Kossi Ape’son: Gazo Cool Catché

Kossi Ape’son: Gazo Cool Catché

Originally published in the Lungu Lungu column for Fader magazine.

Living in Ghana, I am constantly bombarded with references to azonto, the dance craze which has taken over the country in the last year. If it’s not kids spontaneously busting out azonto moves on the street, it’s a grocery bag printed with a pattern made of azonto dancers. But a mere 120 miles away, in neighboring Togo, a very different dance craze has also taken hold. Cool catché may not be getting quite the online buzz that azonto has been generating, but it is just as unavoidable in Lomé as azonto is in Accra.

The cool catché’s pace is set by hit songs by groups such as Toofan. When I first heard their music, I thought they sounded like an Ivorian coupé décalé group, and I was quick to dismiss them, thinking they probably would never make it anywhere outside of Togo, since they are just imitating what others are already doing—a lot—in other countries. I was wrong. I was only listening to the music, and not paying attention to the dance. Toofan completely embraced cool catché—many say they invented the dance. Whatever the case may be, they’ve greatly contributed to its success, which in turn has propelled them beyond Togo’s borders. Their hits now play in Francophone clubs throughout the continent, in particular in Côte d’Ivoire, home to coupé décalé, where people know which cool catché moves to throw down.

But I’m still a music nerd, and even though I do find some of Toofan’s songs to be very catchy, I’ve been looking for groups pushing the musical boundaries of cool catché a bit further. Enter Kossi Ape’son. More of a traditional singer, he’s been around for a few years already, ever since he started under the patronage of King Mensah, perhaps the most influential Togolese artist of his generation. Backed by King Mensah, Ape’son ventured into Togo’s more traditional music, recording songs using some of the country’s countless rhythms and making two full albums out of it. He’s managed to tour West Africa, and has built a very decent name for himself, but in the age of paramount dominance of cool catché, there isn’t usually much room for anything else.

Luckily, cool catché is not a monolithic, unattainable sound, and Ape’son has quite an affinity for the catchy dance. He saw a natural proximity between cool catché and some of the native Togolese rhythms he grew up on, so he decided to fuse the dance with gazo, a fast paced traditional rhythm normally played on the gakokoe, a type of gong, and the aya, a type of castanet. I’m long overdue a trip back to Togo to school myself better on these rhythms, so check back in for some further investigations into the immensely addictive Ewé, Mina and Anlo rhythms.

With Ape’son, what caught my attention was the video for the song, which does not display Western, blingy surroundings, but instead shows a bunch of people dancing in a village setting. Simple concept, beautiful visuals: I often wonder why such videos are not more common? Now that the song taken over in Togo, I’m hoping its success will open doors to diversify the musicality of cool catché, so that the beats match the dance’s originality. Next up: let’s get this guy in the studio!

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Kossi Ape’son: Gazo Cool Catché

Originally published in the Lungu Lungu column for Fader magazine.

Living in Ghana, I am constantly bombarded with references to azonto, the dance craze which has taken over the country in the last year. If it’s not kids spontaneously busting out azonto moves on the street, it’s a grocery bag printed with a pattern made of azonto dancers. But a mere 120 miles away, in neighboring Togo, a very different dance craze has also taken hold. Cool catché may not be getting quite the online buzz that azonto has been generating, but it is just as unavoidable in Lomé as azonto is in Accra.

The cool catché’s pace is set by hit songs by groups such as Toofan. When I first heard their music, I thought they sounded like an Ivorian coupé décalé group, and I was quick to dismiss them, thinking they probably would never make it anywhere outside of Togo, since they are just imitating what others are already doing—a lot—in other countries. I was wrong. I was only listening to the music, and not paying attention to the dance. Toofan completely embraced cool catché—many say they invented the dance. Whatever the case may be, they’ve greatly contributed to its success, which in turn has propelled them beyond Togo’s borders. Their hits now play in Francophone clubs throughout the continent, in particular in Côte d’Ivoire, home to coupé décalé, where people know which cool catché moves to throw down.

But I’m still a music nerd, and even though I do find some of Toofan’s songs to be very catchy, I’ve been looking for groups pushing the musical boundaries of cool catché a bit further. Enter Kossi Ape’son. More of a traditional singer, he’s been around for a few years already, ever since he started under the patronage of King Mensah, perhaps the most influential Togolese artist of his generation. Backed by King Mensah, Ape’son ventured into Togo’s more traditional music, recording songs using some of the country’s countless rhythms and making two full albums out of it. He’s managed to tour West Africa, and has built a very decent name for himself, but in the age of paramount dominance of cool catché, there isn’t usually much room for anything else.

Luckily, cool catché is not a monolithic, unattainable sound, and Ape’son has quite an affinity for the catchy dance. He saw a natural proximity between cool catché and some of the native Togolese rhythms he grew up on, so he decided to fuse the dance with gazo, a fast paced traditional rhythm normally played on the gakokoe, a type of gong, and the aya, a type of castanet. I’m long overdue a trip back to Togo to school myself better on these rhythms, so check back in for some further investigations into the immensely addictive Ewé, Mina and Anlo rhythms.

With Ape’son, what caught my attention was the video for the song, which does not display Western, blingy surroundings, but instead shows a bunch of people dancing in a village setting. Simple concept, beautiful visuals: I often wonder why such videos are not more common? Now that the song taken over in Togo, I’m hoping its success will open doors to diversify the musicality of cool catché, so that the beats match the dance’s originality. Next up: let’s get this guy in the studio!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gvkDO7x9NvE

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RubyGold: Trance Jazz from South Africa

RubyGold: Trance Jazz from South Africa

Originally posted in the Lungu Lungu column at Fader.

Once in a while, I’ll stumble upon a voice I immediately must track down. I get this urge to listen to anything I can find with that same voice. This happened to me a couple of months ago, right when I got back from Angola. DJ Satellite sent me his Luanda no Horizonte mixtape, which starts with a track I could not get enough of: “Invitation to Dance,” by Monotone, featuring a certain RubyGold. After listening to the song in loops, I had to start my online investigation, only to come across another incredibly catchy house song, “Teka Munike,” by Revolution and again featuring RubyGold.

Not only can RubyGold sing: as I watched the video for Teka Munike, I discovered she can move. And has mad swag. In a video flooded with different flavors of babes, Ruby shines through effortlessly. And did I mention she sings in both English and Portuguese? Enough said. I had to reach out.

The first thing RubyGold tells me is that she doesn’t do house music. She sings trance jazz—”Not music to gyrate to,” as RubyGold puts it. After telling me this initial bit, I was left hanging for a couple of weeks before masters on her new project were ready. When the songs were done, RubyGold was kind enough to let me hack into her Soundcloud to grab them, and what a treat that was. Even though her presence in the video hinted to a lot more substance than a house song might suggest, her new songs still surprise me; they’re way deeper than what I expected.

Within minutes on the phone, I understand RubyGold herself has a lot of depth. “Invitation to Dance” and “Teka Munike” are massive hits in South Africa, but RubyGold is not faded by her recent notoriety. Not only that: RubyGold is in fact quite far removed from any kind of club scene. As she tells me how she started with the acid jazz band Meat the Veggies, I realize her new-found house diva status is not all that representative of RubyGold’s own music. With Meat the Veggies she explored numerous musical directions and performed countless small gigs in Jozi, helping her define her own style through performance. I suppose this is how it used to be for all artists: you played real audiences, you built your musicianship and learned from the public’s reactions, crafting your sound night after night. It’s so refreshing to hear it still happens this way, as it seems that most musicians nowadays rush to the studio, often generating a buzz without having ever confronted themselves to a live audience.

Her experience playing live has also enabled her to build a solid network of industry connections, which in turn have made it possible to piece together her upcoming release on her own. No executive producer, no label behind her; she funded the project herself. Beats were provided by producers she already knew, in particular Earth, also from Meat the Veggies, who is behind a large portion of the album. Earth did the beat and plays the percussion on “Feeling Stealer,” the song featured here.

RubyGold feels that people in South Africa, or at least Johannesburg, don’t want music with a conscience. She finds that they prefer to be nonchalant about life, hence the enormous appetite there for party music. This is not what she’s after. With influences as diverse as Fela Kuti, Marie Daulne and Zap Mama and even The Cinematic Orchestra, RubyGold is looking for her own global niche. Add to her diverse musical tendencies hints of her Mozambican background: she grew up in Johannesburg among her mother’s family—”lots of people,” as RubyGold notes—who escaped the war in Mozambique. Deep music with diverse roots, and the wisdom to bring it all together: RubyGold is the real deal.

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RubyGold: Trance Jazz from South Africa

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Once in a while, I’ll stumble upon a voice I immediately must track down. I get this urge to listen to anything I can find with that same voice. This happened to me a couple of months ago, right when I got back from Angola. DJ Satellite sent me his Luanda no Horizonte mixtape, which starts with a track I could not get enough of: “Invitation to Dance,” by Monotone, featuring a certain RubyGold. After listening to the song in loops, I had to start my online investigation, only to come across another incredibly catchy house song, “Teka Munike,” by Revolution and again featuring RubyGold.

Not only can RubyGold sing: as I watched the video for Teka Munike, I discovered she can move. And has mad swag. In a video flooded with different flavors of babes, Ruby shines through effortlessly. And did I mention she sings in both English and Portuguese? Enough said. I had to reach out.

The first thing RubyGold tells me is that she doesn’t do house music. She sings trance jazz—”Not music to gyrate to,” as RubyGold puts it. After telling me this initial bit, I was left hanging for a couple of weeks before masters on her new project were ready. When the songs were done, RubyGold was kind enough to let me hack into her Soundcloud to grab them, and what a treat that was. Even though her presence in the video hinted to a lot more substance than a house song might suggest, her new songs still surprise me; they’re way deeper than what I expected.

Within minutes on the phone, I understand RubyGold herself has a lot of depth. “Invitation to Dance” and “Teka Munike” are massive hits in South Africa, but RubyGold is not faded by her recent notoriety. Not only that: RubyGold is in fact quite far removed from any kind of club scene. As she tells me how she started with the acid jazz band Meat the Veggies, I realize her new-found house diva status is not all that representative of RubyGold’s own music. With Meat the Veggies she explored numerous musical directions and performed countless small gigs in Jozi, helping her define her own style through performance. I suppose this is how it used to be for all artists: you played real audiences, you built your musicianship and learned from the public’s reactions, crafting your sound night after night. It’s so refreshing to hear it still happens this way, as it seems that most musicians nowadays rush to the studio, often generating a buzz without having ever confronted themselves to a live audience.

Her experience playing live has also enabled her to build a solid network of industry connections, which in turn have made it possible to piece together her upcoming release on her own. No executive producer, no label behind her; she funded the project herself. Beats were provided by producers she already knew, in particular Earth, also from Meat the Veggies, who is behind a large portion of the album. Earth did the beat and plays the percussion on “Feeling Stealer,” the song featured here.

RubyGold feels that people in South Africa, or at least Johannesburg, don’t want music with a conscience. She finds that they prefer to be nonchalant about life, hence the enormous appetite there for party music. This is not what she’s after. With influences as diverse as Fela Kuti, Marie Daulne and Zap Mama and even The Cinematic Orchestra, RubyGold is looking for her own global niche. Add to her diverse musical tendencies hints of her Mozambican background: she grew up in Johannesburg among her mother’s family—”lots of people,” as RubyGold notes—who escaped the war in Mozambique. Deep music with diverse roots, and the wisdom to bring it all together: RubyGold is the real deal.

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LadyJaywah – Monkey Money feat. EL – Free Download

LadyJaywah‘s first official single – and nope, it’s not the fantastic soulful jazz we’ve been getting used to at her live performances here in Ghana. She hits us from a totally different angle, hard spittin’ raps over a tight azonto beat, courtesy of EL, also featured on the song.

Monkey money… some of that easy come easy go sakawa cash… LadyJaywah is not easily acquired however, and this song is a hilarious chase between her and a big money man – played by EL.

Lady’s album is almost ready, watch out for a release soon via Pidgen Music. And catch her later this month in Ghana, on tour with the FOKN Bois!

A Political Safari: Spreading The Word About Peaceful Elections In Ghana

 

Once upon a time, long before I started Akwaaba, I DJed a birthday party in Los Angeles for a group of groovy creative types. Turns out to be the birthday boy was filmmaker Jarreth Merz, who would later on piece together An African Election, a fantastic documentary about the 2008 elections in Ghana. The movie paints a compelling portrait of politics in Ghana, giving a much needed nuanced overview of the realities behind Ghana’s 2008 elections, which Western nations often consider Africa’s current democratic success story.  I was lucky enough to see the movie last year, but unfortunately most Ghanaians have yet to watch it.

In an effort to spread knowledge about democracy in Ghana, and to ensure peaceful elections next December, Jarreth is going a step further with A Political Safari, by pushing for a grassroots campaign through Ghana’s different regions: his plan is to have the movie translated into the 5 most common languages in Ghana: Twi, Ga, Ewe, Dagbani and Hausa. Then to have a mobile truck bring the movie to the people, particularly in remote areas where the electoral process is most sensitive.

Of course, this fantastic project comes with a price tag, one that we strongly encourage you to chip into. This is a project with legs, this is a project that may actually make a difference next fall. Especially after president Atta Mills’ sudden death last Tuesday, which adds yet another odd twist to Ghana’s election campaign.