Fela Kuti (October 15, 1938 - August 2, 1997) RIP
Stream
No recent updates in this category.
Why not...
Comments
Photos
Video Player
Interests
General
Hey, I hope you all like the music. Let me know some more groups I should add. The website dont got that many people but this is what I could find at the time. Also The song "Ya Man" by "Balkan Beatbox" is realy the song "For The Ladies". Thats a messup from the website and i cant change it. Sorry. Anyway I hope you like the music. Stop AIDS.Music
Television
Books
CHECK OUT THESE GUYS THEY ARE CALLED "KONONO No1" IF YOU LIKE THEM ILL TELL YOU ALL ABOUT THEM. IM GOING TO TRY TO ADD SOME BANDS TO THIS WEBSITE TO GIVE YOU ALL A NEW TAST OF MORE AFRICAN MUSIC. .. width="425" height="350">........> Daara J is a group from Senegal its kinda rap .. width="425" height="350">........>Heroes
TUNE INTO http://partycentralradio.com. I WILL HAVE MY OWN SHOW ALL AFRICAN MUSIC ALL THE TIME VERY SOON.
Top Friends (22)
- Faggotry
- Bob Marley
- ANTIBALAS
- BALKAN BEAT BOX
- World Anthem Band
- Baoku
- Afrobeat Down
- James Welch
- Kimberly Holloway
- JOSH DANIELS
- hassan krifa
- Birdylion
- Dan Ambesa fall Rostov
- Ashes of the Fallen (NE…
- Benny G Whiskers
- Dallaz Wash
- The VXT
- Morlack
- AFFORDABLE SHIPPING SER…
- Kodiak
- The Golden Ratio
- MsRemains
Music
Blurbs
About me:
Fela Anikulapo Kuti, born in Abeokuta, Nigeria in 1938, was a singer-composer, trumpet, sax and keyboard player, bandleader, and politician. Kuti was one of Africa's most controversial musicians and throughout his life he continued to fight for the rights of the common man (and woman) despite vilification, harassment, and even imprisonment by the government of Nigeria. Born to Yoruban parents, Kuti was strongly influenced by both parents, his mother being Funmilayo, a leading figure in the nationalist struggle. Practically all of his records are dominated by political events and discussions from the approach of Pan-Africanism. In 1954, Kuti joined the Cool Cats as a singer in that highlife band (highlife being the rage of the Lagos music scene at the time). During this period Kuti developed his own unusual sound which he described as highlife-jazz. In 1968 Kuti announced the arrival of Afro-beat, within the year was promoting his sound all over the USA on a 10-month tour where he became influenced by American jazz. When he returned to his homeland he opened a nightclub, the Shrine, and changed the name of his band to Africa 70 (and later to Egypt 80). His bands traditionally included the typical huge line-up consisting of many singers and dancers, numerous saxophonists, trumpeteers, drummers, percussionists, and of course, many guitarists blending African rhythms and jazz horn lines with politicized song lyrics. His music was intricate, rather than calling it Afro-beat you might more arguably consider it Afro-jazz. Entire recordings often consisted of just a few songs and this propensity for jamming set up a roadblock for Fela to attain commercial acceptance in the United States. He also abhored performing a song after recording it, and this led to audience disinterest in the U.S. where the people wanted their music to be recognizable hits. Kuti continued his outspoken attacks on the Nigerian government. When the people returned to power in 1979, Kuti began his own political party - MOP (Movement of the People). The military returned to power in 1983 and within the year Kuti was sentenced to five years in prison on a spurious currency smuggling charge. He was released in 1986 after yet another change of government. Fela Anikulapo Kuti died on Saturday, August 2, 1997, at 4pm (local time) in Lagos, Nigeria. It had been rumoured for some time that Fela had a serious illness he was refusing treatment for, many said he was suffering from prostate cancer. But as it turns out, Fela died from complications due to AIDS. As Fela's brother, Olikoye Ransome Kuti, said at a news conference: "The immediate cause of death of Fela was heart failure, but there were many complications arising from the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome". Fela was a man with great influence in the African music world, he is irreplaceable and his presence will be sorely misssed. ....This profile was edited with MySpace Profile Editor TUNE INTO http://partycentralradio.com/ I WILL HAVE MY OWN SHOW SOON! ALL AFRICAN MUSIC ALL THE TIME! .. width="425" height="350">........>Who I'd like to meet:
Details
- Status: Married
- Hometown: Lagos Nigeria
- Orientation: Straight
- Body type: 5' 11" / Average
- Ethnicity: Black / African descent
- Zodiac Sign: Libra
- Children: Proud parent
- Smoke / Drink: Yes / Yes
- Occupation: Musician / Revolutionary


























Producer - Naiche - Cal… 1 year ago
Producer - Naiche - Cal… 1 year ago
Producer - Naiche - Cal… 1 year ago
Producer - Naiche - Cal… 1 year ago
Producer - Naiche - Cal… 1 year ago
Producer - Naiche - Cal… 2 years ago
AFROBEAT NO LIMIT 2 years ago
Producer - Naiche - Cal… 2 years ago
ADHD
2 years ago
ADHD
2 years ago
10 of 1629MoreMASTERING DEMONSTRATION
Free test mastering on www.california-studio.com
http://www.youtube.com/embed/kwIi7evowQA
http://www.facebook.com/pages/California-Studio/123196637746639?v=app_131686150237656
AUDIO MASTERING DEMONSTRATION On YOUTUBE !
http://www.youtube.com/user/californiastudio
www.california-studio.com
AUDIO MASTERING DEMOMSTRATION YOUTUBE !
http://www.youtube.com/user/californiastudio
FULL AUDIO MASTERING ALBUM PROMO
990 CHF
1200 $
840 €
www.california-studio.com
CALIFORNIA STUDIO - BEST MASTERING STUDIO
www.california-studio.com
WARM UP ANTICOLONIAL : HILAIRE PENDA - TONY ALLEN - FATOUMATA DIAWARA - SO KALMERY
Vendredi 25 février 2011 à 20h
Espace Fraternité - Magic Mirrors à Aubervilliers
18h - 20h : DJ - Animations Anticoloniales
20h : Warm Up Anticolonial
La semaine anticoloniale est aussi l’occasion de vivre un Warm Up exceptionnel autour des artistes de rares talents
Des rythmes et des sons pour sortir du carcan colonial !
Tony Allen est le grand maître du tambour Afrobeat. L’afrobeat est une musique de résistance qui se nourrit des violences urbaines, des effets de l’injustice. C’est une musique qui refuse le dictat de la communauté internationale, et encore moins la politique des gouvernements corrompus en place en Afrique.
Son rythme fantastique est un manifeste pour l’identité et la liberté en Afrique.
So Kalmery est le représentant du brakka. Cette philosophie qui allie danse et quête identitaire, cette musique inclassable qui chante les valeurs de l’humanité, gorgée de racines africaines, de blues, de folk et de soul.
Fatoumata Diawara, c’est la princesse Soninké aux talents multiples qui fascine autant dans le cinéma que dans la musique. Mais, c’est sur la scène que sa musique engagée, inspirée du wassoulou, teintée de folk et de soul, donne tout son éclat.
Hilaire Penda est le géant bassiste camerounais, à la reconnaissance que l’on sait. Bootsy Collins, bassiste de James Brown, John McLaughlin, John Scofield, Angélique Kidjo et Rokia Traoré, l’ont déjà sollicité. Tant son style personnel, groovissime, mêle les rythmes africains, le jazz-rock et le funk.
Retrouvez le programme complet de la semaine anti-coloniale sur le site www.anticolonial.net.
Entrée : 10 € en prévente sur FNAC, Virgin... / 12 € sur place
Espace Fraternité – Magic Mirrors
10-12, rue de la Gare à Aubervilliers.
Métro : Porte de la chapelle puis bus PC3 ou 65 / Crimée ou Riquet puis bus 54
Parking gratuit.
SHANA P "REGARDE MOI" COMPOSED & PRODUCED AT CALIFORNIA STUDIO
GOLD RECORD IN 2010