African Music Forum

*
 
[ Store ] [ Contact ] [ Chat ] [ Radio ] [ Video ] [ JukeBoxes ] Click here to listen to unlimited African Music!     
  Home Help Search Calendar Login Register  
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
November 21, 2008, 04:10:41 PM

Login with username, password and session length
Search:
    Advanced search
Welcome To African Music Forum. You Are Encouraged To Join Us In Discussions. It's FREE With No Strings Attached!!

Admin
3352 Posts in 947 Topics by 308 Members
Latest Member: grbac

Afrigator
Pages: [1]   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: What is Bikoutsi?  (Read 598 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
amf
Top Dog!
Administrator
Sr. Member
*****

Karma: +6/-0
Offline Male
Posts: 327


To be served, you must be at the table!


WWW

« on: September 25, 2007, 02:34:51 AM »

From: http://www.dustedmagazine.com/reviews/3383

The skittering, ebullient, push-and-pull bikoutsi rhythm dominant in Cameroon’s interior city of Yaoundé is at the heart of this project by ex-Zap Mama singer Sally Nyolo. Nyolo has long been musically adventurous in her endeavors as a composer and performer, and on this collection she returns to her childhood roots in Cameroon, assembling, recording and collaborating with a kaleidoscopic array of Yaounde roots and pop musicians. Her modus operandi for the project seems to have been quite simple: She set up a studio and began working with local bands, involving herself integrally with the songwriting, arranging and production. The results are energetic and passionate, and it’s clear that Nyolo has managed to take part in and celebrate these sounds in a refreshingly effortless and natural way.

Nyolo is best known as a singer, so it makes some sense that the vocals, whether solo or ensemble, are consistently up-front in the mix here. The opening track, by Nyolo with Gueyanka, sets that agenda with high-pitched throat-whistling and Cameroonian scat singing; The warm growl of the vocal on Edmund Fils Nkoa Band’s narrative "Esclaves" is gently compelling; the Bidjoi Sisters’ conversational approach on "Chantal" feels almost shockingly intimate and unguarded.

Nyolo herself takes the lead on "Bikoutsi," which might well serve as a manifesto of the style, building its energy on sliding, pulsing electric bass, interlocking electric guitars and balafons, and chattering percussion. A reggae-ish take on the traditional bikoutsi feel drives the aforementioned "Chantal," where the insistent groove and sweet-tart blend of voices eventually moves outdoors and into an audio verite assemblage of street sounds.

Adding to the overall adventure are subtle tastes of other styles and approaches. Disco thump and ringing electric guitars reminiscent of the early '80s era of Zaire-Congo soukous lock in on Americain’s "Salaire"; syncopated patterns on acoustic guitar are at the center of the rich vocal call-and-response trance on "Obila Eba’ by Mr. Eddy. And as relaxed and comfortable as these recording sessions might sound, they are far from lo-fi, evincing a natural sound-staging and depth of field that adds dimension and atmosphere, underscoring the contextual unity surrounding so much musical variety.

Like most pop, Cameroonian music tends toward constant change - and those changes are not always well-documented or disseminated. It seems clear that with Studio Cameroon, however, Sally Nyolo has helped to create a thrilling musical snapshot of a very specific time and place. I’m guessing that time will reveal that she has also helped to produce an African music classic.

By Kevin Macneil Brown

Ké ké ké ké ké ké ké ( The New Bikoutsi)

Logged


African Music Forum
[ "You must be in business for yourself. You'll never get rich working for someone else." J. Paul Getty, Self-Made Billionaire. ]
Rickky421
Newbie
*

Karma: +2/-0
Offline Male
Posts: 23


WWW

« Reply #1 on: September 14, 2008, 10:50:04 PM »

Here is one of my favorite Bikutsi videos


http://www.jujunation.com/viewVideo.php?video_id=2546&title=Cameroon___Natasha_Bizo___Super_Ekang
Logged

http://www.jujunation.com.

African music videos all the time.
Pages: [1]   Go Up
  Print  
  
Jump to:  

Powered by SMF 1.1.6 | SMF © 2006-2008, Simple Machines LLC
Alienation design by Bloc | XHTML | CSS

Subscribe to African Music Forum using any Feed Reader!