CD Details
- Released: May 30, 2006
- Originally Released: 2006
- Label: Collectables Records
- Original Album: Warner Bros. BS 2732 (1973)
Description by OLDIES.com:
Osibisa's Happy Children is one of the group's greatest albums and exemplifies their talent in the world music genre. Originally released in 1973 by Warner Bros., this release came at the perfect time as popular culture was embracing eclectic acts such as Carlos Santana.
Tracks:
- 1.Happy Children
- 2.We Want To Know (Mo)
- 3.Kotoku
- 4.Take Your Trouble - Go
- 5.Adwoa
- 6.Bassa Bassa
- 7.Somaja
- 8.Fire
Product Description:
Osibisa: Teddy Osei (flute, saxophone); Mac Tontoh (trumpet, flugelhorn); Jean Dikoto Mandengue (bass); Sol Amarfio (drums, bongos); Kofi Ayivor (congas).
Recorded at Lansdowne Studios, London, England, September 1973.
Osibisa: Teddy Osei (flute, saxophone); Mac Tontoh (trumpet, flugelhorn); Sol Amarfio (drums, bongos); Kofi Ayivor (congas).
In the wake of the massive early-'70s success of Santana, a flurry of groups that combined rock with traditional percussion were signed to major labels. Osibisa, though a completely different animal than Carlos Santana and crew, were one of these groups. On Happy Children, the band's fourth album and one of their best, Osibisa emerge as a true world fusion group, merging a myriad of styles to an extent unmatched by almost any other unit of the period. The band usually shies away from anything like traditional pop structures, favoring long jams played on top of a repetitive bass vamp in the tradition of live Jimi Hendrix and Miles Davis's Bitches Brew period. Unlike these two artists, however, Osibisa usually emphasizes group dynamic shifts and Blood Sweat and Tears/Tower of Power-style written-out horn lines over individual solos. As they were an African group recording in London, the band's basic rhythms also differ significantly from those of its contemporaries. They play a style of music that has its roots in authentic tribal drumming and chants. Consequently, there are similarities to New Orleans second line, Southern and West Coast/Sly Stone funk, Jamaican reggae, and Afro-cuban jazz, but in a raw, driving manner that seems to pre-date all of these styles. At the same time, on several tunes, Osibisa brings a Duke Ellington-like harmonic sense that belies the members' musical sophistication. Though they don't generally approach anything resembling a pop tune here (which might make the album a hard listen for the casual funk fan), Happy Children is a fascinating glimpse at a band successfully fusing a celebratory, pre-rock energy with ancient rhythms and modern jazz harmony. ~ Pemberton Roach