Bartek Chaciński (polifonia.blog.polityka.pl):
"(...) W kenijskiej wiosce Mukunguni nagrywali Sven Kacirek i Stefan Schneider – ten drugi znany również w Polsce z formacji To Rococo Rot (...) przywieźli surowe, ale pięknie zebrane nagrania terenowe z muzyką ceremonialną (pogrzeby) i leczniczą (ma pomagać w schorzeniach psychicznych, odganiać złe duchy) plemion Mijikenda w tradycji muzycznej Sengenya. To wszystko jeszcze bardziej skomplikowane niż otoczka senegalskich bębniarzy, ale w istocie – bardzo proste(...)"
Field recordings of the Mijikenda tribes, made in different spots in and around Mukunguni village, coastal Kenya, throughout September 2011: mostly healing music (especially for mental problems), but also love-songs, and spiritual contributions to weddings and burials; mostly in the Sengenya style which evolved in the early twentieth century, adding pace, new Tsikitsi rhythms and extra drums to the traditional Dumbwi forms of the Duruma tribe.
Besides the Sengenya drums — bumbumbu, dahdahe, chapuro, vumi, ngoma — there are lungo and dena (metal rings), kayamba (raft rattle), njunga (bells), ukaya (metal tray), bamba (metal guiro) and bottle-tops. Our album opener is solo dena, played to sound like a bat and heal the village sick, with the ear for frequency and timbre of a stringent minimalist. There are the piercing, reeded nzumari oboe and bung'o horn, sounding like fierce free-jazz improvisation; and two gently stunning marimba solos, with complex, overlaid melodies and rhythms, played in polyphonic accents, almost like talking drums.
Most of the recordings here are songs, with strong tunes, robustly delivered, different solo voices leading the group — to heal; to chase away Pepo Mlume, the devil who poisons the imagination; to get you on your feet, dancing; to celebrate dowry payme....... więcej