
HOLY TONGUE / BEATRICE DILLON / LAMIN FOFANA / LABOUR - s/t DLP
Senegalâs master mbalax drummers are rendered in killer electro dubs and club rub ân tug by Valentina Magalettiâs Holy Tongue trio, Beatrice Dillon and Lamin Fofana, for an instant Honest Jonâs classic
Brewing since 2020, âLabourâ shells eight diffusions and variations on the deadly detonations of traditional mbalax drumming; a scintillating, traditional sound highlighted to the western world in recent years by Mark Ernestusâ work with the ensemble Jeri-Jeri on Ndagga. âLabourâ finds mbalaxâs thunderous, rolling and swingeing percussion pulled in four distinct movements by a coterie of UK, Euro, and Afro-American artists who all share a rhythmic fascination from varying perspectives, and with incendiary results for discerning dancers and drum fiends who can hear the links to West African drumming disciplines strewn between â80s post-punk (23 Skidoo, On-U Sound, the Pop Group), â90s jungle, â00s post-techno and broken beat mutations, or 2010âs electro-dub deconstructions into 4th world ambient and experiments with rhythm.
The big one for us is the setâs most radical engagement with the style, where Beatrice Dillon carries the crafty conceptual energy and bodily-attuned results of her âWorkaroundâ album into the razor-cut chords and sinuous rhythmic grammar of â2020â - whose title refers to her time in Senegal, recording with master drummers. Closer to the tradition, the Holy Tongue (Valentina Magaletti, Al Wootton, Susumu Yokai) versions go wild like a âphet-fuelled post-punk stepper on âDey Sayâ, and wider, deeper in the echo chamber in consequent, hands-on dubs, while Sierre Leone/Guinea-originating, US-based contemporary pioneer Lamin Fofana - who introduced the world to Lotic on his Sci-Fi & Fantasy label - turns out driving and trippy acidic variants for the club.Â
It all comes back to root in extraordinary fashion on the two parts of âEtu Keur Guiâ, featuring input by some 30 sabar drummers of Doudou Ndiaye Roseâs family distilled, computerised and electro-acoustically diffused in a spiralling 10 min excursion, and pared back to pure, fluid rhythmelody and slashing synth menace on its 2nd part.
Senegalâs master mbalax drummers are rendered in killer electro dubs and club rub ân tug by Valentina Magalettiâs Holy Tongue trio, Beatrice Dillon and Lamin Fofana, for an instant Honest Jonâs classic
Brewing since 2020, âLabourâ shells eight diffusions and variations on the deadly detonations of traditional mbalax drumming; a scintillating, traditional sound highlighted to the western world in recent years by Mark Ernestusâ work with the ensemble Jeri-Jeri on Ndagga. âLabourâ finds mbalaxâs thunderous, rolling and swingeing percussion pulled in four distinct movements by a coterie of UK, Euro, and Afro-American artists who all share a rhythmic fascination from varying perspectives, and with incendiary results for discerning dancers and drum fiends who can hear the links to West African drumming disciplines strewn between â80s post-punk (23 Skidoo, On-U Sound, the Pop Group), â90s jungle, â00s post-techno and broken beat mutations, or 2010âs electro-dub deconstructions into 4th world ambient and experiments with rhythm.
The big one for us is the setâs most radical engagement with the style, where Beatrice Dillon carries the crafty conceptual energy and bodily-attuned results of her âWorkaroundâ album into the razor-cut chords and sinuous rhythmic grammar of â2020â - whose title refers to her time in Senegal, recording with master drummers. Closer to the tradition, the Holy Tongue (Valentina Magaletti, Al Wootton, Susumu Yokai) versions go wild like a âphet-fuelled post-punk stepper on âDey Sayâ, and wider, deeper in the echo chamber in consequent, hands-on dubs, while Sierre Leone/Guinea-originating, US-based contemporary pioneer Lamin Fofana - who introduced the world to Lotic on his Sci-Fi & Fantasy label - turns out driving and trippy acidic variants for the club.Â
It all comes back to root in extraordinary fashion on the two parts of âEtu Keur Guiâ, featuring input by some 30 sabar drummers of Doudou Ndiaye Roseâs family distilled, computerised and electro-acoustically diffused in a spiralling 10 min excursion, and pared back to pure, fluid rhythmelody and slashing synth menace on its 2nd part.
Original: $39.36
-70%$39.36
$11.81Description
Senegalâs master mbalax drummers are rendered in killer electro dubs and club rub ân tug by Valentina Magalettiâs Holy Tongue trio, Beatrice Dillon and Lamin Fofana, for an instant Honest Jonâs classic
Brewing since 2020, âLabourâ shells eight diffusions and variations on the deadly detonations of traditional mbalax drumming; a scintillating, traditional sound highlighted to the western world in recent years by Mark Ernestusâ work with the ensemble Jeri-Jeri on Ndagga. âLabourâ finds mbalaxâs thunderous, rolling and swingeing percussion pulled in four distinct movements by a coterie of UK, Euro, and Afro-American artists who all share a rhythmic fascination from varying perspectives, and with incendiary results for discerning dancers and drum fiends who can hear the links to West African drumming disciplines strewn between â80s post-punk (23 Skidoo, On-U Sound, the Pop Group), â90s jungle, â00s post-techno and broken beat mutations, or 2010âs electro-dub deconstructions into 4th world ambient and experiments with rhythm.
The big one for us is the setâs most radical engagement with the style, where Beatrice Dillon carries the crafty conceptual energy and bodily-attuned results of her âWorkaroundâ album into the razor-cut chords and sinuous rhythmic grammar of â2020â - whose title refers to her time in Senegal, recording with master drummers. Closer to the tradition, the Holy Tongue (Valentina Magaletti, Al Wootton, Susumu Yokai) versions go wild like a âphet-fuelled post-punk stepper on âDey Sayâ, and wider, deeper in the echo chamber in consequent, hands-on dubs, while Sierre Leone/Guinea-originating, US-based contemporary pioneer Lamin Fofana - who introduced the world to Lotic on his Sci-Fi & Fantasy label - turns out driving and trippy acidic variants for the club.Â
It all comes back to root in extraordinary fashion on the two parts of âEtu Keur Guiâ, featuring input by some 30 sabar drummers of Doudou Ndiaye Roseâs family distilled, computerised and electro-acoustically diffused in a spiralling 10 min excursion, and pared back to pure, fluid rhythmelody and slashing synth menace on its 2nd part.











