VARIOUS - Brand New Wayo: Funk Fast Times & Nigerian Boogie Badness 1979-1983

Sold Date: September 25, 2015
Start Date: July 13, 2015
Final Price: £22.25 (GBP)
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Free delivery on many items.   Same-day despatch, no-question returns.   Authorised dealers - full technical support.   Online since 1997. Sales & help: 020 7424 1960 ● ebay@juno.co.uk Shop categories Information VARIOUS Brand New Wayo: Funk Fast Times & Nigerian Boogie Badness 1979-1983 (gatefold 2xLP) Comb & Razor Sound US

Cat: CRZR 1001LP. Rel: 24 Jan 11
International


Side 1 - Track 1. Mixed Grill - A Brand New WayoSide 1 - Track 2. Kris Okotie - Show Me Your BacksideSide 1 - Track 3. Murphy Williams - Get On UpSide 1 - Track 4. Joe Moks - Boys & GirlsSide 2 - Track 1. Amas - Slow DownSide 2 - Track 2. Oby Onyioha - I Want To Feel Your LoveSide 2 - Track 3. Dizzy K Falola - Excuse Me BabySide 2 - Track 4. Chris Mba - Funky SituationSide 3 - Track 1. Bayo Damazio - Listen To The MusicSide 3 - Track 2. Martha Ulaeto - Music AloneSide 3 - Track 3. Segun Robert - Big RaceSide 3 - Track 4. Amel Addmore - JaneSide 4 - Track 1. Honey Machine - PleasureSide 4 - Track 2. The Stormmers - Love Or MoneySide 4 - Track 3. Emma Baloka - Let's Love Each Other

Comb & Razor Sound launches its exploration of the colourful world of popular music from Nigeria, starting with the post-disco
era of the late 1970s and early 80s.The years between 1979 and 1983 were Nigeria’s Second Republic, when democracy finally
returned after 23 years of uninterrupted military dictatorship. They were also the crest of Nigeria’s oil boom, when surging crude
prices made the country a land of plenty, prosperity and profligacy. The influx of petrodollars meant an expansion in industry,
and the music industry in particular. Record companies upgraded their technology and cranked out a staggering level of output
to an audience hungry for music to celebrate the country’s prospective rise as global power of the future. While it was a boom
time for a wide variety of popular music styles, the predominant commercial sound was a post-afrobeat, slickly modern dance
groove that retrofitted the relentless four-on-the-floor bass beat of disco to a more laidback, upbeat-and-downbeat soul shuffle,
mixing in jazz-funk, synthesizer pop and afro feeling. At the time, it was still mostly locally referred to as “disco”, but has since
been recognized as its own unique genre retrospectively dubbed “Nigerian Boogie”. ‘Brand New Wayo’ collects 15 pulsing
Nigerian boogie tracks in a lovingly compiled package chronicling one of the most progressive and creative eras in the history of
African popular music.