Broadway musical and album reissues spark a Fela Kuti resurgence

By Chris Barton

Los Angeles Times

Published: Tuesday, Feb. 23 2010 12:33 p.m. MST

LOS ANGELES — His sound is unmistakable: insistent, trance-like rhythms spiraling out of songs that sometimes run longer than 20 minutes; a biting and fluid horn section that could put James Brown's backing band to shame; and a confrontational, uncompromising political message that went beyond the experiences of Western protest singers and culminated with a government siege on his home, imprisonment and even an attempted presidential campaign in his native Nigeria.

These are the hallmarks of Fela Anikulapo Kuti, a pioneer in the hybrid of African music, jazz, funk and soul he called "Afrobeat," which made him a global superstar in the 1970s. But now, several years after his 1997 death from AIDS-related complications, this revolutionary musician is amid an improbable resurgence in American pop culture.

While his influence has long rippled through the world music scene with sons Seun and Femi Kuti and a variety of modern Afrobeat ensembles, he is now the subject of "Fela!" a hit Broadway musical backed by high-wattage producers Jay-Z and Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith. And after many of Fela's albums languished out of print for years, New York's Knitting Factory Records this month began releasing remastered editions of his entire catalog in a reissue series.

Consisting of nine albums recorded from 1969 to '74, the first batch of CDs offers a fascinating snapshot of Fela's developing musical voice.

Starting with his debut, "The '69 L.A. Sessions," Fela and his first ensemble, Koola Lobitos, are steeped in Africa's "Highlife" sound, a bright and jazzy style far lighter than that of the bandleader's later work. But even in these early years, Fela's developing social consciousness is on display as he speaks out for African unity on "Viva Nigeria."

While every Fela record has elements to treasure, two releases in this batch could be considered excellent starting points for new listeners. The 1971 album "Live With Ginger Baker" was a transparent but still invigorating attempt by Fela's record company to cross over with Western rock audiences by giving the former Cream drummer equal billing, and the dual-album release "Gentleman / Confusion" is widely considered one of Fela's finest statements.

Opening with a spacey duet between Fela on keyboards and powerhouse drummer Tony Allen that sounds like an outtake from Miles Davis' electric period, the title track is a mercilessly funky, 25-minute journey. Yet even as Fela decries Nigeria's post-colonial plight in a mix of pidgin English and West African Yoruba, the song never loses track of its central mission to move bodies as well as minds.

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