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Old 05-08-2009, 02:00 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Please mate yeah!
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Old 05-08-2009, 02:01 PM   #2 (permalink)
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already got it.
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Old 05-08-2009, 02:03 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Scott Walker was a glaring omission from my own list.

If only i'd heard Scott 4 before I wrote it

It's been a while since I heard The Drift. I think i'm more a fan of his older stuff than his experimental stuff but you have to give him props for doing something like that at that stage in his career.
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Old 05-08-2009, 02:42 PM   #4 (permalink)
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Scott 4 is a fantastic album; chamber pop doesn't get much better than it (in my opinion of course). It's a completely different kind of quality to his later stuff. With his later stuff I think for the last 30-odd years the guy's more or less accepted that whatever he releases is basically doomed for the commercial void so he just does whatever the f*ck he wants in the studio on an indie label.

That's what I love about his later stuff - for that kind of attitude to writing and recording, whatever Walker has released solo or might come up with in future is almost guaranteed to be forward-thinking and experimental at the very least.
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Old 05-17-2009, 06:53 AM   #5 (permalink)
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About time I put the lid on this thread...

1. Ali Farka Touré & Toumani Diabaté - In the Heart Of the Moon (2005)

1. Debe
2. Kala
3. Mamadou Boutiquier
4. Monsieur le Maire de Niafunké
5. Kaira
6. Simbo
7. Ai Ga Bani
8. Soumbou Ya Ya
9. Naweye Toro
10. Kadi Kadi
11. Gomni
12. Hawa Dolo

As I think I've said before, words can only do so much to describe music, particularly music such as my favourite album of all time, which is a bit of a pain because I'd love to rant on way over the character limit about this album. Because of the kind of album this is though, I probably won't get that far. Anyway, before reading on, watch these two videos.



On the left is Toumani Diabaté, giving you a taste of the epitome of traditional Bambara music from southern Mali. On the right is Ali Farka Touré, giving us a taste of traditional Songhai blues from northern Mali. Both these men are seen as the kings of West African folk; Touré as Mali's very own Mr. Blues and Diabaté as the enigmatic Mr. Kora. As you might have gathered from the above videos, both peddled very different and very popular strains of Mandé folk music and, if you put yourself in the shoes of the African music industry of 2005, the two of them coming together to collaborate with a full-length album must have been a very exciting prospect indeed. Such a thing would be my equivalent of David Bowie and Scott Walker collaborating for example.

So, in essence, what started out as the notion of the two co-writing one song together took the form of a full-length LP. During the sessions at Hotel Mandé in Bamako, Mali, the two simply couldn't keep their creativity from getting a little out of hand if you will and in three, two hour-long sessions this little treasure trove of an album was recorded. From the taping of the jams between Diabaté and Touré, folk such as Ry Cooder, his son Joachim Cooder, Sekou Kante, Cachaíto López and Lekan Babalola would add various overdubs on guitar and percussion. Such contributions were very subtle indeed though, to the point that they're barely audible in the face of Diabaté's kora and Touré's guitar.

This does the album a whole world and more of good, bringing the improvisational interplay between the pair to the front of the mix. This is the strength of the album; the fact that two such different styles of folk from possibly the two biggest names in Malian music can come together so well using such a brilliantly uncluttered production style (thanks to Nick Gold, the man in the producer's chair for the Buena Vista Social Club album, and one of the unsung heroes of modern music) to allow such natural musical talents to shine effortlessly. There were, after all, no rehearsals - just a mutual understanding between Diabaté and Touré of one another's musical traditions, the resulting merging of two distinct Mandé traditions then the twelve tracks of instrumental improvisation that followed.

From tune to tune we find each musician adapting their playing style to accommodate the other. For instance this would lead to Touré softening his approach on the guitar so as not to drown out the melodies being created by Diabaté, and often the other way around with Diabaté being challenged into discovering new harmonies on his kora to compliment Touré's guitar. Through this wheeling and dealing between the two musical traditions, something very original and very profound is created; this being quite possibly one of the most original albums of all time.

The result is, as they say, magic! From the mellow melodies, effortless adaptability and the pure talent of the men behind them, twelve tracks of relaxing and absolutely beautiful music are spawned. Vocals are opted for very sparingly (and where they are they're sung by Touré's wonderful baritone voice), as the album is much more about jamming and improvisation than anything else - the creation of some of the most beautiful music on earth at virtually the drop of a hat. If I went into it all song-by-song as I usually do, this'd be even more boring a post to read than it is now. This is really an album you have to hear for yourself and not read about.

It's hard to put into words why I like it so much, let alone why it's my favourite of all time. A lot of it must have something to do with the fact that, when I first bought it around the time of its release, I'd never heard what a kora or traditional Mandé music of any kind sounded like. In the Heart Of the Moon served as the best introduction one could ask for. Also (naturally) it just sounded so different from just about every kind of music I'd heard to that day, given that I was only just starting to climb out of my metal phase. The one that makes this the winner for me though is that not only does it defy any real explanation in words (it is genuinely one of those albums you can recommend to a mate by saying 'just bloody listen to it'), it also transcends the boundaries of mood. I don't know about anyone else here who's heard it, but for me I don't have to have any sort of atmosphere going to enjoy this album - angry, jubilant, depressed, psychotic, cynical; however I'm feeling, I always love this album whenever I put it on. As wonderful as the other 99 albums on this list are, they don't work in that way for me.

As I said earlier though, words can only do so much when it comes to music. Whatever preconceptions you have about 'world music' (such a boring phrase to use that), at least give this a go. Here's the one video I could find;



Now that that's done, I'll get cracking with the last mixtape and a final run-down in a bit...

Last edited by Bulldog; 05-17-2009 at 07:08 AM.
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Old 05-17-2009, 07:10 AM   #6 (permalink)
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Congrats on the thread, obviously didn't see that as number one which is always good!
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Old 05-17-2009, 08:30 AM   #7 (permalink)
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I got so excited when I opened musicbanter and I saw fresh comments in this.

Yeah, I don't think anybody saw that coming, but a great finish to the list.
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Old 05-17-2009, 12:33 PM   #8 (permalink)
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Cheers guys, glad you liked it

Here's the final rundown then, with all the mixtape links...

5-1.rar
1. Ali Farka Toure & Toumani Diabate - In the Heart Of the Moon
2. Scott Walker - The Drift
3. The Pogues - If I Should Fall From Grace With God
4. Talk Talk - Laughing Stock
5. Steel Pulse - True Democracy

10-6.rar
6. David Bowie - "Heroes"
7. The Fall - The Infotainment Scan
8. Elvis Costello & the Attractions - Imperial Bedroom
9. The The - Mind Bomb
10. Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds - No More Shall We Part

20-11.rar
11. Captain Beefheart - Lick My Decals Off, Baby
12. Can - Tago Mago
13. Black Uhuru - Red
14. Peter Tosh - Equal Rights
15. The Zombies - Odyssey and Oracle
16. Happy Mondays - Pills, Thrills 'n' Bellyaches
17. Midnight Oil - Diesel and Dust
18. Paul McCartney - Ram
19. The Rolling Stones - Sticky Fingers
20. Steely Dan - Aja

30-21.rar
21. Tangerine Dream - Phaedra
22. Leonard Cohen - I'm Your Man
23. New Order - Technique
24. PIL - Flowers Of Romance
25. Baaba Maal - Missing You (Mi Yeewni)
26. The Byrds - Sweetheart Of the Rodeo
27. Love - Forever Changes
28. Human League - Dare!
29. The Beatles - The White Album
30. Supergrass - Road To Rouen

40-31.rar
31. The Clash - London Calling
32. 10ft Ganja Plant - Midnight Landing
33. Gorillaz - Demon Days
34. Pink Floyd - Animals
35. Transglobal Underground - Impossible Broadcasting
36. Tom Waits - Mule Variations
37. Faith No More - King For a Day, Fool For a Lifetime
38. Massive Attack - Blue Lines
39. Thievery Corporation - The Mirror Conspiracy
40. The Damned - Machine Gun Etiquette

50-41.rar
41. The Saints - Eternally Yours
42. XTC - Black Sea
43. Talking Heads - Remain In Light
44. Super Furry Animals - Guerilla
45. Joy Division - Closer
46. DJ Shadow - Endtroducing...
47. Gladys Knight & the Pips - Nitty Gritty
48. The Kinks - Village Green Preservation Society
49. Hybrid - Wider Angle
50. Morcheeba - Big Calm

60-51.rar
51. A Certain Ratio - I'd Like To See You Again
52. Sabrina Malheiros - Equilibria
53. Pulp - This Is Hardcore
54. The Specials - The Specials
55. David Byrne - Rei Momo
56. Depeche Mode - Violator
57. Funkadelic - One Nation Under a Groove
58. George Harrison - All Things Must Pass
59. The New Christs - Distemper
60. Turin Brakes - Jackinabox

70-61.rar
61. Joe Jackson - Night and Day
62. Aztec Camera - High Land, Hard Rain
63. Iggy Pop - The Idiot
64. Dub Incorporation - Diversité
65. Lou Reed - Berlin
66. The Birthday Party - Junkyard
67. Cibelle - Cibelle
68. Celibate Rifles - Sideroxylon
69. Brian Eno - Before and After Science
70. UNKLE - Psyence Fiction

80-71.rar
71. Paul Weller - Wild Wood
72. The Coral - The Coral
73. Air - Moon Safari
74. The Pop Group - Y
75. 10cc - The Original Soundtrack
76. Madness - Absolutely
77. The Meteors - Stampede
78. The Residents - Third Reich 'n' Roll
79. Blur - Parklife
80. Gang Of Four - Entertainment

90-81.rar
81. Bob Dylan - Desire
82. Kraftwerk - The Man Machine
83. The Buzzcocks - Another Music In a Different Kitchen
84. Marvin Gaye - What's Going On
85. The Wedding Present - George Best
86. Johnny Thunders - So Alone
87. Magazine - Real Life
88. Big Youth - Screaming Target
89. Everything But the Girl - Temperamental
90. The Eighties Matchbox B-Line Disaster - Hörse Of the Dög

100-91.rar
91. Alternative TV - The Image Has Cracked
92. The Music - The Music
93. Ohio Players - Skin Tight
94. Souad Massi - Deb
95. Frank Zappa - Jazz From Hell
96. Third World - 96 Degrees In the Shade
97. Gram Parsons - GP
98. Gomez - Bring It On
99. Bruce Springsteen - Nebraska
100. The Triffids - Born Sandy Devotional

Well, back to the drawing board I suppose
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Old 05-17-2009, 01:28 PM   #9 (permalink)
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I didn't expect it either! I have the album and played it a couple of weeks back. Not one of my favourites but that's what make these lists so special! Great stuff!
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Old 05-18-2009, 05:33 AM   #10 (permalink)
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I got my hands on the Ali Farka Toure & Toumani Diabate album after reading your review. I'm not blown away just yet, but I definetly like it. It also got the approval of my GF

Also grats on completing your 100!
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