Analog Africa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Analog Africa
Founded2006 (2006)
FounderSamy Ben Redjeb
LocationFrankfurt, Germany
Official websiteanalogafrica.com

Analog Africa is a reissue record label based in Frankfurt, established in 2006 by DJ Samy Ben Redjeb.[1]

History[edit]

Redjeb was born in Tunis, and while working as a flight attendant in the 1990s he collected records from across the African continent.[2] Redjeb conceived of the label in 2001, hoping to release an obscure record by Zimbabwean artist Oliver Mtukudzi from 1977, a project that never came to fruition.[3] The first release on the label was a compilation of tracks from the 1970s by Harare band The Green Arrows.[3]

The label gained wider recognition with its third release, a compilation of 1970s recordings by bands from Benin and Togo.[4]: 1 Redjeb's interest in Beninese music was partly due to a chance meeting with Gnonnas Pedro at a time when Zimbabwe was becoming more dangerous.[1] In total Analog Africa has released two compilations of music by Beninese artists as well as four records by Cotonou band Orchestre Poly-Rythmo de Cotonou,[1] whom Redjeb considers "the most versatile and powerful band that ever existed."[4]

Analog Africa predominantly reissues music that is otherwise hard to find.[5] Redjeb has said that "I find it really interesting to take something from total obscurity to the global audience because the musicians who originally played the song are really proud of it and that's what I really find fascinating."[3]

Notable releases[edit]

  • Take One, (2006), a compilation of remastered hits and rare tracks by Zimbabwean group Hallelujah Chicken Run Band.
  • African Scream Contest: Raw & Psychedelic Sounds From Benin & Togo 70s, (2008),[6] which brought the label wider recognition.[4]
  • Saturno 2000 - La Rebajada de Los Sonideros 1962-1983, (2022), a compilation of cumbia rebajada [es] music that Uncut called "gleefully disconcerting stuff".[7]
  • Roi Du Ziglibithy, (2022), a vinyl reissue of four remastered tracks by Ivorian musician Ernesto Djédjé.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Amaya García (2017-07-26), "The Significant Storytelling of Analog Africa", daily.redbullmusicacademy.com, Red Bull Music Academy, retrieved 2024-04-11
  2. ^ Oliver Wang (2013-12-03), "Dusty African Grooves (label profile)", daily.bandcamp.com, Bandcamp, retrieved 2024-04-10
  3. ^ a b c "Interview: Samy Ben Redjeb", rhythmpassport.com, Rhythm Passport, 2017-07-20, retrieved 2024-04-10
  4. ^ a b c Rob Garratt (2020-10-21), "Analog Africa: digging deeper into gold mines of global groove", allaboutjazz.com, AllAboutJazz, retrieved 2024-04-11
  5. ^ Tiernan Cannon (2024-01-25), "15 Reissue Record Labels You Need To Know About in 2024", pastemagazine.com, Paste, retrieved 2024-04-10
  6. ^ Joe Tangari (2008-06-17), "African Scream Contest (review)", pitchfork.com, Pitchfork, retrieved 2024-04-10
  7. ^ John Lewis (2022-04-15), "Saturno 2000 (review)", uncut.co.uk, Uncut, retrieved 2024-04-10

External links[edit]