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Lord Kitchener
London Is The Place For Me 8 Lord Kitchener In England, 1948-1962
A1
Carnival Road March
A2
No More Taxi
A3
Mango Tree
A4
Food From The West Indies
A5
Alphonso In Town
A6
Come Back In The Morning
B1
Too Late Kitch
B2
Drink-A-Rum
B3
Constable Joe
B4
Pirates Of Paria
B5
Carnival In Town
B6
Is Trouble
C1
If You Brown
C2
Life Begins At Forty
C3
Manchester Football Double
C4
The Denis Compton Calypso
C5
Mistress Jacob
C6
London Is The Place For Me
D1
Tie Tongue Mopsie
D2
Dora (Meet Me At The Pawnshop)
D3
If You're Not White You're Black
D4
Africa My Home
D5
Nora
D6
Kitch In The Jungle
First there is the hooligan chantwell, up for anything in the hurly-burly of carnival proper; and then the casual reporter, firing off postcards to Trinidad about taxis, flashy booze, fast women and football in Manchester, with homesickness and grievance nestled just behind the optimism, pride and tentative senses of belonging.
There is the bearer of news from home, in detailed accounts of murders, tales of stupid local coppers, and reminiscences about food and particular mango trees; the political thinker, considering racism and Africa; and the diarist, with his vivid tales of infidelity, and disclosure of the break-up of his marriage, and his desire to get away.
One foot in the UK, the other in Trinidad; but the man himself somewhere in-between. Kitch In The Jungle, nobody around. A ‘diasporic explorer’; a key twentieth-century witness, alongside such hallowed figures as Samuel Selvon and Edward Kamau Braithwaite.
Though in frustration Kitch would sometimes take over double-bass duties himself, the musicianship of Rupert Nurse, Fitzroy Coleman and co is top-notch. The original glorious sound is down to Denys Preston, recording for Melodisc, often at Abbey Road Studios (where we transferred and restored the 78s compiled here).
Presented in a lovely gatefold sleeve, with a full-size booklet containing superb, specially-commissioned sleevenotes by Kitch biographer Anthony Joseph, and fabulous, previously-unseen photographs