Open today: 13:00 - 23:00

By continuing your navigation on this website, you accept the use of cookies for statistical purposes.

What Goes Up Remixed
What Goes Up Remixed  What Goes Up Remixed

Catno

FRZ001

Formats

1x Vinyl 12" 33 ⅓ RPM

Country

US

Release date

Apr 26, 2019

Killer Afro house project feat Ron Trent Jose Marquez CHICAGO AFROBEAT PROJECT feat TONY ALLEN What Goes Up Remixed Future Rootz US

Killer Afro house project feat

What Goes Up Remixed
Chicago Afrobeat Project ft. Tony Allen remixed by
Ron Trent
Jose Marquez
Sol Power All-Stars
Mago Bo
Afroqbano
Sound Culture
Kevin Ford

Album Cover by Slomo

Media: Mi
Sleeve: M

25.9€*

*Taxes included, shipping price excluded

Rip Samples from vinyl, pics and Discount on www.lediscopathe.com. Please feel free to ask informations about our products and sell conditions. We ship vinyles world wide from our shop based in Montpellier (France). Come to visit us. Le Discopathe propose news and 2nd hands vinyls, collectors, rare and classic records from past 70 years

A1

I No Know (Jose Marquez Afro-House No Go Die Remix)

7:21

A2

Cut the infection (Sol Power All-Stars Remix)

6:51

A3

Afro Party (Ron Trent Redub)

7:15

A4

No Bad News (Maga Bo Remix)

3:24

B1

Sunday Song (AfroQbano Remix)

6:00

B2

White Rhino (Sound Culture Remix)

5:20

B3

Afro Party (Kevin Ford Remix)

5:21

Other items you may like:

Classic Brazilian album from master drummer, Ronald Mesquita, originally released in 1972. Featuring songs by Jorge Ben, Antonio Carlos-Jobim, Gilberto Gil, Edu Lobo and others.Mesquita is probably most well-known for playing with Luis Carlos Vinhas and his 'Bossa Tres' outfit, along with his own group, 'Ronie E A Central Do Brasil', that he formed after his return from the US in the early 1970s. He also played on several songs on Tenorio Jr.'s 'Embalo' album that Mr Bongo recently reissued.The killer track 'Balanca Pema' was very big in the Jazz Dance scene in the 90s and also featured on the Mojo compilation 'Dancefloor Jazz Volume Four'.Madlib sampled 'Balanca Pema' on his Medicine Show Number 2 'Flight to Brazil'.
Minsy ‎– Minsy - Productions Balafon ‎– BAL 79005
Kolida Babo is the collaboration between two Greek woodwind musicians from separate regions - Socratis Votskos is from Pella, and Harris P is from Athens. This, their debut album, was recorded in improvised live-take sessions beginning on the night of the “Kolida Babo” folk rituals of music and dance in northern Greece in winter 2013. The sessions proceeded over three years, exploring the ancient music of Armenia and the folk traditions of northern Greece’s Epirus and Thrace regions alongside abstract electronics and free jazz.As musicians of modern Greece, the sonic palette is developed in part as a means of processing the country’s immediate actualities: its relation to its regional traditions, its urban centres and its humanitarian and economic crises. In this, the music is at once clearly located in traditional sounds and disjointed from them, at times contrasting or harmonious in both concept and sound.The Armenian Duduk that anchors the project is a double-reeded woodwind instrument made of apricot wood with thousands of years of history and generations of venerable masters - the duo cite Djivan Gasparyan as a main influence, and Harris studied with Vahan Galstyan. Traditionally its music is played in duet: a melody on one duduk, a low drone accompaniment (“the dum”) on another. Kolida Babo preserves and extends the dual nature of duduk music in many ways, replacing the dum at times with the tones of a moog synthesizer to allow the two players to weave harmonies together in duet. And there is a persistent duality in the braid of Kolido Babo’s sonic associations - modern and ancient, local and global - sometimes underpinning one another, sometimes undermining. “Sometimes we mock modern times and sometimes the other way around”, they say - it’s a collision, or an engagement, romantic or pugilistic, and the sense is of an experiment without expectation, without preciousness or exoticism of folk culture. The elements challenge each other and the listener - while the music is very much about texture and tone, the sounds aren’t clearly modern or ancient: it’s futile to identify, we’re reminded, and instead we experience the immediate presence and power of the combination. Influences include Armenian Folk music, Greek Rebetiko, German Kosmiche, Spiritual Jazz, the Fourth World Music of Brian Eno and John Hassell, British Trip Hop, Electrified West African Funk. But where these can be identified they are as sidelong journeymakers through the borderless idiolect belonging to the dialogue between the two players and enabling its free and full execution, subtle markers used to co-ordinate the collaboration.