African Head Charge – A Trip To Bolgatanga (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz]

African Head Charge - A Trip To Bolgatanga (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz] Download

Artist: African Head Charge
Album: A Trip To Bolgatanga
Genre: Psychedelic Dub, Reggae, Electronic, Tribal
Release Date: 2023
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 44,1 kHz
Duration: 36:46
Total Tracks: 10
Total Size: 387 MB

Tracklist:

01. African Head Charge – A Bad Attitude (03:42)
02. African Head Charge – Accra Electronica (03:24)
03. African Head Charge – Push Me Pull You (03:49)
04. African Head Charge – I Chant Too (03:57)
05. African Head Charge – Asalatua (03:58)
06. African Head Charge – Passing Clouds (02:56)
07. African Head Charge – I’m A Winner (03:13)
08. African Head Charge – A Trip To Bolgatanga (04:23)
09. African Head Charge – Never Regret A Day (03:37)
10. African Head Charge – Microdosing (03:43)

Download:

African Head Charge return to On-U Sound with their first new album in twelve years. Titled A Trip To Bolgatanga, the recordings are led by founder member Bonjo Iyabinghi Noah, with close friend and co-conspirator Adrian Sherwood once again at the controls. A Trip to Bolgatanga is a stunning return, bringing together the talents of two masters who, after a hiatus, have created a rich album brimming with ideas and executed with finesse.

A Trip To Bolgatanga is a musical journey to Bonjo’s current hometown in north Ghana. A psychedelic travelogue across the landscape featuring their trademark hand percussion and group chanting augmented with rumbling bass, mutated horns, dubbed out effects, wild wah-wah, haunted voodoo dancehall, synthetic swells, disco congas, tumbling layers of electronic effects, blues-inflected woodwind, and funky organ. As with every On-U Sound production, each repeated listen reveals fresh detail, and its power won’t be really understood until heard on a big system, when it’ll reduce all competition to rubble.While usually filed under reggae or dub for convenience’s sake, African Head Charge have always existed outside of simple categorical boundaries. Their expansive, influential body of work, dating back to 1981’s My Life in a Hole in the Ground, is united in its pursuit of expressing a vision of a psychedelic Africa, in reference to a Brian Eno quote. The collective’s eleventh studio album, A Trip to Bolgatanga, is named after the town in northern Ghana where group leader Bonjo Iyabinghi Noah resides. Though he typically spends more time at home with his family, he still frequently performs and creates music. The first African Head Charge album in twelve years was produced by longtime associate Adrian Sherwood and features fellow On-U Sound regulars like Skip McDonald and Doug Wimbish, along with guest appearances by Ghanaian kologo master and singer King Ayisoba. It kicks off with friendly words of advice (“A bad attitude is like a flat tire, you can’t go anywhere until you change it!”) and retains this sense of encouragement and optimism throughout. “Accra Electronica” threads rootsy string melodies and woodwinds into a thumping disco house beat. “Push Me Pull You” is a hazy slice of flute-laced heavy dub flashing back to the bewildering experimentation of the group’s output from the early ’80s, but with the type of booming sub-bass more common during the dubstep era. “I Chant You” blends rainy synths and galloping hand drums with falsetto vocal cries, bringing to mind the devotional dub of 1990’s Songs of Praise. “Asalatua” builds up an exuberant group chant over gleeful drumming and an effects-tweaked techno rhythm. The musicians celebrate victory and persistence with the whimsical “I’m a Winner,” throwing Auto-Tune-smeared vocals over jumpy synth melodies and reggae riffs. The Ayisoba-featuring “Never Regret a Day” is another rootsy, uplifting tune which reminds the listener that every day of one’s life is important, even the bad ones, because one can gain experience and learn from them. A Trip to Bolgatanga gets as sunny and upbeat as African Head Charge’s live performances or their more polished studio efforts from the mid-’90s, but it maintains the spirit of experimentation and love of speaker-crushing bass they’ve had since the beginning.
– Paul Simpson

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