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Music I like, the short list.

A friend recently sent me and others a mail asking what sort of music we liked. As opposed to taking up a mail thread with my list, I decided to preserve one here for posterity. Read on:

What's currently in my compact disk collection

South Africa

Zimbabwe

Zaire, Congo and Surrounding Regions

It's no secret that the lands surrounding the huge Congo river valley are the most war torn and chaotic in the African continent. Perhaps it's not surprising that some of the most beautiful music in Africa comes from these countries. People need something, right? The music that's often associated with this region is soukous. Soukous is a sort of nonstop, highly melodic trance and dance music. There are vocals, even long, involved lyrics, but mostly the music is paramount. Soukous pieces tend to be very long. Live performances tend to last until the wee hours or until the band drops from exhaustion. The whole rave scene in the West could learn a thing or two from these folks.

Nigeria

Are we sensing a theme here? Africa, Africa, Africa, Africa! I haven't even got to North Africa yet! What can I say? It's very hard to find decent music pop music in the West these days. Anyway Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa and has many musical forms, which I've only just started to scratch. Two of these forms are fuji and afrobeat.

Algeria, Morocco and North Africa

Anyone who wants to begin to understand modern Arabic, Middle Eastern and Islamic culture should listen to rai music. This music is banned by reactionaries on the left and right end of the political spectrum in the Arab world. It goes on about sexual escapades, jilted and lost love, drinking all night, slumming it in the dangerous parts of town, taking drugs, political protest against repressive governments of the Middle East, railing against the policy of the post-industrial world and religious ecstacy and mysticism. Rai music doesn't have many friends in the Establishment of the Arab world, but the people, when they are free to listen to it, love it. It's played constantly in the Algerian communities of France and has in recent years been used to protest French racism and policy in the Middle East. An example of rai music that many people may have heard was in the science fiction movie, The Fifth Element. In that scene where Bruce Willis hurtles his air cab through the hyperdense buildings of a future New York, Cheb Khaled is belting it out in the background. That was one of Khaled's milder tunes, but it kicked, didn't it?

Ska

I'll assume that most of you have some idea what ska is. In the last 6 or 7 years I've been collecting original or "first wave" ska. Most folks are familiar with the Second Wave. The Second Wave was part of the punk and new wave sound that came out of the UK in the late seventies and early eighties with bands like Madness and UB40.There is also the Third Wave "almost revival" of the early to mid Nineties. But rather than turn this into a musicology lecture, I'll just cite what I have.

Neo-surf?

Don't really know what title to give this music. Surf revival I guess. The surf guitar sound of the early Sixties had a strong influence on the West coast punk and new wave scene of the late Seventies and early Eighties. Just listen to Billy Zoom in X and you'll hear it. Listen to early Devo (which isn't the West Coast scene but whatever.) and you'll hear it. Anyway, in the mid Ninties there was a surf revival of sorts and I bought some disks during that time:

Music from Other Parts of the World

Tapes that I own

This collection is smaller and a little more embarrassing to me, to be frank. It's mostly Western music on major labels here, but I cite it all for completeness.

Music I wish I had

Music I don't want

Any music belonging to nostalgic revivals of decades I actually lived through. If I never heard it before, count me interested. If it's piped into supermarkets or places trying to be hip, I am not interested. They are planning to revive the music of the Eighties. Argh! Please someone kill me now! I am sick of the nostalgia for decades yet to come!

Posted by Pace Arko on October 24, 2003 5:54 AM

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