Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

The Americanization of Ooga Booga

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Released
  
June, 1966

Label
  
MGM E/SE-4372

Release date
  
June 1966

Genre
  
Jazz

Recorded
  
November 1965

Artist
  
Hugh Masekela

Producer
  
Tom Wilson

The Americanization of Ooga Booga httpsimgdiscogscomfJPtIKoyaZPvaOPiR8ZQflq40

Venue
  
The Village Gate, New York City

The Americanization of Ooga Booga (1966)
  
Hugh Masekela's Next Album (1966)

Similar
  
Hugh Masekela albums, Jazz albums

The Americanization of Ooga Booga is an album by South African jazz trumpeter Hugh Masekela. The album is a blend of American jazz themes and traditional South African musical influences. It was recorded live in November 1965 at The Village Gate night club in New York City and released in June, 1966 via MGM Records label. Verve Records re-released the album in 1996 as a CD named The Lasting Impression of Ooga-Booga, adding five more tracks from his 1968 album The Lasting Impression of Hugh Masekela.

Contents

Reception

Bruce Eder of Allmusic noted in this album "The influence of Dizzy Gillespie and Freddie Hubbard can be heard, along with McCoy Tyner in the playing of pianist Larry Willis, and he shows his debt to John Coltrane as an inspiration on "Mixolydia" as well as his affinity for Brazilian music on "Mas Que Nada." But the core sound was what Masekela called "township bop" -- his short trumpet bursts, sometimes seemingly approaching microtonal territory, are engrossing celebrations of the melodies of his repertory, which is mostly of South African origin (including a pair written by his then-wife, Miriam Makeba). Among the latter, the opening number, "Bajabula Bonke," aka "Healing Song," got its first airing on record here -- it would later receive a bolder performance at the Monterey Pop Festival, comprising one of that event's numerous musical highlights, but where that later performance streaked and soared, this one starts out slowly and quietly, exquisitely harmonized and rising gradually and gently like a glider catching rising winds; it's impossible to fully appreciate the Monterey performance without hearing this one. With Herbie Hancock's "Cantelope Island" providing one firm reference point in the American jazz idiom, the set really wasn't that removed from 1965 listeners, as its stronger-than-expected sales proved".

Personnel

  • Acy Lehman – artwork
  • Hal Dotson – bass
  • Hugh Masekela – cornet, flugelhorn, vocals
  • Henry Jenkins – drums
  • Carl Fischer – photography
  • Larry Willis – piano
  • Tom Wilson – producer, liner notes
  • Reice Hamel – recording
  • Val Valentin – recording, director
  • Songs

    1Bajabula Bonke7:12
    2Dzinorabiro5:57
    3Unhlanhla5:01

    References

    The Americanization of Ooga Booga Wikipedia