Here, our resident Central African Republic and St Lucia correspondent Craig Stephen looks at some of the best ever ‘world music’ albums. We don’t know exactly what constitutes a world music album so there may be one or two inclusions that some may regard as too western, but the entries were not made by pasty-faced students with guitars.
And why choose 10 when you can include 11 ...
Mano Negra:
Casa Babylon (1994)
“Football,
football, football/Football, football, football/Football, football,
football/Larchuma Football Club”
This infectious
refrain is from ‘Santa Maradona’, a dedication to Argentinean superstar Diego
Maradona on track 5 of this magnificent fusion LP. Mano Negra delve into the
psyche of the striker, depicting his rise to fame, his struggles with drug addiction,
and his role as a symbol of hope for the working class.
This would prove
to be the fourth and final studio album by the French group and it cemented the
mark they had made on Ibero-American countries and beyond. The group was
founded in Paris by Manu Chao, his brother Antoine and their cousin
Santiago, who were all born of Galician and Basque parents.
Singing in Spanish, French and occasionally English and Arabic, they were the
ultimate world fusion band.
Fela Kuti:
Gentleman (1973)
With the main
track clocking in at 14 minutes and the other two at over eight minutes,
there’s no disputing that buyers were getting value for their money.
‘Gentleman’ is a politically
scathing song in which Kuti opposes the westernisation of Africa and those who
imitate western ways.
“I no be gentleman
at all,” sings Fela, who details the ways in which African men cow to their
supposed Western masters particularly through their attire to show their
allegiance to colonialism. "I know what to wear but my friend don't know
/I am not a gentleman like that /I be Africa man original." To emphasise
the message, the cover depicts a monkey's head superimposed on to a suit.
Trans-global
Underground: Dream of 100 Nations (1993)
Their debut recording,
‘Temple Head’, was Single of The Week in Melody Maker, one of three broadsheet-size
music weeklies at the time which could make or break bands. Due to record label
issues, it took a good couple of years before the issue of Dream of 100 Nations,
one of the finest albums of the decade.
This featured
Egyptian-Belgian songstress Natacha Atlas, included a sample from a Laurel
& Hardy comedy, and dialogue from the cult sci-fi film Plan 9 From
Outer Space.
This is an act
with Morocco at its core and who mine the sounds of the Maghreb. Bab L’Bluz
translates as "gateway to the blues”, but the reference is to African
blues rather than its more modern American version.
To the untrained
ear Nayda! is a beguiling listen: Yousra Mansour’s vocal range and the unusual
instruments - such as the guembri and the awisha - combine to riveting yet
confusing effect.
There’s a solid
ground of influences on here, and no more so than on songs such as the
anti-corruption anthem ‘Gwana Beat’ (“Who tells the story of the citizens’
pain/ And the story of the crooks who destroyed this country?”).
Les Negresses
Vertes: Mlah (1989)
A group born in Paris,
France of Algerian and Spanish roots with a touch of circus theatricality with four
of the original members having performed with circus acts. All clown jokes end
here as Les Negresses Vertes were a seriously infectious world fusion/rock
outfit.
Their debut album,
Mlah, was well received throughout Europe, including Britain which isn’t always
open to European tendencies, but also in the United States where several tracks
achieved radio airplay. It includes the excellent gypsy-tinged rocker ‘Zobi le
Mouche’ which was a particular favourite of the radio pickers.
Tito Puente:
Dance Mania (1958)
While the New Yorker of Puerto Rican parents released more than 100 albums in a half century career, Dance Mania is often regarded as his finest. In 2000, the New York Times selected it as one of the 25 most significant albums of the 20th century.
Dance Mania’s birth in
1958 came during an innovative time when the predominant sounds of jazz and big
bands were beginning to be infused with Afro-Cuban rhythms such as mambo,
bolero and cha cha. These shaped Dance Mania which is a vivid
experience of life in New York City during the late 1950s.
Significantly, unlike most Latin albums up to then, which were almost exclusively instrumental, Puente included the Spanish-language vocals of Santos Colon. English speakers appreciated its authenticity.
Susheela Raman:
Salt Rain (2001)
Raman has a
colourful background having been born in London to South Indian parents, raised
in Australia, and has performed with Hindustani singers and Asian Underground
techno-raga bands like Joi.
Salt Rain, her
first solo work, was the first ‘world music’ album to be nominated for the
Mercury Prize. Most of the songs on the album are ancient Indian devotional
songs in Sanskrit, Hindi or Tamil set around modern chord structures. While ‘Ganapti’,
the opening track, is based around a traditional South Asian hymn written two
centuries ago, there is a version of Tim Buckley’s ‘Song to the Siren’ to close
it.
Ray Barretto:
Acid (1968)
Barretto was a
celebrated studio session player whose hard-driving conga rhythms could be
heard on records by the likes of Dizzy Gillespie and Cannonball Adderley. He
had released a few boogaloo solo albums but it was Acid, his first
recording for the new Fania latino label, that would establish him as an
innovator in his own right.
Acid is a lot less
psychedelic than its title and cover might suggest, and is pivotal in the
way it mixes Latin and soul music with songs such as ‘A Deeper Shade of Soul’.
Rachid Taha: Tékitoi
(2004)
Tékitoi, showcases
Taha’s tastes for Algerian raï, chaabi (old-style Algerian and Moroccan pop),
punk, rock and techno-pop.
It was produced,
co-written and co-performed by the veteran prog/avant-rock guitarist Steve
Hillage while Brian Eno adds his composer and artist touches.
The centrepiece is
a version of The Clash’s ‘Rock The Casbah’, which was rewritten entirely in
Arabic and renamed slightly to ‘Rock El Casbah’ and given the Egyptian strings
treatment. There’s been suggestions that a Taha song was the inspiration for
the Clash original, and if that is the case then it is only right that Taha
‘reclaim’ it and record and sing the track in the way he would want it.
Joe Strummer died
before he had the chance to hear ‘Rock El Casbah’ but given his worldly view,
he would surely have approved.
Gaye Su Akyol:
Hologram Ĭmparatorluğu (2016)
The Turkish singer Gaye is part of her country’s revitalised music scene and Hologram Ĭmparatorluğu mixes Turkish styles with grunge, surf rock and psychedelia.
Indeed, the
Turkish psychedelia scene of the 1970s is forefront in Akyol’s music. The
psychedelia of Turkiye is unique, so it couldn’t translate to western cultures.
That is why this and Akyol’s subsequent albums sound so refreshing.
In addition, her lyrics can be read as poetic comments on the dictatorship in Ankara. The police asked Akyol for a “please explain” for the album track ‘Nargile’ after receiving a complaint about the line: “You sold us out well. You have a palace but it’s just empty four walls.” She denied it was about President Erdogan and instead was about the power that destroys people everywhere. As she is not in jail, we can assume that the cops accepted her explanation.
Femi Kuti: No
Place For My Dream (2013)
No Place For My Dream was
Femi Kuti’s 10th studio album, and is generally considered his best.
Recorded in Paris,
it’s an upfront Afro-beat album, but Kuti also introduces the listener to Latin
and Caribbean textures. There are strong political messages across the 11
tracks such as ‘No Work No Job No Money’ and ‘Politics Na Big Business’ which
are robust attacks on the class divide throughout the world.
And so it weighs
heavily with straightforward political messages, for example: “When you see
what is going on in the world today/You will agree that poverty is winning the
game/More people are suffering/More people are very poor/The suffering people
can’t take anymore.”


