Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Famoudou Don Moye/John Tchicai/Hartmut Geerken: The African Tapes

273

Famoudou Don Moye/John Tchicai/Hartmut Geerken: The African Tapes

By

Sign in to view read count
Famoudou Don Moye/John Tchicai/Hartmut Geerken: The African Tapes
One of music's most amazing powers is its ability to tell a story. In the case of The African Tapes, three musicians lived an incredible story and transformed the experience into a narrative of pure sound. Lengthy negotiations with various foreign ministries and embassies gave fruit in 1985 as the trio of Moye, Tchicai, and Geerken unlocked the doors to performance in West Africa. Starting out in Freetown, these musicians traveled across Sierra Leone, Guinea, and Liberia as cultural ambassadors, playing for local audiences which had often never experienced modern jazz. The locals participated eagerly during these performances—with dance, clapping, and instrumental collaboration. The two-disc set The African Tapes documents the resulting diversity of instruments, styles, and moods.

It's essential to note up front that the roots of jazz lie in the African-American experience, and most of the slaves imported to the New World had their origins in West Africa. It's equally important to consider that when the descendants of this population returned to Africa after emancipation, they concentrated in Liberia and neighboring countries. As a result, modern-day West Africa retains all sorts of connections, new and old, with jazz music.

The members of this particular improvising trio include Famadou Don Moye, a neo-tribalist percussionist (famous for his work with the Art Ensemble of Chicago); John Tchicai, a half-Congolese Danish reedist who emigrated to the U.S. in the '60s (notable for his work with the New York Art Quartet); and Hartmut Geerken, a multi-instrumentalist with a truly global concept of sound (and whose book, motte motte motte, describes the experience documented in aural form on The African Tapes). Before their first stop in Freetown, these three musicians had never played together. Their immediate cohesion testifies convincingly about their musicality—in terms of playing as well as listening. Subsequent recorded documentation of this group appears on Cassava Balls (GYNJ/Leo).

Instead of bringing jazz to the people of West Africa, the Moye/Tchicai/Geerken trio meet them halfway. Their performances in Sierra Leone are accompanied by a drum ensemble (Milo Jazz) from the National Dance Troupe, as well as an all- woman drum quartet (Bundu Drum Group). Check out the elegant, dense polyrhythms of "Yabom Kamara" for evidence of the latter. In Liberia, they are joined by the trumpet/bass duo of Melwin Reeves and Habib Tamba (particularly evident sculpting the groove on "Xongly plus Monro"). When the trio is left to its own devices, it covers an amazing range of tone and texture—from underwater gong bellows, to elaboration of simple melodies, to cranked-up Ayleresque howling.

Audience participation manifests itself throughout The African Tapes. During one particularly ethereal performance in a bauxite mine in Guinea ("Reveiller le Belleville"), trance-like sounds on the Tibetan horn, conch, and tenor saxophone elicit striking fear and foreboding from listeners. (It turns out this music was uncomfortably close to the traditional ritual sounds of a local religious group, and the trio had to switch over to a different tune in order to keep the audience from scattering.) Other tracks reveal obvious audience participation, as well as background noise and chatter. For being essentially a series of field recordings, The African Tapes offers surprisingly high sonic fidelity. And the cultural, linguistic, and musical richness of these two discs stands unparalleled in the history of improvised music.

It is hard to recommend The African Tapes strongly enough.

Track Listing

Mobimbirutile; Angklung Okro; Do You Go Back to Bago?; Backe Backe Kuchen; Akarakuru; Ghosts; Post-Ramadan Exhausters; Kamsar; Yabom Kamara; Mohawk; Bo oh Bo; The Rainbow's Over; Conakry Overtones; Go Down Moses; Xongly Plus Monro; Reveiller le Belleville; Pink Pepper; Panjebo-Ta; Mothers; Please Come to the Stage.

Personnel

Famoudou Don Moye: percussion, drums, whistles, bells, conche, voice, congas; John Tchicai: tenor saxophone, voice, percussion, kettle drums; Hartmut Geerken: percussion, voice, Tibetan boo-chals, whistles, bells, Tibetan horn, singing tube, balloons, Chinese gong, Indian swarmandal, Indonesian angklung, waterphone, cowbells.

Album information

Title: The African Tapes | Year Released: 2001 | Record Label: Golden Years of New Jazz

Comments

Tags


For the Love of Jazz
Get the Jazz Near You newsletter All About Jazz has been a pillar of jazz since 1995, championing it as an art form and, more importantly, supporting the musicians who create it. Our enduring commitment has made "AAJ" one of the most culturally important websites of its kind, read by hundreds of thousands of fans, musicians and industry figures every month.

You Can Help
To expand our coverage even further and develop new means to foster jazz discovery and connectivity we need your help. You can become a sustaining member for a modest $20 and in return, we'll immediately hide those pesky ads plus provide access to future articles for a full year. This winning combination will vastly improve your AAJ experience and allow us to vigorously build on the pioneering work we first started in 1995. So enjoy an ad-free AAJ experience and help us remain a positive beacon for jazz by making a donation today.

More

Sensual
Rachel Z
Over and Over
Tony Monaco Trio
Love Is Passing Thru
Roberto Magris

Popular

Get more of a good thing!

Our weekly newsletter highlights our top stories, our special offers, and upcoming jazz events near you.