Tags
Language
Tags
May 2025
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
27 28 29 30 1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
    Attention❗ To save your time, in order to download anything on this site, you must be registered 👉 HERE. If you do not have a registration yet, it is better to do it right away. ✌

    ( • )( • ) ( ͡⚆ ͜ʖ ͡⚆ ) (‿ˠ‿)
    SpicyMags.xyz

    Various Artists - Pour Me A Grog: The Funaná Revolt in 1990s Cabo Verde (2019)

    Posted By: aasana
    Various Artists - Pour Me A Grog: The Funaná Revolt in 1990s Cabo Verde (2019)

    Various Artists - Pour Me A Grog: The Funaná Revolt in 1990s Cabo Verde (2019)
    african; latin; cumbia; dance | 00:40:36 | WEB FLAC (tracks) | 301,73 MB
    Label: Ostinato Records LLC

    In the 1950s, a few young men, known as Badius, embarked on a nearly 2,500-mile (4000 km) journey from the northern rural interior of Cabo Verde’s Santiago Island to the island of São Tomé off the Atlantic coast of central Africa. Incredibly, they made the arduous journey not to earn a better living or send money back home — but to simply buy an accordion, locally known as a gaita. They would work years in harsh conditions to earn enough to buy the instrument and a few more years to buy a ticket back to Santiago.

    Returning home, they slowly formed an elite class of self-taught gaita players who achieved a status similar to the griots of West Africa: venerated: wise elderly men archiving Badiu history in their diatonic button accordions. The gaita became the maximum expression of Badiu identity, one defined over centuries by a persistent culture of revolt and rebellion against domination and injustice. In a land lacking electricity, the acoustic instrument is king.

    The gaita masters marriage to a hard-won instrument gave birth to raw Funaná music, undoubtedly a trans-Atlantic sibling of Colombian Cumbia. Hypnotic notes on aged accordions, tuned and flavored in ways found nowhere but Santiago, became infused with inviting baselines, raucous rhythms, blade-on-iron percussion and the bubbling lyricism and lament of the island’s finest ambassadors, their lyrics spoke of the trials of daily scarcity and playfully crafted whole metaphors within songs.

    Their music was outlawed under colonial rule, with strict curfews monitored by the ever watchful eye of Portugal’s secret police to prevent gatherings since Funaná was dance music meant for large crowds, centered on one of the many star gaiteiros. Yet, naturally defiant, Badiu Funaná continued unfazed at the risk of arrest, detention, or worse.

    Funaná remained an isolated style, largely an affair for Badiu ears only. But in 1991, Cabo Verde had its first democratic election. Elections are tricky business anywhere, let alone a state divided into several islands, each needing a tailored approach. Political parties found a novel solution, perhaps even a model, to successfully get their campaign messages out to large audiences with ears wide open: music festivals. Until today, Cabo Verde plays host to dozens of festivals a year, some sponsored by the government.

    The music of the proud African interior became the soundtrack of choice at campaign rallies and music festivals. It drew large crowds, engaged the youth, kept people content, and undoubtedly won votes, setting the stage for traditional Funaná’s entry into the mainstream. But professional production and recording remained elusive.

    Younger artists empowered by the politically-backed proliferation of Funaná in the early ‘90s began traveling inland to learn the trade secrets from the gaita griots, taking up the once maligned artform to counter what they saw as global pop sounds diluting Cabo Verdean output and preventing genuine local music from competing on the airwaves.

    Another revolt was afoot, and in 1997, an “earthquake shook the country,” a Cabo Verdean newspaper wrote, when a group of youths, calling themselves Ferro Gaita, “dared to make a disc based on the gaita, ferrinho and bass guitar.” That best-selling first album – 40,000 copies in a country of just 400,000 – changed the entire trajectory of the country’s music.

    Ferro Gaita’s success caught the attention of affluent producers based in Cabo Verde’s large European diaspora, namely Rotterdam. Widespread sentiment was to honor the old gaita masters from the small villages of Santiago by commercially publishing their work for the very first time, giving what was once hidden the bigger stage it deserved.

    This compilation curates eight tracks from a short period in the late ‘90s when cherished pioneers, who risked everything to give their proud culture a sound, were finally put in recording studios; an album in itself a revolt in favor of the music of the most marginalized and once deliberately silenced.

    Pour yourself a grog, the Cabo Verdean moonshine distilled from sugarcane crushed by bulls, imbibe responsibly, listen carefully, and dance recklessly.

    01. Ferro Gaita - Rei di Tabanka (4:40)
    02. Etalvinho Preta - Mulato Ferrera (3:48)
    03. Tchota Suari e Chando Graciosa - Nha Boi (6:21)
    04. Avelino e Orlando Pantera - Nha Lutcha (5:23)
    05. Peps Love - Pom Um Grogu (6:31)
    06. Bitori e Fefé di Calbicera - Mô Na Máma (4:33)
    07. Orlando Pantera - Rabidanti (5:01)
    08. Fefé di Calbicera - Tra Tchapéu (4:20)

    ANALYZER: auCDtect: CD records authenticity detector, version 0.8.2
    Copyright © 2004 Oleg Berngardt. All rights reserved.
    Copyright © 2004 Alexander Djourik. All rights reserved.


    FILE: 08. Tra Tchapéu.flac
    Size: 33148457 Hash: 81A09C39FF7AF0C6FEF39E659B8FA7A1 Accuracy: -m8
    Conclusion: CDDA 100%
    Signature: D5CAB71DD60A16062BF5790270E8990D577F406B
    FILE: 07. Rabidanti.flac
    Size: 37955624 Hash: EE5711435EEDF2114281AD758E07111D Accuracy: -m8
    Conclusion: CDDA 100%
    Signature: 87922938801AD966C816785664A5DE40358AA556
    FILE: 06. Mô Na Máma.flac
    Size: 35423134 Hash: 2C536E4E4335E2ECD9AD01388B55B58F Accuracy: -m8
    Conclusion: CDDA 100%
    Signature: F18B99C513694ED7673148F842E8673D0A532A01
    FILE: 05. Pom Um Grogu.flac
    Size: 49607945 Hash: C7803D6472AD2B0538AC28709696FC87 Accuracy: -m8
    Conclusion: CDDA 100%
    Signature: 85E09F9D1107982DAF4CFD230A5F6F107B1A914F
    FILE: 04. Nha Lutcha.flac
    Size: 42630676 Hash: 6D2817E18018CD0B865A7BF1710CD5DD Accuracy: -m8
    Conclusion: CDDA 100%
    Signature: DD0640E61C9D0D1BC708D4189390BB4E3D9E607D
    FILE: 03. Nha Boi.flac
    Size: 50173798 Hash: D7908980F0150274BE04B4E0CB8B72AA Accuracy: -m8
    Conclusion: CDDA 100%
    Signature: 118FFC6CD98B0A0DCC2C7A69799F5CBA9FBCD1FE
    FILE: 02. Mulato Ferrera.flac
    Size: 29725537 Hash: DC47F20D9117487C5016DF8223D28F8C Accuracy: -m8
    Conclusion: CDDA 100%
    Signature: 396B1A20C098FB2B71D7B7BC03DD3B052B043CB2
    FILE: 01. Rei Di Tabanka.flac
    Size: 37722290 Hash: CDE3C1FE1F78B921713437217665EBEB Accuracy: -m8
    Conclusion: CDDA 100%
    Signature: AF9F9F9C9D30D16DBA3C57DFE2F8E89C1C54F5CA