Catalog Number: BBE771ALP
Format: LP
UPC: 198391907517
A very special and historically significant record is imminent on our partner label, Greg Boramans' Impressive Collective.
The story of percussionist, band leader, teacher, club owner Ginger Johnson and his African Party album is a fascinating tale that is only now being recognised for its significance. Born George Folurunsho Johnson in Nigeria,1916, of a Yoruba background, by the late 1940s Ginger was living in London and made an immediate impact playing live and recording with British jazz legends Ronnie Scott, drummers Phil Seaman and Tony Crombie, pianist Victor Feldman, and Kenny Graham's Afro-Cubists.
In the 1950s he was the featured percussionist for the Edmundo Ros Orchestra, and also released several of his own 78s and 45s for Melodisc which were among the first examples of African music recorded and released in Britain. From his base in Pimlico, Ginger became the lynchpin of the African and West Indian expat musical community, including being mentor to a young Fela Kuti when he first came to London in 1957. By the mid-1960s Ginger was the highest profile Afro Cuban percussionist in Europe, with the 'talking drum' being his speciality, this led him to feature on all styles of recording sessions, from pop to jazz, also appearing in films, children's television shows and live at The Royal Variety Performance and he was also instrumental in helping establish and expand the Notting Hill Carnival.
In March 1967 Ginger and his group entered Sound Techniques Studio, in Chelsea, to record the African Party album. The multi-layered drum patterns combined with jazz horn lines and vocals sung in the Yoruba dialect, the recordings were unlike anything else of the time and still sparkle with energy and vitality that remains undiminished almost 60 years later. The album is often cited as the foundation of Afrobeat - and his African Messengers group functioned as the finishing school for highly renowned musicians like Michael "Bami" Rose, as well as members of Osibisa and Cymande.
Ginger and his group continued to blaze a genre defying trail through contemporary music - recording and playing live with the likes of Art Blakey, with psychedelic rock outfits Pink Floyd and Soft Machine at the International Times 14 Hour Technicolour Dream - and most famously with The Rolling Stones in Hyde Park, in front of a crowd estimated to be well over 250,000.
Besides the 50's Melodisc recordings and African Party album, it was thought that there were few other recordings, however in 2018 Uchenna Ikonne, a renowned African music collector discovered one battered original copy of a 45 single, released in the early 70s on the 'Afrodesia' label. These two bonus tracks have been given the best audio restoration possible and are included on this expanded, double vinyl LP version of 'African Party', providing a wider perspective on this significant musician's career.