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YORUBA SINGERS

Yoruba Singers

Ojinga's Own - 2023 Reissue

    The 1974 debut album Ojinga's Own (along with the single Basa Bongo/ Black Pepper) by Guyanese Afro-Folk band The Yoruba Singers has been remastered for the first ever vinyl reissue

    The Yoruba Singers formed in Georgetown, Guyana in 1971. Despite their name they were not from Nigeria, but identified strongly with the area from which so many of the African diaspora in Guyana and neighbouring regions were originally descended.

    The group started adapting Guyanese traditional folk music as well as writing their own - blending a mixture of protest, social commentary, blues, and genres inspired by the times. Beginning with 12 people sharing vocal duties, most of the early repertoire was inspired by folk songs that started life on plantations or in religious settings accompanied by a few sparse musical instruments.

    Integral to the Yoruba Singers' sound are echoes of Obeah traditions which are very closely related to the Santería religion of Cuba and the Orisha and Shango traditions of Trinidad and Tobago. Calypso and steel- band culture from nearby Trinidad and Tobago was to some extent part of the musical DNA of the group, but they were naturally also influenced by the massive volume of rocksteady and roots-reggae coming from Jamaica.

    TRACK LISTING

    Ojinga's Own
    What To Do
    Stay Away
    Uncomprehensidensible Radio-Matic Woman
    Neighbour Jean
    Go-Go
    Massacura Man
    Woman A Dead Ya Fuh Man
    Ka Duma
    I've Got To Be Somebody
    No Intention

    Yoruba Singers

    Basa Bongo / Black Pepper

      Guyana folk music reinterpreted and infused with Afro-roots and culture, reissued on vinyl for the first time

      A year after their debut album 'Ojinga's Own', the Yoruba Singers from Guyana released the singles 'Black Pepper' and 'Basa Bongo'. These two songs were recorded in Barbados and released on the Green Shrimp label and became extremely popular throughout the Caribbean and South America. The music also became an integral part of the very beginnings of what was later to become the Champeta Criolla sound in the Caribbean coast of Colombia.

      TRACK LISTING

      Basa Bongo
      Black Pepper


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