Friday, 3 March 2023

Mze Shina - Elesa

First published in Songlines Magazine issue 186, April 2023.

Mze Shina
Elesa
Buda Musique (50 mins)

A quintet of American, Peruvian, French and Iranian origin, based in Rennes, Brittany, is a pretty odd collective of musicians to perform Georgian music, but with more than 25 years of study behind them, Mze Shina’s songs are almost enough to transport the listener directly to the Caucasus Mountains.

Now on their fifth album, and their first since 2018’s Odoïa, the group continue their quest to explore the depths of Georgia’s polyphonic vocal tradition while adding their own modern, international twist. Although the group’s repertoire is traditional, their arrangements are innovative and exciting, and seem to emphasise global polyphonic traditions, with subtle harkings to Occitania, Bulgaria, Albania and more throughout.

The group’s four voices – three male and one female – are in a near-constant tumble, with voices cropping up in various combinations, harmonies and different styles of polyphony throughout – there’s even some impressive rapid-fire yodelling. With just voice and percussion, each intertwining vocal part rings clear within the weaving, and this album’s new addition of Milad Pasta’s Persian percussion (daf, zarb and riqq) provides more intriguing connections both east and west.

Mze Shina’s music is modern, traditional, global and inescapably Georgian – no matter where they call home.

Ebo Krdum - Revolt for Change

First published in Songlines Magazine issue 186, April 2023.

Ebo Krdum
Revolt for Change
Epidemic Sound (27 min)

After his 2021 Top of the World album Diversity, Ebo Krdum has followed up with two albums for the royalty-free music platform Epidemic Sound in 2022: Love and Struggle in May and the latest Revolt for Change in December.

Originally from the Darfur region in western Sudan, Krdum is now based in Sweden. He’s worked with many Swedish musicians in the past, but for this album he’s mostly on his own, singing and playing guitar, ngoni and fiddle among others, occasionally helped out by a bassist or percussionist. Although he describes his music as ‘Afroblues and Afrobeat,’ his sound is very much anchored in West Africa. The way he constructs his songs and shapes his guitar lines shows a clear lineage to the Songhai style of Ali Farka Touré, from whose records Krdum learnt guitar as a child. In fact, apart from the languages used – mostly Sudani Arabic, with some Darfuri Masara and Daju – there are places where this could easily be mistaken for the latest album by a Touré or Traoré from Mali.

This album doesn’t have the same scope as Diversity in terms of style, but Krdum gives solid performances throughout, along with impassioned lyrics on war, corruption and hope.