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Sample Track 1:
"Electric Pow Wow Drum" from A Tribe Called Red
Sample Track 2:
"Look At This" from A Tribe Called Red
Sample Track 3:
"Sowa" from Fatoumata Diawara
Sample Track 4:
"Track 1" from Kayhan Kalhor and Erdal Enzincan
Sample Track 5:
"Track 2" from Kayhan Kalhor and Erdal Enzincan
Sample Track 6:
"Con Dinamita" from La Shica
Sample Track 7:
"Limonsna de amores" from La Shica
Sample Track 8:
"Tout Est Fragile" from Lo'Jo
Sample Track 9:
"The Garden of Love" from Martha Redbone Roots Project
Sample Track 10:
"Hear the Voice of the Bard" from Martha Redbone Roots Project
Sample Track 11:
"Origin 5 - Minuit aux Batignolles" from Stephane Wrembel
Sample Track 12:
"Boss Taurus" from Mucca Pazza
Sample Track 13:
"Touch the Police" from Mucca Pazza
Sample Track 14:
"Ziwere - Mahube featuring Oliver Mtukudzi" from Oliver Mtukudzi
Layer 2
Concert Preview

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The New York Times, Concert Preview >>

Oliver Mtukudzi, one of Zimbabwe’s leading songwriters who created a signature sound out of several African styles, will anchor the lineup for the Globalfest 2013 world music concert in January, organizers said on Tuesday.

A veteran singer who began his career in 1977 in the band Wagon Wheels, Mr. Mtukudzi, 60, blends styles from across southern Africa and beyond without loosing the modal threads of Zimbabwean roots music. He possesses a deep, gutsy voice and writes about the daily struggles of people in his homeland, accompanying himself with hypnotic guitar lines.

Unlike his old Wagon Wheels bandmate Thomas Mapfumo, Mr. Mtukudzi tends to shy away from direct political commentary about the Mugabe regime. Still, some of his songs have been interpreted as allegorical protests. In “Ndakuvara,” some saw the story about an ox hurting a farmer as a condemnation of political violence. And his single “Wasakara,’ which means “You’re Getting Old,” has been seen by many in Zimbabwe as a plea for Robert Mugabe to retire. Bonnie Raitt, who has recorded his songs, has likened his “raw, imploring vocals” to Otis Redding and Toots Hibbert.

He will headline a wide-ranging bill with 12 acts from different traditions: They include the Malian singer Fatoumata Diawara, the Nuevo Flamenco group La Shica, the Hungarian Gypsy performer Parno Graszt, the Martha Redbone Roots Project and the classical Turkish duo Kayhan Kalhor and Erdal Erzincan.

The concert will be held on Jan. 13 at Webster Hall, taking place on three separate stages. Now in its 10th year, the festival was established by a trio of New York music bookers — Bill Bragin, Shanta Thake and Isabel Soffer — after the 2011 terrorist attacks to promote world music in the United States. Tickets, which cost $40, are on sale through Ticketmaster.

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 11/13/12 >> go there
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