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London is the place for me records

London is the place for me records

London is the place for me records

«LONDON IS THE PLACE FOR ME - Trinidad Calypso in London 1950 - 1956» is four double record album's out on Honest Jon's Records, London. These are beautifully made records, by the label that brought us the outstanding «WATCH HOW THE PEOPLE DANCING - Unity Sounds from the London Dancehall, 1986 - 1989». The Calypso sound is not heard all that often today and it is heartwarming to hear this uplifting and often funny Jazz music from them Caribbean Londoners. The series gets a «ten out of ten» I'm so happy to own those records ;)

From the liner notes (- classy layout by the way!):
«When the Empire Windrush, an old troop-carrier, arrived at Tilbury on June 21, 1948, and inaugurated modern Caribbean immigration to Britain, it also supplied calypso with its best-known image — on Pathe newsreel, Lord Kitchener singing his new composition London Is The Place For Me.

Kitch had boarded with Lord Beginner at Kingston docks, Jamaica, on Empire Day, May 24. In London they joined a milieu of fine band musicians familiar with Caribbean musical forms, and already represented on numerous recordings crucial to the development of British swing and jazz music.

Travelling with their own core audience, the Trinidadian calypsonians brought with them the vocal music of Carnival. Traditionally this ranges from social satire to sexual double-entendre, from voodoo to the most pressing issues of the day, from sporting events to competitive insult. The experiences of Britain’s growing Caribbean population were to be fabulously rich in raw material.

In many ways Trinidad calypso prefigured the rise of the Jamaican recording industry, by which it was eclipsed as the fifties ended. During that decade, certainly, it was the enthralling soundtrack of Black Britain.»

Mali Music record

Mali Music record

«MALI MUSIC» a double-vinyl project album with Damon Albarn compositions played by musicians in Mali, recorded on location, brought to London, more music added, tapes sent back to Mali, more music added... Out comes an intercontinental music collaboration that turns out to be an incredibly beautiful and unique trouvaille. Contemporary world music... weird, great.

Release notes from Honest Jon's website:
Damon Albarn, Afel Bocoum, Toumani Diabate And Friends
Mali Music
In August 2000, Damon Albarn travelled to Mali for Oxfam’s On The Line project (about people living along the Greenwich Meridian), intent on getting together with his favourite musicians there. In the capital Bamako and its surrounding villages, he sat in on club and private jam sessions, playing concerts and streetcorners, bars and boats.

Back home in London, more than forty hours of tapes were opened to other influences - reggae, dance, rock - and then the work in progress was returned to Mali, for further contributions from the musicians there: immersive and open, back and forth.

www.honestjons.com

Related Entries:
Watch How The People Dancing
Todays Records: The Light of Saba
New Release on Wankdorf Recordings
New Music: Adam Freeland's Hate EP
Todays Records: The Fall - The Rough Trade Singles Box
Comments (2)  Permalink

Comments

Poppa Sparling @ 26.08.2007 14:32 CEST
Jepps, that one - Watch how the people dancing - is THE best reggae CD/LP ever! Love it!

It even better than that Live at The Fishworld Club live LP weh Don Carlos is well offical and puffa puffa!
kev @ 26.08.2007 17:54 CEST
watch how is massive yes, but there's also "Darker than Blue (Soul from Jamdown) ‘73-80" - big!!

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