Author Topic: Musical Interlude  (Read 633434 times)

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #720 on: June 24, 2025, 04:24:20 AM »

LL feat Total, summer 1996 memories.
Amazing to me how much this jam still rocks 3 decades later!

Offline Kim Jong-Un's Pajama Pants

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #721 on: June 24, 2025, 05:53:06 PM »
These mzanzi numbers are ringing in my head.

Dlala Ka Yona

Bhampa

If you love Ogene, Ejyk Nwamba will not disappoint.
"I freed a thousand slaves.  I could have freed a thousand more if only they knew they were slaves."

Harriet Tubman

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #722 on: June 25, 2025, 04:30:23 AM »
These mzanzi numbers are ringing in my head.

Dlala Ka Yona

Bhampa

If you love Ogene, Ejyk Nwamba will not disappoint.

Kali sana, asante!
Anything with Maradona Focalistic in it is always fire 🔥🔥🔥😎👍🏾
Then add these gels, these gels, these young, fit, tight, tiight, tiiiight Mzansi gels I tells ya, shaking it tuntulu tantala bila jokes. Kazi safi.

Nice authentic African Ogene Joint. From the morphology and outfits, these are definitely our Igbo brodas. Speaking of which, I have never met a single one of them who wasn't a chief nor one who didn't have a monster ego to boot!

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #723 on: June 26, 2025, 04:45:46 AM »

Fela! This LP remains a classic to date!

Offline yx

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #724 on: June 29, 2025, 03:05:14 AM »

These song these song these song I tells ya, reminds me of someone.

Same.

Offline RV Heavy Hitter!

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #725 on: June 29, 2025, 05:37:35 AM »
Black music has over 10,000 genres; you can never sample them all in your lifetime. Every tribe, which totals over 4000 in the globe, has their few genres. Even in America, Black folk from state to state have their own style. Google a tribe and learn their music, and you will be amazed. SA tribes alone seem to have a boatload! Xigaza from the Tsonga environs alone is addictive! The Bakuba Tribe of Congo are legends. Kenyan tribes, I think Luo's ohangla topples the rest, but the rest are also great in their own rights. Bikutsi, mapuka, coupe decale, makasi, Kizomba in West Africa are bangers, but I thing Congo and SA remain kings African Music!
The future belongs to those who have a quarter of the character and integrity of RV Heavy Hitter!

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #726 on: June 30, 2025, 08:06:28 AM »

These song these song these song I tells ya, reminds me of someone.

Same.
Who does it remind you of and why? 😃

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #727 on: June 30, 2025, 08:25:21 AM »
Black music has over 10,000 genres; you can never sample them all in your lifetime. Every tribe, which totals over 4000 in the globe, has their few genres. Even in America, Black folk from state to state have their own style. Google a tribe and learn their music, and you will be amazed. SA tribes alone seem to have a boatload! Xigaza from the Tsonga environs alone is addictive! The Bakuba Tribe of Congo are legends. Kenyan tribes, I think Luo's ohangla topples the rest, but the rest are also great in their own rights. Bikutsi, mapuka, coupe decale, makasi, Kizomba in West Africa are bangers, but I thing Congo and SA remain kings African Music!

Muziki chonjo sana. I like the Botsawanan joint. Very relaxing.

Very true. When it comes to music and sports sisi nyeuthis rule. Hata rock.and roll has black roots. God gave us good hand-eye coordination for sports and dancing, good rhythm and unmatched creative talent. The interesting thing is the best music worldwide always seems to come from places with the most suffering.

DRC - lingala - a tragedy of a country since independence with no roads to date between major cities
Naija - Afrobeat, Ogene, Fela Kuti etc  -- military and civilian dictatorships and zero development to speak of to date. Fuel shortages yet 5th largest producer of oil worldwide.
South Africa - Kwaito, Amapiano and so much more - The Boers have sat on them for 400 years
The US south - Blues, Jazz - slavery, suffering

It seems when nyeuthi is in pain, he produces the best music to capture it. Or to escape life's miseries.

We in Kenya are not so good in music because we are all very, very fat. Even the mama mbogas Njamba spoke of are huge in size eating big, big, biiig daily, and are used to soft life of running water, stima tokens tutuluu, a functioning democracy, peace and roads swaaaa all over the nation.

Even my Turkana people in Eliye are now also starting to get fat because food is plenty. We seldom hear of famine relief anywhere in Kwiinya any more.

That's why Kwiinyans whine about peni mbili things like soprano voices. When stima is in your house, you eat daily getting very fat, maji tiririiii from the tap/borehole/stream or harvesting tank/well, your kids/brothers/sisters are in school studying stululu and you even have loose money to buy masks, Kwiinyan flags, smartphones for selfies and good running shoes for mahandamanos, of course you have nothing too bad to cry about except soprano and so on.

The irony is that many Kenyans die from communicable.diseases that can be solved with proper hygiene but nobody protests those deaths. In fact when they looted Quickmart I am told they took the electronics and left the food. I saw huuge amounts of unga ya chapati trampled on the ground trampluuuu on TV after they had done their work. Which also means they have stima where they will plug in those electronics. I may be wrong on that (the looting of electronics alone) though.

Bottom line, Kwiinyans are spoilt hence not so good music. Notice none of the mahandamanos are ever about development, inflation, economy, food, homelessness. Almost every single Kwiinyan has a huge ugali to eat at night and a warm safe place to sleep except for the poorest of the poor whom we of course should assist. But whom Genzs will never protest for. That huge huge ugali daily and soft life is what leads to our bad music.

ni hayo tu
 

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #728 on: June 30, 2025, 08:49:43 AM »

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #729 on: July 03, 2025, 03:57:54 AM »

Offline yx

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #730 on: July 04, 2025, 05:10:38 AM »

High school memories for me


The live reprise

That’s beautiful.

I was going to answer your question upthread, but it would not let me respond to you there. Another time maybe.

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #731 on: July 04, 2025, 08:32:17 AM »
That’s beautiful.

I was going to answer your question upthread, but it would not let me respond to you there. Another time maybe.

Sawasawa  :)

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #732 on: July 04, 2025, 08:47:04 AM »


For those of you also into classical. What's your favourite composition ever?
I bought this album in 1996 and there's a funny story behind that purchase.

So this Kenyan buddy - we were not that close as friends though - used to visit us at our apartment from time to time to see his other buddy. One day he found me listening to it while working on my assignments. He started observing my CD collection beady-eyed with a toothy grin. After that I headed out to go to the store to buy a beer (was a drinker back then) while he and his other buddy (one of my two other roommates) were still chatting in the sitting room. When I came back he had left. Time went by with usual routines of life, then about 6 months later I found myself visiting his roommate at their apartment.

As we're sitting there talking I noticed their boombox with lots of CD's next to it. Then I caught him! There lay my CD (this one) in plain sight! I told myself no no no it's not possible. He couldn't have. I hadn't noticed it was missing so I just told myself it's probably a case of imitation as a form of flattery. He went out and bought it once he saw mine. When I went home I checked my CD collection and sure enough it was missing! He had stolen it!

Isasadthing

To this day I have never asked him about it but one day I surely will. He's a big prof at one of the Stateside unis by the way. I hope he's not stealing from his students and the uni too!

Ni hayo tu

My fave (live version):

 

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Re: Musical Interlude
« Reply #733 on: July 06, 2025, 09:34:30 PM »

Angie Stone gone. Car crash. So is George Foreman.


Life is super short, folks. Use each precious minute wisely. You'll never get it back.