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Various - Living Is Hard: West African Music In Britain, 1927-1929 FLAC

Various - Living Is Hard: West African Music In Britain, 1927-1929 FLAC
  • Performer: Various
  • Title: Living Is Hard: West African Music In Britain, 1927-1929
  • Genre: Jazz / Blues / Folk & World
  • Cat #: HJRCDDJ33
  • Label: Honest Jon's Records
  • Country: UK
  • Date of release: 2008
  • Style: African
  • FLAC size 1549 mb
  • MP3 size: 1009 mb
  • Record From CD, Compilation, Promo

Tracklist

1George Williams AingoAkuko Nu Bonto
2Ben Simmons Mu Kun Sebor Wa Wu
3Oni JohnsonGarse Yer Fido
4Harry E. QuashieAnadwofa
5John MugatAlahira
6James Thomas Jon Jo Ko
7George Williams AingoAgur Bi Dzi Mansu Aba
8Kumasi TrioAsin Asin Part 2
9Nicholas De HeerWasiu Dowu
10Douglas PapafioKuntum
11Prince ZulamkahLigiligi
12Ben Simmons Obu Kofi
13Nicholas De HeerEdna Buchaiku
14John MugatBukay
15The West African Instrumental QuintetAdersu - No. 2
16Domingo JustusBuje
17James Brown Mukorin-Mantun
18Doouglas PapafioSakyi
19Nicholas De HeerEwuri Beka
20Isaac Jackson Nitsi Koko Ko Ko
21Ben Simmons [Blank]
22James Tucker Rue Bai Rue Bai
23The Ga QuartetAbowe Dsane Nmaka Tso

Versions

CategoryArtistTitle (Format)LabelCategoryCountryYear
HJRCD33Various Living Is Hard: West African Music In Britain, 1927-1929 ‎(CD, Comp)Honest Jon's RecordsHJRCD33UK2008
HJRCDDJ33, 50999-208255-2-2Various Living Is Hard: West African Music In Britain, 1927-1929 ‎(CD, Comp, Promo)Honest Jon's Records, Honest Jon's RecordsHJRCDDJ33, 50999-208255-2-2UK2008
HJRLP33Various Living Is Hard: West African Music In Britain, 1927-1929 ‎(2xLP, Comp)Honest Jon's RecordsHJRLP33UK2008

Credits

  • Compiled By, Liner NotesMark Ainley
  • DesignWill Bankhead
  • Mastered ByAndy Walter
  • Translated By [English Lyrics]Kofi Kudonu, Nate Jorm Kwame

Notes

Mastered at Abbey Road.

The promotional material of the Zonophone label is used here by arrangement with the EMI Group Archive Trust.

In oversized gatefold card sleeve with 20 page booklet.

℗ 2008 The copyright in this sound recording is owned by Honest Jons Records under exclusive license to EMI Records Ltd. © 2008 Honest Jons Records.

Living Is Hard
West African Music In Britain, 1927-1929
HONEST JON'S RECORDS

'While the likes of Blind Lemon Jefferson and Charley Patton were making the earliest blues recordings in America, this equally strange and compelling music by West African singers and musicians was simultaneously being recorded in London... [a] treasure trove of golden voices, chants, authentic percussion and traditional instruments presented in totally unmediated fashion' ( Songlines).

Made in London, these recordings were issued originally by the Zonophone record label over three years from late 1927.
The first West African Zonophone recordings date from 1922, when the Reverend J. J. Ransome-Kuti — Fela’s grandfather — travelled from Nigeria to Britain, to record Christian hymns in Yoruba. Notables of 1925 sessions included the Pan-African activist Ladipo Solanke, who had come to Britain three years earlier to study Law; and Roland Nathaniels, also resident in Europe at this time, who soon afterwards recorded for Odeon in Germany, before returning to the Zonophone studios in 1927 (probably doubling as an A and R man).
Finally, with these recordings in 1927-9, Zonophone moved decisively to dominate the West African market ahead of the competition, by exporting hundreds of discs — and record players — recorded in almost all its major languages. Included here are Wolof, Temni, Yoruba, Vai, Fanti, Hausa, Ga and Twi.
The records were recorded and manufactured in London: all of them were sent to West Africa, where few have survived.
Zonophone was soon followed by Odeon as the decade turned, then Parlophone in 1936, and HMV the following year. Unlike Zonophone, all three rivals travelled to West Africa with recording equipment.

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