With Printed Inners.
Catalog Number: AJXLP803
Color: Black
Format: LP
UPC: 676499080351
Founded in the late 1960s by record store owner Seidou Adissa, Albarika Store is one of the most
important independent record labels on the African continent. That it was founded in the relatively small
ex-French colony of Benin (then still called Dahomey), is a testament to its founder's musical taste and
vision for what the local musical scene had to offer.
Acid Jazz releases the first ever vinyl and CD over-view of the label and its music,
compiled by David Hill of The Soul Revivers and West African musical expert Florent Mazzoleni, who also
wrote the in-depth notes.
The compilation provides a look into what was a developing and then thriving post-colonial music scene.
It focuses on the label's biggest and most prolific act Orchestre Poly-Rhythmo and its founder Melome
Clement - who released under a variety of names often spotlighting on the musicians key to their sound. It
also looks at the other established artists on the label such as the incendiary Les Sympathics De Porto
Novo and Les Volcans. All of these artists create a unique mix of Westernised Funk, Soul and Latin sounds
cross-pollinated with the traditional music of the region.
Elsewhere, we hear the music as it is consumed further by funk and disco, with tracks from the ultra-
obscure, and exceptionally danceable albums by Ipa Boogie and Ogassa - the latter sounding like they
have been adding psychedelic rock to their funky brew. The record is a story of local music, and they way
that it was cross-pollinated by both the West and the wider regional scene in neighbouring Nigeria. Adissa
would often head to EMI's state of the art Lagos studio to record his acts, contributing to the exceptional
sonic quality of the recordings, and it is no surprise that the influence of Fela Kuti and Afro Beat is writ
large.
The double album is housed in a beautiful wide-spine sleeve designed by the Unknown, and the printed
inners have the extended essay by Mazzoleni, and plentiful illustrations of the original LPs and 45s from
which the records are taken. The CD is equally classy, as its card sleeve mimics the vinyl design complete
with those notes and images.