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Afrika

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Download links and information about Afrika by Johnny Dyani. This album was released in 1983 and it belongs to Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, Avant Garde Metal genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 01:03:30 minutes.

Artist: Johnny Dyani
Release date: 1983
Genre: Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, Avant Garde Metal
Tracks: 10
Duration: 01:03:30
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Blame it on the Boers 4:52
2. Appear 4:22
3. Pretoria Three 2:31
4. Needle Children 7:54
5. Kalahari Lives 5:39
6. Grandmother's Teaching 9:47
7. Funk Dem Dudu 3:47
8. Kippieology 4:54
9. Dedicated to Abdullah Ibrahim 6:07
10. Grandmother's Teaching 13:37

Details

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For Afrika, South African expatriate bassist Johnny Dyani enlarged his group to a septet from the quartet formation he had used on prior Steeplechase recordings and, in the process, shifted gears slightly from the deeper, beautifully bitter songs that had been his forte (such as "House Arrest" on Mbizo) to a somewhat lighter fare, replete with catchy, skipping melodies and funky electric bass. Something of the township feel, so basic to his work, was also lost by replacing Dudu Pukwana with veteran saxman Charles Davis and by the odd inclusion of steel drums which supply a lilting quality. All of these elements make for a perhaps less satisfying effort that others by Dyani but still a fairly enjoyable one. His bass figure at the beginning and end of "Grandmother's Teaching" is almost worth the price of the album and a great example of the sort of thing that no one but Dyani could accomplish, and "Funk Dem Dudu" retains enough of that "African cry" to make one yearn for more. With its relatively short song times, Afrika might have been his stab at a bit of popular notice and is certainly a fun record, if not up to the heights of classics like his Witchdoctor's Son.