Kabu
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Yedi Gosh (My Guy)
- Yaz-Oh [Grab It, Get It on]
- Kabu (Sacred Rock)
- Kezira
- Bati [A Town in Ethopia]
- Tchewata (Romance)
- Eyoha
- Bitchengna (Loneliness)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #132146 in Music
- Released on: 1991-10-08
- Number of discs: 1
Customer Reviews
A Wonderous Voice from Mother Africa
This woman has a rare, rare voice. She has Sarah Vaughn pipes AND emotive powers Sarah never had.
I don't like every thing on this album for sure. The highlights for me are: Bati, Tchewata (which sounds a lot like a traditional Ethiopian song that is almost their national anthemn, called Tizeta
The songs and arrangements on those 3 are a perfect settings for this exquisite voice. I would buy it again just for those 3 performances alone.
One of my family or friends "borrowed" this from me. I MUST replace it and NEVER loan again!
Star of Ethiopia
The statuesque Aster Aweke, who physically if not musically resembles Grace Jones, really shines on this, her second album the title of which means Sacred Stones. She's backed by a sensitive ensemble of London jazzmen that does full justice to her unusual voice and spectacular delivery.
While the rhythms range from complex Ethiopian styles to smooth jazz-funk, Aster's voice displays a remarkable variety of modalities, from yearning to rapturous and from coaxing to celebratory.
The album opens with Yedi Gosh (My Guy), a sensual uptempo number where Aweke's voice quivers and swoops to be interrupted at times by interludes of whistling and melodic purring.
The second track Yaz-oh (Get It On) is a steadily pounding dance ditty calling for a remix, whilst the title track is a brooding ballad where her voice soars and plummets from on high to below sea level, yet remains understated with a sort of quiet intensity.
The bouncy Kezira includes yodeling as her voice runs up and down the scales in an impressively swirling intonation. Bati is again a slow number, and Chewata (Romance) is almost reminiscent of Laurie Anderson in its devotional dirge-like power over an entrancing drum pattern and with a particularly impressive acoustic base and dramatic finger-clicks.
The songs - a mix of traditional Amharic tunes and Aweke's own compositions - are highly distinctive and in a class of African music quite unlike anything else.
Pity about the settings
I came across Aster on the brilliant double packaged, Desert Blues compilation some years ago; one breathtaking track with pentatonic piano scales to match. How could i resist an album of such rare emotive, vocal aplomb. Alas, that track chosen for the compilation was not emulated by its company. Raucous and questionably mixed disco jazz just doesn't compliment this fabulous singer. I'm hoping the recent ballads release is closer to my original sampling! So I am in agreeance with reviewer, Louis Alewayehu on this release regards star tracking and indeed down to his very selections!




