This is another one of those musical finds that more or less randomly dropped into my lap. I’ve been listening to a lot of music lately. I listen to music while I’m doing homework, I listen to music while I’m doing contract tracing, I listen to music when I’m trying to settle my brain before bed. I have pretty extensive music collection but looked at from a broad perspective there are really only five or six genres of music represented and recently it’s all been feeling a little stale.
Some time ago, and I can’t even remember where I heard about it, I downloaded the Boomplay app. For those not familiar, Boomplay is kind of Spotify for the African continent. My exposure to afro-pop is limited to the very small collection of artists that have broken in to the U.S. market to some extent so I was expecting to be able to find something new and (hopefully) interesting.
In one of those tiny sparks of serendipity, the first song that was playing when I switched it on was this
Angélique Kpasseloko Hinto Hounsinou Kandjo Manta Zogbin Kidjo is a musician, actor and activist who was born in Benin in West Africa and that is the extent of what I know about her.
In 2018 she released a cover of Remain In Light by the Talking Heads. The whole album.
It. Is. Amazing.
One of the best ways to get me hooked into a song is to take an element that is familiar and transforming it into something very different, DJ Shadow using a sample from El Condor Pasa (If I Could) in You Can’t Go Home Again, for example, or Diane Birch’s Velveteen Age EP. Remain In Light is one of my favorite Talking Heads albums (along with almost all the others if I’m honest) and it works surprisingly well as an afro-pop album. It is also unquestionably something different, even if all the songs are more than 40 years old at this point.
At some point in the near future, once I’m able to stop compulsively listening to this album, I want to dig in to some of her other material. I’m hoping more discoveries await.
That is an outstanding take on a classic song. I love how it transforms the slightly menaced bewilderment of the original version into something completely and unabashedly joyous.
Thanks for the recommendation! That was incredible (and now a part of my iTunes library).