Break, N°29
Here’s a resolution for the new year: to feature more Togolese pop. If you don’t know who the above Toofan duo is, google “Cool Catché”. Kuduro on the other hand we can never feature enough — this is a new video for MC Maskarado:
Don’t miss this week’s NPR piece on kuduro by the way, “The Dance That Keeps Angola Going”; they interviewed AIAC’s Marissa Moorman for it.
Next, from Uganda: Vampino and friends (arriving “from far”) visit a rural village; a party ensues. A different kind of dance-hall/pop/(add style):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Q0mUEuMLQM
Gambian artists Xuman, Djily Bagdad, Tiat and Ombre Zion take a stand ‘Against Impunity’:
South African Tumi Molekane directed a video for MC Reason (who is signed on Tumi’s record label):
Talking about labels…here’s a new video for South African rapper Kanyi. The story is funny-sad, but probably quite real too:
A video for Fatoumata Diawara’s song about men trying their luck crossing the Mediterranean to get to Europe. Here’s a translation of the lyrics.
Malian trio Smod (remember them) is all for ‘a united Mali’:
Wonderful new video for Asa’s Bond-esque ‘The way I feel’:
And one of the albums I’ve been listening a lot to this year — more about that next week — is Carmen Souza’s Kachupada. This is her version of Cape Verdean artists Humbertona and Piuna’s 1970s classic ‘Seis one na Tarrafal‘: