Friday, 3 April 2015

Femi Kuti - No Place For My Dream (2013) {Knitting Factory}


Femi Kuti - No Place For My Dream (2013) {Knitting Factory}
EAC rip (secure mode) | FLAC (image)+CUE+LOG -> 348 Mb | MP3 @320 -> 120 Mb
Full Artwork @ 300 dpi (jpg) -> 39 Mb | 5% repair rar
© 2013 Knitting Factory / Label Maison | KFR 1129-2
Afro-Beat / International / African Traditions / West African


Throughout his career, Femi Kuti, eldest son of Fela, has sought to establish his own musical identity while being the torchbearer (along with his younger brother Seun) of his late father's legacy. That truth can be easily envisaged on the cover of No Place for My Dream, where a woman is walking with a basket on her head through an enormous field of garbage. Recorded in Paris, the album sticks close to the heart of Afro-beat, but Kuti, infuses the music with Latin, African-American, and Caribbean sounds as well.


The message is the message. Kuti has no choice but to deliver it song after song--"Nothing to Show for It," "No Work No Job No Money," "Politics Na Big Business," etc. all speak truth to the power of oppression The righteous indignation is everywhere, presented in beautifully written tunes orchestrated by himself and Positive Force's bandleader/guitarist Opeyemi Awomolo. But there is real vulnerability here as well. Check the slippery Caribbean Afro-funk of "The World Is Changing." In addition to the interlocking call and response of his organ and the saxophone and brass sections, Kuti offers a vocal atop his backing chorus that states his case -- referring to Somalia, the tsunami in Japan, the earthquake in Haiti, the poverty and suffering from Bangladesh to Rwanda. His voice almost breaks with empathic pain, even as the music charges on. Kuti's organ takes center stage and fuels a deep Afro-Cuban groove on "Carry on Pushing On," while "Na So We See Am" melds Afro-beat to salsa in furious tempo. His tenor kicks things off in the jazzy funk of "One Man Show"'s call to world revolution. Throughout, Kuti sticks close to the heart of Afro-beat's musical drive and heartbeat, yet he moves its boundary. Besides the slamming tunes, another notable thing about No Place for My Dream is the way Femi mirrors his father's musical innovation. Where the elder Kuti brought other musics into the one he was creating as a new language for liberation, Femi uses Afro-beat as the jumping-off point that explores and connects other sounds to build bridges to other cultures. He acknowledges and celebrates musical difference, allows for those tensions to reveal themselves inside his music, and creates a dialogue that uses rhythm and harmony as unifying signifiers in his political language. Brilliant.

tracklist:
01 - Nothing To Show For It
02 - The World Is Changing
03 - No Place For My Dream
04 - Action Time
05 - No Work No Job No Money
06 - Carry On Pushing On
07 - Politics Na Big Business
08 - Na So Wee See Am
09 - One Man Show
10 - Wey Our Money
11 - This Is Only The Beginning

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