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Upside Down/Music of Many Colours - BONUS TRACK
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Album: Upside Down/Music of Many Colours - BONUS TRACK
Artist: Fela Kuti
Release Date: 3/7/2006

This two-for-one CD reissue brings together a couple of the more unusual offerings in Fela Kuti's discography. Upside Down, released in 1976, is the usual two-song, half-hour deal, the songs beginning with several minutes of instrumental solo trades before the socially conscious lyrics enter. The... [+] Expand

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Upside Down/Music of Many Colours - BONUS TRACK by Fela Kuti!

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0.0 out of 5 stars Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
This two-for-one CD reissue brings together a couple of the more unusual offerings in Fela Kuti's discography. Upside Down, released in 1976, is the usual two-song, half-hour deal, the songs beginning with several minutes of instrumental solo trades before the socially conscious lyrics enter. The song "Upside Down" itself, however, is sung not by Kuti but by Sandra Akanke Isidore. She was a woman who Kuti met during his stay in the United States at the end of the '60s, and who is credited with helping to elevate Kuti's own social awareness and ethnic identity. It's basically like hearing a Kuti track with a different vocalist, then. Although Isidore's pipes aren't as strong as Kuti's, it makes for something refreshingly different in the midst of all those similar two-song releases from the mid-'70s. The other track, "Go Slow," is a little jazzier, and puts less emphasis on lyrics than most Kuti tracks, with the singing largely limited to chants that punctuate the instrumental arrangement. On Music of Many Colours, Kuti collaborated with American jazz/soul crossover vibraphonist Roy Ayers. Ayers wrote and sang one of the two lengthy tracks that comprised the album, "2000 Blacks Got to Be Free." Musically, the match didn't work out that great here, putting Kuti's Afro-funk ensemble to a disco beat, though the lyrical advocacy of African unity fit in with Kuti's usual lyrical preoccupations. Kuti takes the vocal and compositional chores for the album's other song, "Africa Centre of the World," which is like a customary Kuti track decorated by Ayers' vibes flourishes, and chained to a rather more conventional Western beat. [This edition contains one bonus track.]
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