Billy Brooks - El Babaku (Live at the Jazz Galerie) (2015) [Hi-Res]
BAND/ARTIST: Billy Brooks
- Title: El Babaku (Live at the Jazz Galerie)
- Year Of Release: 1971 / 2015
- Label: MPS Records
- Genre: Jazz, World
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) [88.2kHz/24bit]
- Total Time: 48:04
- Total Size: 886 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. El Babaku (8:34)
02. Orisha (7:15)
03. Aino Buca (8:31)
04. Al Hajj Malik Al Shabazz - For Malcolm X (8:14)
05. Lament (6:21)
06. El Lupe Chango (9:09)
01. El Babaku (8:34)
02. Orisha (7:15)
03. Aino Buca (8:31)
04. Al Hajj Malik Al Shabazz - For Malcolm X (8:14)
05. Lament (6:21)
06. El Lupe Chango (9:09)
This 1971 recording is something special – no chordal instruments, no horns, four Americans and one Cuban performing traditional African and Afro-Cuban pieces in a live spiritual ritual of drumming, chants, and song. Known for his work with Woody Shaw and Eddie Harris, American percussionist Billy Brooks moved to Europe in 1964, where he has played with the likes of Tete Montoliu and Dusko Goykovich. The African-rooted El Babaku is the group’s theme song, with Brooks playing bass block flute and leading the call and response. Orisha, a traditional Nigerian song of the Yoruba, is a vocation to the gods. Brooks’ jazz drumming and interplay reflects the African heritage that runs through jazz. Aino Buca is a traditional Cuban piece given to the group by Tete Montolu’s Cuban wife. Cuban conga player Carlos Santa Cruz, a friend and student of the legendary Cuban conga player Chano Pozo, takes over most of the ritualistic chants while Brooks concentrates on bamboo flute, singing through the instrument ala Roland Kirk. Al Hajj Malik Al Shabbazz has Brooks honoring Malcom X’s memory. Here, as in other pieces, the bass functions as a drone, much like the rababab in Arabic music. Lament, a Nigerian song of mourning and loneliness, functions like a jazz ballad for voice and drums. El Lupe Chango celebrates the Yoruban god Chango who reigns over the world with lightning and thunder. Carlos sings with Brooks on the African dun-dun and traps. Brooks says it best; “The ecstasy I get in music comes from group drumming. It’s more than musical – it’s spiritual.”
Billy Brooks, drums, flute, talking drum, vocals
Burt Thompson, bass, vocals
Carlos Santa Cruz, congas, cowbell, tamborim, vocals
Donald Coleman, congas, cowbell, vocals
Charles Campbell, congas, vocals
Recorded May 3, 1971 live at the Berlin Jazz Galerie
Engineered by Eberhard Sengspiel at Teldec Studio Berlin
Produced by Joachim E. Berendt
Digitally remastered
Billy Brooks, drums, flute, talking drum, vocals
Burt Thompson, bass, vocals
Carlos Santa Cruz, congas, cowbell, tamborim, vocals
Donald Coleman, congas, cowbell, vocals
Charles Campbell, congas, vocals
Recorded May 3, 1971 live at the Berlin Jazz Galerie
Engineered by Eberhard Sengspiel at Teldec Studio Berlin
Produced by Joachim E. Berendt
Digitally remastered
Jazz | World | FLAC / APE | HD & Vinyl
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