By continuing your navigation on this website, you accept the use of cookies for statistical purposes.
For the first in a new series of albums covering the Sudanese soul and jazz scenes, Habibi Funk serves up an album of previously unreleased material by veteran performer Kamal Keila. The music contained on the album comes from two reel-to-reel tapes of session recordings made by Keila and his band for Sudanese radio in 1992, though many of the songs and arrangements date back to the 1970s. During his ’70s peak, Keila was often described locally as “Sudan’s answer to James Brown or Fela Kuti”. Although the influence of both is present on both tracks, you’ll also hear Sudanese blues, fifties-style R&B, hazy funk influenced by the Ethiopian music scene and sweet, horn-heavy, breakbeat-powered sing-alongs. Superb stuff, all told.
A1
Shmasha
A2
Muslims And Christians
B1
Agricultural Revolution
B2
Arican Unity
B3
Sudan In The Heart Of Africa
C1
Taban Ahwak
C2
Ghali Ghali Ya Jinub
D1
Al Asafir
D2
Ya Shaifini
D3
Ajmal Youm