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Sample Track 1:
"Virgin of the Sun God" from Aphrodesia
Sample Track 2:
"White Elephant" from Aphrodesia
Sample Track 3:
"Holy Ghost Invasion" from Aphrodesia
Sample Track 4:
"Bus Driver" from Aphrodesia
Sample Track 5:
"Ago Mayo" from Aphrodesia
Sample Track 6:
"Ochun Mi" from Aphrodesia
Sample Track 7:
"Every Day" from Aphrodesia
Sample Track 8:
"Agayu" from Aphrodesia
Sample Track 9:
"World Under Fire" from Aphrodesia
Buy Recording:
Aphrodesia
Layer 2
CD Review

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The Boston Phoenix, CD Review >>

The 11 California-based musicians of Aphrodesia are part of a new wave of US-based Afropop bands who don’t simply draw inspiration from recordings but are driven to travel and learn from their sources. The group’s principals are two women with experiences in Ghana and Cuba and familiarity with Shona music from Zimbabwe. Aphrodesia’s new CD commemorates the band’s collective — and intrepid — overland trip from Ghana into Nigeria, where they opened for Femi Kuti at the legendary Lagos nightclub the Shrine, home of Africa’s most widely imitated modern genre. Afrobeat, with its funky grooves, trenchant brass arrangements, and feisty call-and-response vocals, is the glue that binds these nine original tracks. But along the way, we get traditional mbira (hand piano) and guitar-driven boogie from Zimbabwe, an Afro-Cuban homage to the healing saint Babalu-aye, and, on “Everyday,” the two lead women singing in Ghana’s Ga language over a funky brass-and-electric guitar backbeat. The band are tight and fluid, and their command of far-flung languages and musical genres is sure-footed without being reverential.

- by Banning Eyre
 01/23/08 >> go there
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