MASAKA MASAKA - Barely Making Much (2024) [Hi-Res]
BAND/ARTIST: MASAKA MASAKA
- Title: Barely Making Much
- Year Of Release: 2024
- Label: Hakuna Kulala
- Genre: Electronic
- Quality: 16-bit/44.1kHz FLAC; 24-bit/44.1kHz FLAC
- Total Time: 37 min
- Total Size: 197; 391 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Growing up in Uganda, multi-disciplinary artist Ian Nnyanzi (aka Masaka Masaka) always knew he wanted to make music, he just needed enough time and breathing room to figure out what exactly his contribution had to be. He cut his teeth fashioning rudimentary hip-hop beats at a friend's studio on Makindye, a hill that overlooks Kampala's balmy Murchison Bay, and quickly realized that he wanted more. "Out here, everyone seems okay to listen to the same thing," he explains, and Nnyanzi wasn't interested in following the crowd. During regular commutes across the city, his mind was being cracked open by sounds from Dean Blunt, Slauson Malone, Arca, Jpegmafia and Vegyn; he knew he needed to show Kampala something similarly distinct.
'Barely Making Much' is a sprawling, ambitious album that's as sculptural as it is explorative, reaching through genre membranes and refusing to stay still for a second. Masaka Masaka wrote it over a fragmented two year period at Nyege Nyege's Kampala studio, and tapped into a jumble of interconnected sounds, from jungle and experimental hip-hop to techno and smoked-out, dubwise ambient music. He was particularly absorbed by the loose, open-minded production style he heard from Manchester's Sockethead, who makes an appearance on 'Before I go', a frayed tapestry of stuttering snares and floury breaks that billows into jazzy euphoria.
On 'cut right through', Masaka Masaka bends fictile piano hits through a lattice of Afro-Brazilian-style vocal chops, trap hi-hat rolls and serrated, synthesized bass thumps. Airy and energetic, the track makes an unexpected left turn when the hats transform into insectoid rasps that cushion a woody hand drum patter. Elsewhere, Nnyanzi isn't afraid to go straight for the jugular: on 'elv9t' he sets atmospheric, back room pads against booming, soundsystem-ready Southern rap subs, and on the kinetic 'let me out', he remolds hard techno in his image, knocking the 4/4 kick off grid to perplex seasoned dancers, and hammering the nail in further with swirling, psychedelic synth fuzz.
Even when Masaka Masaka's working in a more contemplative mode - like on the hypnotic title track and the fragile cinematic finale 'it's okay to dance alone' - he maintains the momentum, swirling otherworldly vocal loops and erratic percussion into pools of melted ambience. 'Barely Making Much' is a charming, hyperactive debut that wears its influences on its sleeve, playing like a lysergic, literate mixtape packed with layers and subtle gestures. Cool-headed and mysterious, it exposes the twilit side of the Kampala underground.
Tracklist:
1.01 - MASAKA MASAKA - Mental Construct (3:20)
1.02 - MASAKA MASAKA - Before I Go (3:48)
1.03 - MASAKA MASAKA - Come with me to Goma (2:50)
1.04 - MASAKA MASAKA - Cut Right Through (2:42)
1.05 - MASAKA MASAKA - 6pm Waiting on You (1:41)
1.06 - MASAKA MASAKA - Days of Nothingness (1:47)
1.07 - MASAKA MASAKA - Let Me Out (2:22)
1.08 - MASAKA MASAKA - Elv8t (2:53)
1.09 - MASAKA MASAKA - Barely Making Much (1:37)
1.10 - MASAKA MASAKA - Gone (3:49)
1.11 - MASAKA MASAKA - Nothing Makes Sense (1:48)
1.12 - MASAKA MASAKA - NRG (2:12)
1.13 - MASAKA MASAKA - Sacrifice (2:54)
1.14 - MASAKA MASAKA - It's Okay to Dance Alone (3:29)
'Barely Making Much' is a sprawling, ambitious album that's as sculptural as it is explorative, reaching through genre membranes and refusing to stay still for a second. Masaka Masaka wrote it over a fragmented two year period at Nyege Nyege's Kampala studio, and tapped into a jumble of interconnected sounds, from jungle and experimental hip-hop to techno and smoked-out, dubwise ambient music. He was particularly absorbed by the loose, open-minded production style he heard from Manchester's Sockethead, who makes an appearance on 'Before I go', a frayed tapestry of stuttering snares and floury breaks that billows into jazzy euphoria.
On 'cut right through', Masaka Masaka bends fictile piano hits through a lattice of Afro-Brazilian-style vocal chops, trap hi-hat rolls and serrated, synthesized bass thumps. Airy and energetic, the track makes an unexpected left turn when the hats transform into insectoid rasps that cushion a woody hand drum patter. Elsewhere, Nnyanzi isn't afraid to go straight for the jugular: on 'elv9t' he sets atmospheric, back room pads against booming, soundsystem-ready Southern rap subs, and on the kinetic 'let me out', he remolds hard techno in his image, knocking the 4/4 kick off grid to perplex seasoned dancers, and hammering the nail in further with swirling, psychedelic synth fuzz.
Even when Masaka Masaka's working in a more contemplative mode - like on the hypnotic title track and the fragile cinematic finale 'it's okay to dance alone' - he maintains the momentum, swirling otherworldly vocal loops and erratic percussion into pools of melted ambience. 'Barely Making Much' is a charming, hyperactive debut that wears its influences on its sleeve, playing like a lysergic, literate mixtape packed with layers and subtle gestures. Cool-headed and mysterious, it exposes the twilit side of the Kampala underground.
Tracklist:
1.01 - MASAKA MASAKA - Mental Construct (3:20)
1.02 - MASAKA MASAKA - Before I Go (3:48)
1.03 - MASAKA MASAKA - Come with me to Goma (2:50)
1.04 - MASAKA MASAKA - Cut Right Through (2:42)
1.05 - MASAKA MASAKA - 6pm Waiting on You (1:41)
1.06 - MASAKA MASAKA - Days of Nothingness (1:47)
1.07 - MASAKA MASAKA - Let Me Out (2:22)
1.08 - MASAKA MASAKA - Elv8t (2:53)
1.09 - MASAKA MASAKA - Barely Making Much (1:37)
1.10 - MASAKA MASAKA - Gone (3:49)
1.11 - MASAKA MASAKA - Nothing Makes Sense (1:48)
1.12 - MASAKA MASAKA - NRG (2:12)
1.13 - MASAKA MASAKA - Sacrifice (2:54)
1.14 - MASAKA MASAKA - It's Okay to Dance Alone (3:29)
Year 2024 | Electronic | FLAC / APE | HD & Vinyl
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