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Listen to our Mulatu Astatke Podcast - Free and Funky |
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Gilberto Gil talks to Fly about prison, exile, music and being and not being (a government minister) in this revealing but punchy interview followed by a wonderful insight into the world of Afrobeat with Seun Kuti. Jane Birkin, the subject of our third podcast gives an insight into the private world of Jane Birkin while Mulatu Astatke takes us on an unlikely journey that began in North Wales. Use this link to subscribe to our podcasts through iTunes Or copy this XML feed http://www.flyglobalmusic.com/podcasts/fly_podcasts.xml to subscribe if you don’t use iTunes or you can just choose to listen to the Gilberto Gil podcast in your browser, the Seun Kuti podcast , Jane Birkin podcast or Mulatu Astatke podcast. |
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| Africa/Middle East: Features Kora, Cello, Chamber Music - Vincent Segal Joachim Kuhn/Majid Bekkas/Ramon Lopez - Out of the Desert Is Northern Mali Still Safe to Visit? Comfusoes - from Angola to Brasil with Producer Mauricio Pacheco Khaled: Rebel of Raï - The Early Years |
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MULATU ASTATKE releases new album INSPIRATION INFORMATION with 9 piece band THE HELIOCENTRICS and gearing up for live show at KOKO
Mulatu Astatke / The Heliocentrics ‘Inspiration Information’ - released April 13th
Wednesday May 20th - KOKO, Camden, NW1 - AGMP & Brownswood proudly presents
WORLDWIDE 10 featuring MULATU ASTATKE & THE HELIOCENTRICS plus DJ GILLES PETERSON
Gilles Peterson’s Worldwide Radio 1 show is enjoying its 10th anniversary in 2009 and there will be no let up in the celebrations this year. Hot on the heels of January’s Worldwide Awards and Q-Tip’s sold-out March date at The Roundhouse, Camden, is this new May soirĂ©e dripping in world music gold.
Following their highly acclaimed appearance at London’s Cargo in spring 2008, the combined performance of Mulatu Astake and the Heliocentrics’ is being hailed as Ethiopia’s equivalent to the Cuban Buena Vista Club sensations.
Mulatu, born in 1943 in Jimma, Ethiopia is widely regarded as the father of Ethio-jazz. Elegant and finely turned out, Mulatu is an innovative multi-instrumentalist, composer and arranger, known primarily for the successful ‘Ethiopiques’ album series and the film soundtrack to Jim Jarmusch’s ‘Broken Flowers’.
He studied music at London’sTrinity College of Music and immersed himself in ’60s New York club scene, before perfecting his vibraphone, conga and percussion skills. Soon he was performing at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC, the Lincoln Center in New York, Bonn’s Beethoven-Haus to the Barbican Center here in London.
Later, packing his jazz, soul, Caribbean and Latin learnings back to his homeland (where he performed as a guest artist with the Duke Ellington orchestra during its visit to Ethiopia in 1971) he innovated what became internationally known as the formidable, unique Ethio-jazz groove.
The British 9-piece band Heliocentrics (Now Again / Stones Throw) embrace funk-based psychedelic, soul, electronic and hip-hop in their cosmic jazz voyages. Known as one of the UK’s foremost free-thinking collectives of musicians, inspired by Sun Ra, James Brown, David Axelrod and all manner of psych, Afro and Eastern sounds, the Heliocentrics sound is timeless and has made fans of Madlib, DJ Shadow (the Heliocentrics backed him on ‘This Time I’m Gonna Do It My Way’ from his ‘The Outsider’ album) and Mr Chop to name a very few.
Out on 13th April 2009 Strut Records release their third Inspiration Information studio collaboration series, ‘Mulatu Astatke & the Heliocentrics - Inspiration Information ’ - an album made during a week of frenetic writing and recording between the Heliocentrics rhythm section, Joel Yennior from Boston’s Either Orchestra and Mulatu…. and features horns, moog, cello, harp and astral textures plus the krar (a six-stringed, five tone instrument), masenqo (one-stringed lyre) and washint (made from bamboo). The result is a true fusion of styles, at times reminiscent of Mulatu’s earlier recordings, at others touched by the Heliocentrics own fresh Ethio-hybrid (www.strut-records.com).
Live at London’s Koko for this special on-off night expect an energetic show of classic funk tempered by reggae, chunky bass, swirling sax, Afro-influenced drums and percussion, all layered with jazzy overtones.