I still get amazed sometimes when I hear something cool that I've not heard before and it's all thanks to the whims of a radio DJ. I don't know if online streaming services can be as eclectic as an actual DJ can be, since they supposedly cater to what they know of your tastes. Hard to say really, but I came across some music on Radio 6 the other day that I'm pretty sure I'd never have heard otherwise. It's a collaboration from 2003, so not even new, I just never knew about it. The collaboration is between Terry Hall & Mustaq. You may be thinking "who?". Well, Terry Hall is a founder member of the Specials, a classic UK ska act. I've liked Hall for a long time and I'm not sure if it started with the Specials cassette I bought or when I heard a song of his as a solo singer. Mushtaq I'd never heard of but it turns out he's a member of Fun-Da-Mental. Now, I could probably write a whole other post on Fun-Da-Mental, but I won't, I'll just keep it short, but looking into them for this post again also displays the power of radio to remind us of things we'd forgotten, and how it exposes us to massive amounts of random music. Fun-Da-Mental are a multi-ethnic UK group who are anti-racist and quite pro-Islam. They were using and singing about these topics back in the 90's, way before 9-11, when wearing your Muslimness on your sleeve wasn't even a thing! They basically started with a combination of Asian sounds and hip-hop, and their Asian/Muslim identity was pretty mind-blowing to me when I first came across them as a teenager in Wales (though not mind-blowing enough to get me to hear anything else by them for nearly twenty years). Very interesting group, definitely worth a further read upon. Anyway, back to the main topic; Terry Hall & Mushtaq put together an album called 'The Hour of Two Lights' which is a great blend of Hall's singing with Arabic instrumentation -- you can hear it all here. It reminds me of a bit of some Gorillaz stuff, and it turns out that Damon Albarn had some involvement and put it out on his Honest Jon's label -- hmm. The song I heard, and that piqued by interest, is below:
i think this is the first time you're posting anything about ethnic music
ReplyDeleteall music is ethnic
ReplyDeletei like 'sticks and stones' the most i think
ReplyDeletehttp://youtu.be/52prLl0_5kQ