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The King Of Sudanese Jazz

Sharhabil Ahmed

The King Of Sudanese Jazz

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Interpret
Sharhabil Ahmed
Titel
The King Of Sudanese Jazz
Label
Habibi Funk
Artikel-Nr.
HABIBI013-1
EAN
673790035530
Release-Date
29.10.2021
Musicstyle
World Music
Konfiguration
LP 1x
Lagerbestand
Lagernd und sofort lieferbar
22,99 € *
Back in stock! We're super happy to announce our 13th release by Sharhabil Ahmed, the actual King... mehr
Produktinformationen "The King Of Sudanese Jazz"
Back in stock! We're super happy to announce our 13th release by Sharhabil Ahmed, the actual King of Sudanese Jazz (he actually won that title in a competition in the early 1970s). Sonically it sounds very different from what Jazz is understood to sound like outside of Sudan. It’s an incredible unique mix of rock’n’roll, funk, surf, traditional sudanese music and influences from Congolese sounds. Original copies of Sharhabil recordings are often hard to find, so we’re happy they will now be widely available. “Argos Farfish” which was featured on our last comp amassed close to 400.000 plays already. Tracklist 01. Argos Farfish 02. El Bambi 03. Malak Ya Saly 04. Kamar Dawa 05. Zulum Aldunya 06. Aziza 07. Ya Shagini Sharhabil was born in 1935 and he is the founding father of the Sudanese Jazz scene. His aim was to modernize Sudanese music by bringing it together with western influences and instrumentation like he summarized it himself in a 2004 interview for „Al Ahram Weekly“: “[...]Haqiba music, you know, was traditional vocal music with little accompaniment beyond a tambourine. When our generation came in the 1960s, we came with a new style. It was a time of worldwide revolution in music. In Europe, the rhythms of swing and tango were being replaced by jazz, samba, rock- and-roll. We were influenced by this rejuvenation in Sudan, too. I started out by learning to play the oud and traditional Sudanese music, and got a diploma from the music institute of Khartoum University. But my ambition was to develop something new. For this, the guitar seemed like the best instrument. Western instruments can approximate the scales of Sudanese music very well. After all, a lot of Western music is originally from Africa. I have absorbed different influences, from traditional Sudanese rhythms to calypso and jazz, and I hold them together in my music with no difficulty.”...
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