Knitting Factory Reissues Fela Kuti

09/18/2009

 

Fela fans start drooling... now.

By Blurt Staff

 

Knitting Factory Records announced yesterday that they'll reissue all 45 Fela Kuti albums on CD and vinyl. The campaign marks the first time all Kuti releases have been issued on wax in the States, as well as the first time all of Kuti's 1960s work with the band Koola Lobitos has been available here.  The CDs will come in digipaks with the original artwork.

 

The 13-track compilations The Best of the Black President will kick off the series on Oct. 27. A deluxe edition will feature a DVD including segments from the film Music Is A Weapon as well as Glastonbury and Berlin Jazz Festival performances, plus interviews with Fela biographer Carlos Moore and choreographer/director Bill T. Jones. The full press release:

 

KNITTING FACTORY RECORDS TO BEGIN COMPLETE
FELA REISSUE SERIES

 
FIRST RELEASE TO BE THE BEST OF THE BLACK PRESIDENT WITH EXCLUSIVE DVD ON OCTOBER 27, 2009
 
FIRST TIME ALL 45 TITLES WILL BE RELEASED
ON VINYL IN NORTH AMERICA

 
FIRST OFFICIAL RELEASE OF ENTIRE CATALOGUE OF
FELA'S 1960s BAND: KOOLA LOBITOS

 
BROADWAY MUSICAL FELA! TO OPEN
NOVEMBER 23 AT EUGENE O'NEIL THEATRE

Knitting Factory Records is very excited to announce that over the next 18 months, all 45 Fela titles will be remastered and re-released in unique digi-packs with the original artwork. This reissue series will mark the first time all of the titles will be released on vinyl in North America, and also the first official release of the entire catalog of Fela's 1960s highlife band Koola Lobitos. The first release of the series will be The Best Of The Black President on October 27, 2009, which compiles 13 of the most popular Fela compositions. The deluxe edition of the CD will come with a DVD featuring segments from the film Music is the Weapon, performances from the Berlin Jazz Festival, "Teacher Don't Teach Me Nonsense" from the Glastonbury Festival and interviews with choreographer/director Bill T. Jones and Fela biographer Carlos Moore.
 
Tony Award-winner Bill T. Jones is the director and choreographer of the new Broadway musical, FELA!, based on the life and music of the legend. The critically acclaimed musical will open at the Eugen O'Neill Theatre in New York on November 23. Sold-out crowds were left dancing in the aisles during its premiere last summer at Off-Broadway 37 Arts, as the world renowned Antibalas and other members of the NYC Afrobeat community, under the direction of Aaron Johnson, performed Fela's music live onstage.
 
"The timing couldn't be more perfect," says Knitting Factory Records' Ian Wheeler. "With the play opening, it made the most sense to start the reissue series in the fall. We are taking great care working with Fela's estate to make the reissue series the most true to the artist's original concepts than ever before. We have a lot of fun ideas up our sleeves too."
 

Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, previously Ransome-Kuti, was born in Abeokuta, Nigeria, in 1938. His father, like his grandfather, was a minister of the Protestant church, and director of the local grammar school. His mother was a teacher, but later became a politician of some considerable influence. His parents sent him to London in 1958, but rather than study medicine like his two brothers and his sister, Fela chose to register at the Trinity School of Music, where he was to spend the next five years. He formed Koola Lobitos with other Nigerian musicians living in London.
 
Fela decided to take the Koola Lobitos to the United States in the mid 60s. In Los Angeles, he changed the name of the group to Fela Ransome-Kuti And Nigeria 70. At the club where they were playing, he met an African American girl, Sandra Isodore, who was a close friend to the Black Panthers. She introduced Fela to the philosophies and writings of Malcolm X, Eldridge Cleaver and other Black activists and thinkers, through which he was to become aware of the link existing between Black people all over the world. While in Los Angeles, Fela also found the inspiration he was seeking to create his own unique style of music, which he named Afro-Beat. Before leaving America, the band recorded songs in this new style. When he returned to Nigeria, Fela once again changed the name of the group, this time to Fela Ransome-Kuti & Africa 70.

Fela soon became a virulent critic of colonialism and neo-colonialism soon grew famous as a spokesman for the great mass of people, in Nigeria and elsewhere in Africa and the African Diaspora, disenchanted with the period of post-independence. His songs became satirical and sarcastic towards those in power, condemning both military and civilian regimes for their crimes of mismanagement, incompetence, theft, corruption and marginalization of the underprivileged.

In 1974, pursuing his dream of an alternative society, he built a fence around his house and declared it to be an independent state: The Kalakuta Republic. To the chagrin of the bourgeois section of the Nigerian society, this act of defiance was soon to spread throughout the entire neighborhood as more and more people were inspired by Fela's sta
nce. The authorities remained vigilant, fearing the potential power of his "state within a state." On countless occasions, he was to suffer the consequences of his scathing denunciations with arrests, imprisonment and beatings at the hands of the authorities.
 
Fela presented himself as a presidential candidate in the 1979 elections that would return the country to civilian rule. His candidature was refused. Four years later, at the next elections, Fela once more stood for president, but was prevented from campaigning by the police, who again rampaged through his house, imprisoning and beating Fela and many of his followers. However, any further presidential aspirations were crushed when a coup brought Nigeria back to military rule.

In 1984, Fela served 20 months of a five-year prison sentence on trumped-up currency charges. He was only released when the judge confessed to having sentenced him with such severity because of pressure from the previous regime. The judge was dismissed from office and Fela was given his liberty.

Over the next decade, with an entourage of up to 80 people, now called Egypt 80, Fela made several visits to Europe and the United States. These tours were to receive tremendous public and critical acclaim, and made an important contribution to the worldwide popular acceptance of African rhythms and African culture.
 
Fela passed away in August 1997.
 

 

 


blog comments powered by Disqus

Blurt Bloggers
Scott Crawford
Fred Mills
Randy Harward
Justin Sane
Chuck Eddy
Kate Bradley
Ed Hamell
James McMurtry
Martin Bisi
Mark Jenkins
Todd Snider
Carl Hanni
David Schools
Coco Hames
Rich Haupt
John Moore
John Stabb
Matthew Ryan
Steve Lorber
Johnny Mnemonic
Bryan Reed
Otep Shamaya
Scott Dudelson
Jason Cruz
Brandon Phillips
Aaron Burgess
Kasey Anderson
Anne McCue
Greg Laswell
Joshua Aaron
Dominic Umile


Feb 2012

Dec 2011

Nov 2011

Oct 2011

Sep 2011

Aug 2011

Jul 2011

Jun 2011
Pictures of Lily
06/12/2011


May 2011

Mar 2011 View All Mar 2011...

Feb 2011
BATTLE READY
02/07/2011
View All Feb 2011...

Jan 2011

Dec 2010
Marc Maron
12/20/2010
Porkeciser
12/17/2010
View All Dec 2010...

Nov 2010

Oct 2010 View All Oct 2010...

Sep 2010
POLTZ ON LEFSETZ
09/20/2010
View All Sep 2010...

Aug 2010 View All Aug 2010...

Jul 2010
Criminal Art
07/29/2010
View All Jul 2010...

Jun 2010
Right Gone Wrong
06/24/2010
View All Jun 2010...

May 2010 View All May 2010...

Apr 2010 View All Apr 2010...

Mar 2010 View All Mar 2010...

Feb 2010
The Zombie Option
02/08/2010
View All Feb 2010...

Jan 2010
The Tape Fetish
01/26/2010
View All Jan 2010...

Dec 2009 View All Dec 2009...

Nov 2009 View All Nov 2009...

Oct 2009 View All Oct 2009...

Sep 2009
194 dB / BRYAN REED
09/25/2009
Lefsetz is Wrong
09/21/2009
Menace to Society
09/17/2009
View All Sep 2009...

Aug 2009
I hate Led Zepplin
08/30/2009
View All Aug 2009...

Jul 2009 View All Jul 2009...

Jun 2009
Sky's the Limit
06/30/2009
Yesterday's Ring
06/28/2009
View All Jun 2009...

May 2009
Tristram Speaks
05/29/2009
RIP Jay Bennett
05/25/2009
Size Matters
05/11/2009
View All May 2009...

Apr 2009
Levittown
04/16/2009
View All Apr 2009...

Mar 2009
SxSW Part 2
03/23/2009
View All Mar 2009...

Feb 2009
PopKrazy!
02/15/2009
Carducci's Blog
02/15/2009
View All Feb 2009...

Jan 2009
20 Feet From Obama
01/26/2009
YAP: RUN-INS
01/23/2009
Muslimgauze
01/14/2009
Birthday Kiss
01/12/2009
View All Jan 2009...

Dec 2008
Bum-Fluffed?
12/22/2008
2008 Top 10
12/15/2008
View All Dec 2008...

Nov 2008
Castro!
11/24/2008
View All Nov 2008...

Oct 2008
Sonic Reducer
10/30/2008
OBAMA IN XBOXLAND
10/17/2008
Feedback
10/13/2008
View All Oct 2008...

Sep 2008
Year Long Disaster
09/29/2008
I Hate New Music
09/18/2008
View All Sep 2008...

Aug 2008
FITZ
08/28/2008
View All Aug 2008...

Jul 2008 View All Jul 2008...

Jun 2008 View All Jun 2008...

Feed Shark