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  Yaseen & Party, Yaseen & Party   Michel's Pick:
Yaseen & Party
Yaseen & Party
 
    EUR 1xLP 
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  ‘Harambe’ by Mac & Party was one of the most interesting recent rediscoveries of Kenyan taarab from the past decades. An English language taarab song with the prominent presence of an early synthesizer, it sounded unlike any other Kenyan music that came out during the 1960s and ‘70s. Initially, when trying to license the track for reissue in 2016 (Soundway’s ‘Kenya Special volume 2’ and the 45 RPM reissue on Afro7), we didn’t have much luck in finding out who had recorded and composed the song, or even when exactly it had come out. Comparing discographies of the original label, and listening to other songs that were close enough by catalogue numbers, it appeared to be the work of the late singer/composer Yaseen Mohamed. His sons were able to confirm that it was their father singing on those singles, that Mac & Party and Yaseen & Party were most likely the same band, and that the recordings were done in the early ‘60s.

A closer look at Yaseen Mohamed’s legacy reveals that he was an important figure in Kenya’s taarab music of the 20th century. Between his first 78 RPM record, which came out around 1947, and the last single released in the mid-sixties, his discography spans nearly 50 confirmed releases, and possibly many more collaborations that he was not credited for.
Yaseen was born in Mombasa in the 1920s. His parents were of Omani heritage. Growing up he joined the British colonial army, which allowed him to travel around the region and soak up a wide variety of cultural influences. During Yaseen’s youth, recorded taarab music had become popular across the region, pioneered by a group of musicians from Zanzibar whose musical output from the late ’20s and early ’30s set a trend.

Socio-economic changes in the colony during the 20th century, which transformed Mombasa from a Swahili town of less than 30,000 people, reigned by the sultan of Zanzibar, into a metropole in the newly independent country of Kenya, had a major impact on music culture. These changes were mirrored in the evolution of taarab between the 1920s and ‘60s. Yaseen’s early work is a patchwork of stylistic influences from Indian and Egyptian film melodies, Cuban son, and trendy dance styles such as the twist, mambo and samba, all thrown in the mix with a traditional taarab combo line-up of vocals, ud and percussion. He would later be quoted as saying that “there is no certain thing which is taarab. Even rock is taarab if people just sit and listen”.

By the early ‘50s, Yaseen had joined Assanand & Sons (Mombasa) Ltd., a shop selling musical instruments and 78 RPM records, which was quickly being developed into Mombasa’s most popular music studio. Yaseen was an all-round member on the team, recording his own music, performing as a session musician, acting as a studio technician, and scouting new talent for Mzuri, the in-house label. Apart from singing and composing he became a master of the taishokoto, a musical instrument of Japanese origin which was introduced in Kenya in the 1940s. During this time he started recording with his wife Saada (credited on releases as ‘Mimi’), who joined him on the stage during live single mic set up in the storage room at the back of the Assanand shop.

Yaseen, Mimi and their band were at the forefront of innovation in Mombasa taarab; their small-band approach with newly introduced instruments such as the (amplified) taishokoto, accordion, and the Clavioline, a predecessor of the synthesizer, sounded quite different from the big-band taarab approach of orchestras that were around during the 1940s and ‘50s. Their short songs (limited to 3 minutes per side for 78 RPM releases, and a bit longer when Mzuri started pressing on 45 RPM singles) appeared easy on the ear, but the lyrics were rooted in the intricate Swahili poetry that had been popular among the East African coast for centuries.

In 1962, Yaseen and Mimi got their first child, a milestone described in ‘Nimepata mwana’. From then on, Yaseen focused on working regular jobs, while music remained a hobby. They struggled to make ends meet though, living with their four children in a single-room apartment in Mombasa’s inner city. While Yaseen was of Omani heritage, Mimi’s parents were Digo, a people from coastal Kenya who were discriminated against during the colonial era. Yaseen’s close family didn’t accept Mimi and her kids into the family. In 1972, Yaseen left Mimi and the children to take up work in Oman, which had just started a transition from one of the middle east’s most traditional societies into a modern Arab oil-fuelled economy. Yaseen’s professional skills as an electrician and a mechanic were welcomed as he joined thousands from the Omani diaspora in East Africa in occupying the work force. Despite continuing to make music in his pastime, performing on national television and radio with his taishokoto, and composing a song for sultan Qaboos, he didn’t record any more music. Yaseen returned to Mombasa to visit his wife and sons every few years, and he intended to retire bring the family over to Oman, but he passed away in 1985. By that time, the Mzuri label and Assanand shop were long gone, and the production of taarab in Kenya had started a decline that has nearly decimated the Mombasa scene by 2019. A few of Yaseen’s songs were featured on foreign compilations, some of his recordings can be found on bootleg CDs in Mombasa, but only some of the older generation in Kenya are aware of the remarkable legacy and the impact that Yaseen and his wife have had on Kenya’s coastal music.
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38 Spesh - Conway - Big Ghost LTD
The Ghronic: (Speshal Machinery)
[de Rap Winkel Records]
Abacus
Erotic Illusions
[Phonogramme]
Adam's Apple
La Inflacion De Ofelia
[Matasuna]
Alessandro Alessandroni
Angoscia
[Sounds From The Screen]
Alessandro Alessandroni
Panoramic Feelings
[Sounds From The Screen]
Alien Trackers
Dubs From Vortex Beach
[Jahtari Records]
Anthony Hobson
Millenium
[Music De Wolfe]
Aura Safari & Jimi Tenor
Sensory ReBlending
[Hell Yeah Records]
Babo Morena
Babo Morena
[Matsuka]
Barrington Levy
Bounty Hunter
[Lantern Rec.]
Bhairavi Raman & Nanthesh Sivarajah
Syncretic
[Efficient Space]
Brenda
Bath Time
[College Of Knowledge Records ]
Cake
Make Up Your Mind
[Mutual Intentions]
Coastal County
Coastal County II
[Lomas]
Conway x Big Ghost LTD
If It Bleeds It Can Be Killed
[de Rap Winkel Records]
Courtney Bailey
In Dream
[Second Circle ]
D'Angelo & Amerigo
Variations Voodoo
[Soul Mates Records]
Dead Perry
Acoustic Shadows
[Below System]
Delano Smith
Deeper Fundamentals I
[Mixmode Recordings]
Dele Sosimi & The Estuary 21
Mo Se B'ola Tan (feat. Get Cape. Wear Cape. Fly)
[Mukatsuku]
Delrei
Desolation And Radiation
[Projekt: Archive]
Emilio Santiago
Mais Que Um Momento
[Universal]
Finsta, Recluse Crew
Possibilities Vol. 1
[Mood Monarch]
Food Brain
Social Gathering
[Cosmic Rock]
Harvey Sutherland
Debt
[Clarity Recordings]
Homeboy Sandman x SonnyJim
Soli Deo Gloria
[Dirty Looks]
Jimi Tenor Band
Selenites, Selenites
[Bureau B]
Keiyaa
Hooke's Law
[XL Recordings]
KIF
Still Out
[Sound Records]
Kojey Radical
Don't Look Down
[Warner Bros.]
Lord Shepherd
Evidence For Real
[Frederiksberg]
Los Zheros
Psychedelic Cumbia Party
[Vampisoul]
Masta Ace, Tom Caruana
Natural Forces
[Tea Breaks]
Maurice Poto Doudongo
The Lost Album
[Editions de Lux]
Muluken Mellesse With The Dahlak Band
Muluken Mellesse With The Dahlak Band
[Heavenly Sweetness]
Nightmares On Wax
Echo45 Sound System
[Warp Records]
Omasta
Jazz Report from the Hood
[Astigmatic]
Paolo Ferrara
Sound
[Sounds From The Screen]
Peymont, Braen
Paese Sotto Inchiesta
[Musica Per Immagini]
Phylipe Nunes Araujo
Phylipe Nunes Araujo
[Far Out]
Reg Tilsley
Tilsley Orchestral No. 10
[Music De Wolfe]
Ron Hardy
Classics Vol.2
[RDY]
Royal Fam
Black Castle
[de Rap Winkel Records]
Setwun
Visions In Venus
[Extra Soul Perception]
Smif-n-Wessun
Dah Shinin' - Deluxe Edition
[Fat Beats]
Soar
Soar
[Efficient Space]
System Olympia
Love Language
[Material ]
Tapes
Photos Of My Frog
[Jahtari Records]
The 18th Parallel meets Roberto Sánchez
Dub Avalanche Vol.1
[Fruits Records]
The Cenobites Featuring Kool Keith & Godfather Don
The Cenobites LP
[Don Town Music]
The Juks
Reggae Jazz Classics
[Mukatsuku]
The Library Archive
The Library Archive: Vol. 4
[Ata Records]
Tim Maia
Racional Vol. 1
[Seroma]
Tim Maia
Racional Vol. 2
[Seroma]
Tuff City Kids
R-Zone EP
[Running Back]
V/A
Chicago Boogie Vol. 4
[Star Creature]
VA
Neon Castle
[Smiling C]
Various
Ghana Special: Highlife
[Soundway]
Various
Techno Kayō Vol. 1 Japanese Techno Pop (1981 - 1989)
[Rush Hour]
Various
Tóxico Tapes
[Subject To Restrictions Discs]
Various Artists
Let Me Down Easy: Echoes From Cheri Records
[Miles Away Records]
Various Artists
Super Disco Edits
[Legofunk Records]
Who's The Technician?
?
[Wah Wah Wino]
WildChild
Child of a Kingsman
[BBE Records]
Yoshiaki Ochi
Natural Sonic
[WRWTFWW]
Zig-Zag Band
Chigiyo Music Kings 1987-1998
[Analog Africa]
  1. Mobb Deep
Infinite
 
  2. Sven Wunder
Daybreak
 
  3. Danase & Tru Comers
Premium 98
 
  4. Nas
Illmatic
 
  5. Phylipe Nunes Araujo
Phylipe Nunes Araujo
 
  6. Tyler The Creator
Chromakopia
 
  7. Chilly Gonzales
Solo Piano
 
  8. Coastal County
Coastal County II
 
  9. Cool Kids
Hi Top Fade
 
  10. Freddie Gibbs And The Alchemist
Alfredo 2