A jazz revival in Ethiopia

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    • #3642
      _JohnnyF_
      Member

      http://www.economist.com/world/middleeast-africa/displayStory.cfm?story_id=15401911&source=hptextfeature

      A jazz revival in Ethiopia
      Swing along again
      An old tradition may be coming back
      Jan 28th 2010 | ADDIS ABABA | From The Economist print edition

      AFICIONADOS are hoping for a revival of the golden age of Ethiopian jazz, as players who emigrated westward a generation ago, especially to America, come home amid the global recession.

      Tafari Assefa now plays his drums in a band at the bar of the Jupiter Hotel, one of the fancier newer establishments in Addis Ababa, the capital. Born in 1974, he studied music in Poland before emigrating to America. Life as a jazz man there was hard. “You had to beg for gigs,” he says. “Here, they call you.” He earned $70 a gig in America. Now, back home, he gets only $40. But the monthly rent, at $180, is several times less. He can get along. A cup of Ethiopian coffee, he notes, costs only 25 cents.

      Ethiopia’s jazz tradition goes back to the 1920s, when Armenian orphans from the massacres in Turkey were adopted by Ethiopia’s imperial court and formed a band called Arba Lijoch, meaning Forty Children. Other big bands followed suit. “The Addis swing” caught on. By the dying days of Haile Selassie’s reign, in the early 1970s, musicians were fusing jazz and funk with more traditional Ethiopian tunes to create a distinctive Ethio-jazz.

      After the grim Marxist regime of Mengistu Haile Mariam took over in 1974, Ethio-jazz soon died, along with much else. The communists were suspicious of free-form jazz. Many players and fans were killed or fled, mostly to America. Hotel bands were replaced with drab synthesisers.

      The doyen of Ethiopian jazz men is Mulatu Astatke, now 66, who used to divide his time between Britain, America and his home country, drawing inspiration from all three. When Duke Ellington visited Addis, Mr Astatke transposed some of the American bandleader’s numbers from the West’s eight-note scale into Ethiopia’s five-note scale. The revivalists reckon that cross-fertilisation of this kind can now start up all over again.

    • #11775
      ROB
      Keymaster

      Ahh – that’s why I love this site. Where else would forum members be discussing the Jazz reviival in Ethiopia?

    • #11776
      flipflop
      Member

      @ROB wrote:

      Ahh – that’s why I love this site. Where else would forum members be discussing the Jazz reviival in Ethiopia?

      With a big fuck off avatar to boot!

    • #11777
      _JohnnyF_
      Member

      yeah, not sure how that happened but teddy kgb looks good in that pic.

    • #11778
      ROB
      Keymaster

      You know, if you wanted you could use http://www.picnik.com to resize that avatar. :wink:

    • #11779
      khalampre
      Member

      I caught that on The Economist. It was odd that they attributed the intro of jazz to a group of Armenians that moved there when the Turks were cleaning out that part of the world.

    • #11780
      _JohnnyF_
      Member

      @ROB wrote:

      You know, if you wanted you could use http://www.picnik.com to resize that avatar. :wink:

      does it work for off site pics?

    • #11781
      ROB
      Keymaster

      Download it to your desktop. Alter it in picnik. Upload it here as your avatar. :)

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