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Babatunde Olatunji Circle Of Drums


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Babatunde Olatunji Circle Of Drums

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This is the first recording put out since Babatunde Olatunji passed away in 2003. Circle of Drums radiates with the spirit of drumming. Three drum masters: Baba Olatunji, P-Funk/Weather Report percussionist Muruga Booker, and long time Olatunji collaborator Sikiru come together and explore the rhythm, tone, and over tones of the drum and voice. While the CD layer is good, the SACD layer is noticeably better. If you are a fan of percussion this is a must buy. The sonics are very good; with Chesky sonics are not usually an issue.

Percussionist Babatunde Olatunji was born in a Yoruba-speaking fishing village in Nigeria in 1927 and succumbed to diabetes in Salinas, California in 2003. Why might Circle of Drums, a previously-unreleased 1993 recording, be of interest? In part because, if the prize for First World Music Record can be definitively awarded (and it probably cannot) a serious contender would be Olatunji's (Columbia/Legacy, 1959). John Coltrane claimed Olatunji as an influence (and provided financial support for the drummer's cultural center in Harlem, where Trane performed his last concert in 1967); rock 'n' roll fans might be aware that Olatunji wrote Santana's hit 'Jingo' and had a long-lived collaboration with fellow world music entrepreneur and Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart. To the essentially music-historical factors listed above, Olatunji would add geopolitical unity and New Age-inspired spirituality, very much in evidence in the packaging, and to a lesser extent in the music on this record.

But is there any inherently musical interest to Circle of Drums? After all, seen from a jazz perspective, the musical project of this record is essentially dressing up a beat.

Which, for a musical form that reveres Max Roach and Elvin Jones, means that this is a project of potentially enormous musical interest. The best passages on this recording are built around the interplay among Olatunji, long-time associate Sikiru Adepoju and Serbian drummer Muruga Booker, based on a set of fairly simple rhythmic ideas. The tempos tend toward the loping middle range, not so different from that of the resting heartbeat. The very names of the drums are evocative, but they are sonically heterogeneous as well: the mix of metal, wood, animal hide and other materials means that there is considerable variation in pitch and timbre. The opening 'Stepping (Isise)' and 'Incantations' (which derives its drone from the one-string Indian ektar of James Gurley) introduce the interlocking rhythms and the empathetic improvisation of the group. The record sags a little toward the middle. 'Dawn (Idaji)' disappoints not so much because of the synthesizer wash that suffuses it, but because of Booker's unimaginative rock 'n' roll drumming; 'Embracement' falters because Harry Ely's unfocused noodling on the hammered dulcimer never quite coalesces with the percussion ensemble.

Babatunde Olatunji Circle Of Drums

The twenty-minute-plus 'Cosmic Rhythm Vibrations' that closes the record entirely redeems the project. Taken at a slower tempo (at least initially) than the rest of the record, this veritable drum concerto allows more space for flourishes and the establishment of counter-rhythms, which surge and subside hypnotically. Listen to it while running, or while lying down, eyes closed: your ear will become attuned to the tonal variety of the instruments, your intellect will be engaged by the surprisingly broad expressiveness of the piece, and your soul will be gradually overcome by the trance-inducing qualities for which drumming circles are renowned.