New release and tour from Seun Anikulapo Kuti and Egypt 80

By Laura Comben
By March 4, 2011 September 25th, 2013 World

Seun Anikulapo Kuti and Egypt 80 will release ‘From Africa With Fury: Rise’ on April 4 2011, with a UK tour beginning on April 13.

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At just 27 years of age, the album sees Kuti finding his own voice as songwriter, singer, and band leader, heading up Egypt 80, the extraordinary combo first fronted by his renowned father, Fela Kuti. The album follows Seun Kuti’s critically praised debut, 2008’s ‘Many Things’, which was hailed for continuing Kuti’s musical legacy.

 

‘From Africa With Fury: Rise’ is produced by Brian Eno, John Reynolds and Seun himself, with additional production by Godwin Logie. Eno – an avowed fan – has nothing but the highest praise for Seun and his band, hailing them for “making some of the biggest, wildest, livest music on the planet.” Co-producer Reynolds (whose work as musician, producer, and mixer spans such artists as Sinéad O’Connor, U2, and Natacha Atlas) agrees, applauding Kuti and Egypt 80’s distinctive Afrobeat as “a musical adrenaline rush.”

 

Seun is happy to return the compliments: “Brian Eno is ‘Brian Eno’ for a reason.  He has a great mind when it comes to music. He adds new dimensions to the sound. He showed me new ways of opening up the sound I’d never have thought of on my own. Not to downplay the work of John Reynolds, who is an incredible producer. I’m really glad I had them work on the album.”

 

“What inspires me is the time that I live in,” Seun says.  “What is happening today in Africa are the same things that were happening 40 years ago, when my father was song writing, but they are happening in different ways.

Sadly, Seun finds himself challenging many of the same injustices his father fought in his heyday, from corporate greed to militaristic leaders to the war on drugs. Perhaps the album’s most unequivocal battle cry is “Rise”, in which Kuti impels listeners to fight “the petroleum companies” that “use our oil to destroy our land,” “the diamond companies” that “use our brothers as slaves for the stone,” and companies like “Monsanto and Halliburton” which “use their food to make my people hungry.” But where Fela’s work often featured an explicit call to revolution, Seun’s goal is subtler.  He sees his role as that of an educator, speaking truth to power in order to provoke awareness and debate throughout his homeland.

 

“In Africa today, most people are struggling in silence,” Seun says.  “The systematic oppression of the people has made them blinded to their reality.  Everybody’s just thinking about survival.  Nobody wants to stand up for anything, everybody just wants to tow the line.  So I’m trying to make people think about these things that they are forgetting.  I want to inspire people to want things to change.”

 

TOUR DATES APRIL 2011:

 

13 LONDON – Royal Festival Hall

15 NORTHAMPTON – Royal & Derngate

16 EDINBURGH – Usher Hall

18 MANCHESTER – The Ritz

17 BANGOR – Prichard – Jones Hall

19 BRISTOL – Colston Hall

20 BASINGSTOKE – The Anvil

21 POOLE – Lighthouse

 

For more information please visit the official website.

 

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