Robert Christgau's Music Criticism Blog - Expert Witness - MSN Music

The Rough Guide to Highlife/Electric Highlife

Highlife as Pop and Not

By Xgau Jun 26, 2012 3:46AM

The Rough Guide to Highlife (World Music Network)

Although the label's second pass at this expandable concept--which as has been its regrettable recent practice isn't marked as such anywhere on a package that in this case is orange and bears the serial number 1280CD--tends quirkier and quieter, in-house compiler Rachel Jackson goes for the gut tunewise. From the surprising pre-Afrobeat Fela who opens to the gospel falsetto-as-girl group who close, every song stands out, so much so that Jackson really could have risked Celestine Ukwu's "Osundu" rather than repeating the oft-compiled "Igede." Special faves: the Black Beats' "Tsutsu Tsonemo" for hook, Gentleman Bobby Benson's "Taxi Driver" for lyric, Francis Kenya's "Memia" for guitar compression, and Chief Stephen Osita Osadebe's "Osondi Owendi" for guitar expansion. There's a slight tailoff before the gospel closer, but not so as to spoil your appetite for the bonus disc by the university-based trio Seprewa Kasa. On Riverboat four years ago, I found their preservationism a mite polite. Here the same album provides a graceful, restful, informative coda. A

 

Electric Highlife: Sessions From the Bokoor Studios (Naxos World '02)

Ghanaian-Nigerian highlife was a pop music not just because it was urban and popular, but because it produced something resembling hits and stars‑-in their world, the Victors Uwaifo and Olaiya were genuinely famous. Not these eight early-'80s guitar bands John Collins recorded in Accra. As all too part-time musicians in a ruined economy, they share a likably ramshackle feel, which infused by the good cheer they mustered in the face of 100 percent inflation is enough to sell this collection. But I noticed a funny thing when I looked closely at the second Rough Guide to Highlife, which is that its two finest tracks began their public life at Bokoor: the hummable one by the Black Beats, who had a long if varied career elsewhere, and the musicianly one by Francis Kenya, who seems to have been Collins's greatest protege. Think there were some players over in Ghana? Must have been. A MINUS

 

141Comments
Jun 27, 2012 1:28PM
avatar
Strong new Cat Power cut "Ruin" (from the forthcoming album Sun) now up over on NPR's music page.
avatar
Just because I played it the other day, Great Plains' Born In a Barn (Homestead, 1984), 'though I wouldn't go above A-, I think. 

I'm sure there are (several-to-many?) more, but I don't have such a list at hand nor the time or inclination to make one at the moment.
Jun 27, 2012 12:31PM
avatar
"judging from the Spin guide"

But Rob Sheffield panned Behavior in the Spin guide with a (typically) brilliant takedown. After “Being Boring,” I don’t get it myself.

 

Joining in the B+ parlor game, my all-time fave album is New Order: Low Life so…

 

And now to drain myself of all authority, Train: “50 Ways To Say Goodbye” is one of the best singles of the year.


Jun 27, 2012 11:50AM
avatar
http://boingboing.net/2012/06/26/rebuttals-to-david-lowerys-i.html

More commentary about David Lowery. At least someone seems to have some solid numbers for royalties.

Jun 27, 2012 11:24AM
avatar
Was reading in my Frost last night and came to the end of a lecture which was to be his last, before a Dartmouth audience, and saw the date given as '62. The boss's wiki informs me he graduated in what I assume was the Spring of that year, and the lecture went down in late November, with a January death not far behind. History's not always funny like that, but it's sometimes funny like this (ha-hm).

Was also out in Battery Park City last night and heard, of all people, Suzanne Vega take the stage at a concert in Rockefeller park.  Most of it was to peak at about the level of amiable noise pollution, but she found a good way to back up "Tom's Diner", which some of you may even remember existing, that made for good ambience at the end of a God's Gift to Jersey sundown.

Here's a video which uses the same arrangement, but a softer mix, and, unless you've got concert stacks, much less oomph, but you're welcome to turn up the dial and see how it feels: http://goo.gl/F0WuV


And, in case you're wondering where the rock and roll comes in, I'll be returning to that illustrious neighborhood of po' boys and anarchists this evening for a parkside performance of Twelfth Night. 
So metal there could be tights. 
Jun 27, 2012 10:51AM
avatar
Agreed with many of the B+-to-A-'s below.  My New Order upgrade would be Technique.  Two of my own choices I just listened to recently: Marshall Crenshaw's Life's Too Short and Miracle of Science.  I'd also up Mary Jean one notch and lower Good Evening one.
Jun 27, 2012 10:43AM
avatar
Walter- Yes he did, and does that make it a tribute to Bob or Van or both?

gdash- No judgements just an observation. It's a fine parlour game to be sure, and I played along too. I wish I could sit and look at B+'s all day long , but Maggie's brother is coming again...

Jun 27, 2012 10:27AM
avatar

"As the commercial states- to have the time and inclination

to distinguish between Xgau's B+'s and your own A's  -PRICELESS."

""Dang, This B+ is really an A or A- in my book"- #firstworldproblems"

I think it's fun, and actually pretty useful. No, it's not digging irrigation ditches

in Gambia.

Jun 27, 2012 9:43AM
avatar
"Dang, This B+ is really an A or A- in my book"- #firstworldproblems
Jun 27, 2012 9:42AM
avatar
My favorite B+s

1. Fever to Tell - Yeah Yeah Yeahs
2. Like A Prayer - Madonna
3. Vicki Leekx Mixtape - M.I.A.
4. The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars - David Bowie
5. Undun - The Roots
6. Low-Life - New Order
7. Bitte Orca - Dirty Projectors
8. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere - Neil Young
9. Blackout - Britney Spears
10. Wave - Patti Smith
1st runner-up: Tusk - Fleetwood Mac

Jun 27, 2012 9:24AM
avatar

As the commercial states- to have the time and inclination

to distinguish between Xgau's B+'s and your own A's  -PRICELESS.

Jun 27, 2012 9:07AM
avatar
Walter- Best cover of a Dylan tune...Them feat. Van Morrison  "It's All Over Now  Baby Blue"?

Current Listening: Grin-  Live at the Grisner Auditorium Dec '72 Geo Washington Univ.
Mofungo- End of the World
Rolling Stones-  Brussels Affair (Live 1973)
Dirty Projectors- swing lo magellan

Jun 27, 2012 8:10AM
avatar
The new Lana Del Ray video (for "National Anthem") is, uh...something.

Vision of a post-racial America? Poison arrow in the poisoned heart of American capitalism?

Both? Neither? (With the Queen of Opaque the answers are always tantalizingly and frustratingly just out of reach.)
Jun 27, 2012 7:41AM
avatar
Today's Pitchfork reviews are of - and I am just admiring the band names:

Guided by Voices
Kitty Pryde  [the name of a Marvel comics superheroine, not a musician]
Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs
Old Man Gloom
Ides of Gemini
Jun 27, 2012 7:39AM
Jun 27, 2012 4:05AM
avatar

All right, who the **** thumbs-down Tom?  Do I have to come round with a baseball bat?

 

Putting aside things like Before Hollywood (we've been down that road before) my list of personal fave Xgau-sanctioned B pluses would include Stranded and Country Life for sure, two records Tom and I have in common.  This reminds me also about certain records Tom's nudged me on over the years that I've been meaning to get to, namely things like The Clones of Dr. Funkenstein or The Modern Dance.

 

Behavior, another favorite of his, is one I've always wondered about.  My brother loves that record too -- in fact, judging from the Spin guide, I think everyone loves that record except for me, which is one of the many reasons I've always cottoned to Bob's taste.  I never got Music from Big Pink or Astral Weeks either. 

Jun 27, 2012 1:41AM
avatar
Looking at Joe's list, I see one more I missed: Neil Young: Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (1969, Reprise). I ran the script for Christgau B+ (or less)/Hull A- and the list is too long to bother with (280 records, adding in two more from Joe's list, so there are certainly more). Also ran Christgau no grade against Hull A* and got 3766 records. Of course, that's mostly jazz, but a cursory glance suggests that there are several hundred records where I missed jotting down Christgau's grades -- so the list I presented should grow further, and the one I didn't even more so.


Jun 26, 2012 11:28PM
avatar
Tom, I was working on my list when you posted. I love how we have almost no overlap, though I toyed with Infamous Angel, Agents of Fortune (and Tyranny and Mutation), Led Zep III, Behaviour, and Ducks Deluxe (UK, yes). I don't think I could listen to Dark Side again. Autoamerican above Plastic Letters?

Einstein was not a handsome fellow...

Jun 26, 2012 11:12PM
avatar
This B+ talk is making me nostalgic, namely for my staunch defence of B-Pluses in a previous thread, which earned a "duh" from Ryan on Before Hollywood.  Didn't our host do a re-evaluation of Here My Dear? As it is he was ahead of the curve on that one.

This Lebowski talk tells me I should revisit the film. Haven't seen it since its release, and at the time I'd thought it tanked after a half hour or so, and I'd felt [spoiler alert!] killing Buscemi's character was all wrong.

I don't really have my own grades, but some B+ records that might rate higher, excluding the ones I mentioned in the other thread (I recall Little Feat, Kevin Coyne and Roxy Music):

Artful Dodger, Honor Among Thieves. EWers, if you don't know this record, I urge you to.
Nils Lofgren's debut, absolutely.
Toys in the Attic
Between Nothingness and Eternity maybe
Rejuvenation
Frankie Miller's Highlife
Europe '72
Paris 1919
Less Than Zero
BTO best-of (Winnipeg reference, re another thread; when you coming, Wussy? You made it to Montana)
Power Corruption and Lies?  Thoughts, anyone?
Nilsson Sings Newman (I know it was downgraded for time; let's forgive)
At Yankee Stadium maybe
Chirpin'
Smokey & Smokey & The Miracles have eight - odds tell us at least one would climb (same for Gil Scott Heron and Three Johns)
Boz Scaggs (a fave CG line: "that would appear to mean Boz Scaggs, folks")
Veedon Fleece

All right, I'll stop. Haven't heard Let England Shake yet, this Liege and Lief fan wonders if it would make the cut.

Report
Please help us to maintain a healthy and vibrant community by reporting any illegal or inappropriate behavior. If you believe a message violates theCode of Conductplease use this form to notify the moderators. They will investigate your report and take appropriate action. If necessary, they report all illegal activity to the proper authorities.
Categories
100 character limit
Are you sure you want to delete this comment?

about the blogger

Robert Christgau

Starting in 1967, Robert Christgau has covered popular music for The Village Voice, Esquire, Blender, Playboy, Rolling Stone, and many other publications. He teaches in New York University's Clive Davis Department of Recorded Music, maintains a comprehensive website at robertchristgau.com, and has published five books based on his journalism. He has written for MSN Music since 2006.

find concert tickets

 
Find more tickets. Powered by FanSnap