
Now-Again Records
Amanaz - Africa
Regular price £29.00 Save £-29.00Product Description
-
Now-Again’s
Amanaz
release
presented
here
differs
from
the
label’s
previous
reissue
in
that
it’s
a
single
LP
of
just
the
dry
mix
–
omitting
the
reverb
mix
of
the
album.
Issued
in
1975,
this
is
the
articulation
of
Zambia’s
Zamrock
ethos.
Its'
musicians
were
anti-colonial
freedom
fighters,
it
envelops
Zambian
folk
music
traditions,
and
it
rocks
-
hard.
Amanaz
were
serious,
and
they
made
a
serious
stab
at
an
album.
They
titled
their
album
Africa,
according
to
original
band
member
Keith
Kabwe,
“because
of
how
it
was
shared
and
how
its
inhabitants
were
butchered
and
enslaved,
its
resources
stolen...
all
the
atrocities
slave
drivers
committed.
“
Thus,
their
“Kale,”
a
blues
sung
in
Nyanja,
that
traced
the
continent’s
arc
from
slavery
to
Zambia’s
independence
closes
the
album.
Kabwe
and
rhythm
guitarist
John
Kanyepa
have
a
winsome
softness
to
their
vocals,
which
sit
politely
aside
the
feral
growl
of
drummer
Watson
Baldwin
Lungu,
bassist
Jerry
Mausala
and
bandleader/lead
guitarist
Isaac
Mpofu.
Africa’s
vibe
ranges
from
anxious
(“Amanaz”)
to
escapist
(“Easy
Street”)
to
straight-up
pissed-off.
On
the
“History
of
Man,”
his
voice
whiskey-burned,
his
distorted
guitar
buzzing
like
swarming
hornets,
Mpofu
indicts
his
species.
There’s
a
darkness
to
Africa
not
found
on
any
other
Zamrock
records,
and
a
melancholy
drifts
throughout,
specifically
on
Mpofu’s
more
restrained
“Khala
My
Friend,”
which
stands
as
an
effective,
bleak
situation
for
the
Zambian
everyman,
the
average
citizen
of
a
struggling,
new
nation,
who
might
have
had
relatives
in
conflict-torn
countries
on
the
horizon,
who
might
have
been
struggling
to
find
his
next
meal,
who
might
have
seen
a
bleaker
future
than
his
president
promised.
Then
there’s
the
clear
Velvet
Underground-influence
on
the
nostalgic
“Sunday
Morning,”
which,
as
Kabwe
recalls,
was
the
first
song
written
for
the
album,
back
in
1968,
when
Velvet
Undergound
and
Nico
was
a
new
release
-
and
the
underground
funk
of
“Making
The
Scene.”
The
album
also
tackles
traditional
Zambian
music
and
early-‘60s
rock
–
punctuated,
of
course
by
Kanyepa’s
wah-wah
and
Mpofu’s
fuzz
guitars.
But
every
time
Amanaz
get
too
deep,
too
violent,
they
come
back
with
an
accessible
song
and
woo
their
listener
back
to
the
groove.
“Green
Apple”
is
a
civil
song,
featuring
Kanyepa’s
sighing
guitar.
A1.
Amanaz
A2.
I
Am
Very
Far
A3.
Sunday
Morning
A4.
Khala
My
Friend
A5.
History
Of
Man
A6.
Nsunka
Lwendo
B1.
Africa
B2.
Green
Apple
B3.
Making
The
Scene
B4.
Easy
Street
B5.
Big
Enough
B6.
Kale
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