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KOFI AYIVOR - JUNGLE FUNK


ARTIST:
TITLE:
Jungle Funk
CATNO:
KALITA12024
STYLE:
FORMAT:
Vinyl record
DESCRIPTION:
Afrobeat, Disco Reggae & Funk - -'Adzagli (Jungle Funk)' and 'A Song For You (Ayawa)' have never before been released on vinyl. Kalita has acquired the rights to do so though so we are now treated to two next-level slices of West African disco from Amsterdam's Kofi Ayivor. They have been taken from his 1981 classic and much sought-after album 'Kofi' and have been cut nice and loud for extra impact. As well as the lively and vibrant, instrument-rich originals, DJ and producer Mendel has cooked up his own remixes of each recording using the original multitrack session tapes. Pure fire.

PRICE:
£13.49
RELEASED YEAR:
SLEEVE:
New
MEDIA:
New

BUY:
 
 
LISTEN:
Play       Cue Sample

TRACK LISTING:

Click to listen - add to playlist or download mp3 sample.

PLAY
 
CUE
MP3
a1
Adzagli (Jungle Funk) (Mendel Mix)
a2
Adzagli (Jungle Funk)
b1
A Song For You (Ayawa) (Mendel Mix)
b2
A Song For You (Ayawa)

Last FM Information on Kofi Ayivor

Please note the information is done on a artist keyword match and data is provided by LastFM.
I experiment with making new songs on the street. One was dedicated to my uncle, called "Shokolokobangoshe", another was a kind of original African rap called, "Dig It or the Walking Dance." They're a synthesis of traditional and modern styles. It's all from experience from the past forty-seven years of playing drums. All kinds of people listen. Rich people, street people, people who are judges, police, directors of business come to watch me play, they come and sit on the ground! Chinese, Korean business people all sitting on the ground! Listening to one drum and a voice. I can't believe that Kofi Ayivor can be sitting on the street with one drum and a voice and some two hundred people are sitting listening to him! But the Amsterdam audience is the hardest audience. Only recently have Western young people gotten into rhythms of the drum through house music and hiphop and rap. Now it's all rhythm. Have you heard chords these days? No sweet changes from B flat to C, no, it's rhythm. People in the West are just beginning to use rhythms now. They're on the way. But they have to get more in touch with crossing-rhythms. And syncopations. Kofi Ayivor Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.