Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

It’s been a wonderful year…. Coming in early 2010: Whitefield Brothers’ Earthology (pushed back a week to Feb. 2nd), the official reissue of The Equatics’ Doin’ It!!!! (Feb. 2nd – that’s the sticker, below), our Fela-inspired Black Man’s Cry anthology (Feb. 23rd), the Brazil Fuzz Guitar Bananascomp (think of it as a follow up to Psych Funk 101 – also Feb 23rd), Swiss producer Dimlite’s Prismic Tops EP in March, CD issues of Zambian psych gems by Witch (Introduction and Lazy Bones!) and Amanaz (their masterpiece, Africa) in March and April in association with Shadoks, the Nigerian synth-psych of Tirogo’s Float (also with Shadoks, in April), the three albums released by Bay Area jazz wunderkind PE Hewitt in the late 60s and early 70s and British producer Paul White’s take on Swedish neo-psych act ST Mikael Paul White And The Purple Brain (in association with One-Handed Music, also April).

Until we’re back, we’re wishing you all a Merry Christmas (Psychedelic Sound) and Happy New Year!

Listen: “Auld Lang Syne.”

Link: Egon’s Christmas Edition of Funk Archaeology on NPR.org.

More on the He 5’s Merry Christmas Psychedelic Sound.

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Monty Stark Family Photos

All photos courtesy Monty Stark, Jr.

Monty Stark and his family (holding his only child, son Monty, Jr.) in Cape Cod, August 1963.

Hoagy Bix Carmichael, producer of WGBH’s Hoagy Carmichael’s Music Shop and son of Hoagy Carmichael.

Stark Reality bass player Phil Morrison

Monty Stark

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Announcing: Myron & E “It’s A Shame” – and a bunch of other 2010 stuff….

2010’s first quarter is shaping up to be a busy one, what with the Whitefield Brothers’ Earthology, our Fela-inspired comp Black Man’s Cry, the reissue of the Equatics’ brooding soul masterpiece Doin’ It!!!!, an EP by Dimlite, the Brazil Fuzz Guitar Bananas compilation we’re presenting with Joel Stones and, finally, our P.E Hewitt anthology

But, when Jukka, drummer for the Soul Investigators and partner in Helsinki’s Timmion label, hit us up to ask if we wanted to release the forthcoming Myron & E 7″ in North America, we couldn’t say no. “It’s A Shame” will see release on February 2, 2010. More news soon.

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Zambian Psych Rock

By the mid 1970s, the Southern African nation known as the Republic of Zambia had fallen on hard times. The new Federation found itself under party rule. Zambia’s then-president engaged what was then Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) in a political fencing match that damaged his country’s ability to trade with its main partner. The Portuguese colonies of Angola to the West and Mozambique to the East were fighting their own battles for independence; conflict loomed on all sides of this landlocked nation.

This is the environment in which the catchy – if misleadingly – titled “Zam Rock” scene that flourished in 1970s Zambian cities such as Lusaka and Chingola emerged. Though full of beacons of hope for its numerous musical hopeful it was a tumultuous time and it’s no wonder that the Zambian musicians taken by European and English influences gravitated to the hard, dark side of the rock and funk spectrum. From the little of the Zambian 70s rock and funk music that has been spread via small blogs and bootlegs – the likes of Chrissy Zebby, Paul Ngozi and the Ngozi Family, and the devastating Peace – we learn that fuzz guitars were commonplace, driving rhythms as influenced by James Brown’s funk as Jimi Hendrix’s rock predominated, and the bands largely sang in the country’s national language, English.

The European and North American compilers that had, say, fallen in love with the wonders of Nigeria’s 70s scene via an introduction by Afro-Beat maestro Fela Kuti and decided to journey to Lagos to investigate further never even bothered to visit Zambia. Perhaps this is because even the largest of the 70s Zambian recording artists made any impact on the global scale. (Prior to reading this, had you heard of Paul Ngozi or his innovative Kalindua, Zambia’s equivalent of Afro-Beat?) Before 2000 – and infrequently since then – few Europeans or North Americans outside of university-funded ethnomusicologists more interested in the country’s folk musics than its pop culture even journeyed to this country in search of a the progenitors of the Zam Rock scene. And, when they did, the markers were few. Only a small number of the original Zam Rock godfathers that remained in the country survived through the late 90s, when the music recorded in Zambia became the next frontier for those global-psychedelic rock junkies searching for the next fix.

Now-Again, in conjunction with Zam Rock pioneer Rikki Ililonga, has licensed the WITCH repertoire from the ensemble’s last surviving member, Emmanuel Jagari Canda, and the Amanaz Africa album from the band’s Keith Kabwe and Issac Mpofu. Vinyl issues of WITCH’s Introduction and Lazy Bones and Amanaz’s Africa are out on Shadoks; CD issues licensed from Now-Again are planned for early 2010. In early 2010, Now-Again will present a Rikki Ililonga anthology. Plans are in the works for a proper WITCH anthology and a Zam Rock compilation.

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