Album: Femi Kuti and Made Kuti - Legacy+

Scions of Afro-Beat dynasty deliver the old and new

Fela Kuti and Afro-Beat have achieved a kind of joyous immortality: his son Femi and his grandson Made keep the flame of Nigerian agitprop and party-music ablaze, with a pair of albums (Stop the Hate by Femi, and For(e)ward by Made) that both, in their distinct ways, pay homage to the man who started it all.

Femi sticks closely to the family tradition, with as tight and powerful a band as ever. There is the intricate mesh of guitars weaving lines that speak to each other with compelling fluency, a drum-kit haunted by the constantly inventive spirit of the late Tony Allen, and a punchy horn section that delivers seductive riffs – a wall of saxes, including the deep tone of the baritone, on “Pà Pá Pà”, and the blast of brass (trumpets and trombones) on “Land Grab”. African music, as I learned from Africanist Robert Farris Thompson, is never just about entertainment – there is always a moral lesson. With Femi Kuti, as with his father Fela, we are insistently called to the dance-floor, but the call is also to stand up and fight – corruption, thuggery and the crushing of anything resembling democracy.

Made KutiMade (pictured right on the sleeve of For(e)ward) studied music in London and his tracks are much less bound by the tropes of Afro-Beat tradition. He plays all the instruments rather than working with a band, and the music is much more complex, even though it owes a great deal to his grandfather’s legacy. The experimentation pays dividends on a track like “Free Your Mind”: the polyrhythms work their multi-voiced magic, and the backing vocals are treated electronically to good effect. But other moments, such as in “Young Lady”, lose some of the contagious immediacy that makes Afro-Beat a thrilling mix. The lyrics are less political and more subjective, as if he were speaking as a songwriter rather than the spokesman for an embattled community. Although he is adventurously re-inventing a genre, this is a music that thrives on the disciplined science of making music ecstatic collectively, and Made’s album lacks the punch of his less experiment-driven elders.

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
We are insistently called to the dance-floor, but the call is also to stand up and fight

rating

4

explore topics

share this article

more new music

A new Renaissance at this Moroccan festival of global sounds
The very opposite of past it, this immersive offering is perfectly timed
Hardcore, ambient and everything in between
A major hurdle in the UK star's career path proves to be no barrier
Electronic music perennial returns with an hour of deep techno illbience
What happened after the heart of Buzzcocks struck out on his own
Fourth album from unique singer-songwriter is patchy but contains gold
After the death of Mimi Parker, the duo’s other half embraces all aspects of his music
Experimental rock titan on never retiring, meeting his idols and Swans’ new album
Psychedelic soft rock of staggering ambition that so, so nearly hits the brief
Nineties veterans play it safe with their latest album