Appia Kwa Bridge - Ebo Taylor

Appia Kwa Bridge

Ebo Taylor

  • Genre: Worldwide
  • Release Date: 2012-04-16
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 8

  • ℗ 2012 Strut Records

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Ayesama Ebo Taylor 7:04
2
Abonsam Ebo Taylor 5:30
3
Nsu Na Kwan Ebo Taylor 4:47
4
Yaa Amponsah Ebo Taylor 4:27
5
Assomdwee Ebo Taylor 5:55
6
Kruman Dey Ebo Taylor 4:39
7
Appia Kwa Bridge Ebo Taylor 5:30
8
Barrima Ebo Taylor 3:24

Reviews

  • Unusual emotional depth and resonance--AMG

    5
    By Outernational
    Unlike pop songs based on the Europe-derived rules of tonal music, Afro-beat doesn't typically move in a deliberate way from one place to another and then home again in a reasonably prescribed pattern of tension and release. Instead, it generally stays in a single place and dances there until it gets tired -- which can take anywhere from eight to 30 minutes. Nigerian legend Fela Kuti was the universally acknowledged Mozart of this approach: he would build a fearsome groove out of highly repetitive and mostly static harmonic materials, and then use it as an extended showcase for instrumental solos, wild dancing, and eye-poppingly bold political rants. Guitarist and songwriter Ebo Taylor, hailing from nearby Ghana, comes from the highlife tradition, which shares with Afro-beat a tendency toward funky, densely arranged, and harmonically static songs, but is also generally a bit lighter in terms of both groove and message. Recording here with the Berlin-based Afrobeat Academy band, Taylor gets deeper into his musical roots than he has on previous releases, creating a powerful set of songs that sound as if they could have been recorded in 1974: on tracks like "Abonsam," the highlife standard "Yaa Amponsah," and the effortlessly groovy title track, Taylor revives the old-school sounds with an energy and joy that belie his age. And on the album-closing "Barrima," he pays sweet tribute to his late wife with a stripped-down vocal-and-guitar composition that will break your heart. It all adds up to an album of unusual emotional depth and resonance. -Rick Anderson