MP3 Scavengers Know No Borders
(Page 2 of 2)
May-June 2009
by Keith Goetzman
Not exactly the fare you’re likely to hear on the typical world music compilation, mass-marketed to go down smooth with that three-dollar cup of java and to appeal to your sense of perceived authenticity.
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“In general, these blogs (and the bloggers themselves) challenge the accepted terrain of ‘world music,’ a term that has come to connote a very limited number of instantly palatable foreign sounds,” writes Simonini. “Australian Aboriginal music, for instance, would probably be too experimental for most lazy-Sunday world music enthusiasts, while Angola’s kuduru music would lean too far toward hard-core urban sounds.”
Nick Storring makes a similar point in the Canadian magazine Musicworks (Winter 2008; article not available online) in an article that celebrates both the best of international blogging and small, scrappy world music labels such as Sublime Frequencies, Yaala Yaala, Terp, and Crammed Discs, which have more in common with the indie-rock world than with bigger, slicker world music labels.
These smaller, nimbler platforms, he writes, are examples of “emerging alternative modes of marketing and curating non-Western sounds” and are a welcome counter to an “over-emphasis on authenticity [that] continues to drive the world music industry.”
While Africa is a fertile ground for many MP3 bloggers, it’s far from the only repository of great forgotten music.
Matt Yanchyshyn started Benn Loxo du Taccu (bennloxo.com) as a forum for Nigerian-made, American-influenced pop-rock from the 1960s and 1970s. Now he’s all over the map, from China to Syria to Denmark, and a recent post delved into Italian versions of U.S. pop hits, starting with the Who’s “Can’t Explain” rendered as “Con Quella Voce” by the exuberantly throaty singer of the band Gli Uragani.
Stuart Ellis at Radiodiffusion Internasionaal sums up the spirit of discovery that drives his peers:
“With compilations like The Roots of Chicha: Psychedelic Cumbias from Peru and 1970’s Algerian Proto-Raï Underground popping up, and bands like Konono No. 1 coming to light after being in existence for a quarter-century, it makes you wonder: What else is out there? What have I missed?
“Maybe there were some kids in a basement somewhere with an electric guitar, or a keyboard, or even some kind of electrified gayageum [a Korean zitherlike instrument] making some unholy racket. And maybe, just maybe, there’s reel-to-reel, cassette recordings, or possibly even some bootleg X-ray records floating around with those unimaginable sounds. That is what keeps me, and other obsessive types like me, constantly searching.”
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