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Ivory Coast Soul

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Download links and information about Ivory Coast Soul. This album was released in 2010 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, World Music genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 01:16:02 minutes.

Release date: 2010
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, World Music
Tracks: 13
Duration: 01:16:02
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Kalabuley Women (Pierre Antoine) 11:40
2. Melokon Mebun Ou (Okoi Seka) 5:53
3. Yatchiminou (Jimmy Hiacynthe) 7:06
4. Manny Nia (Santa Nguessan) 2:48
5. Wazi Doble (Gougoumangou) 8:16
6. Zadie Bobo (Ernesto Djédjé / Ernesto Djedje, Ernesto Djédjé / Ernesto Djedje) 3:46
7. Unite (Moussa Doumbia) 4:54
8. Adoue Pla Moussoue (K Assale) 4:54
9. Mon Falou Nan (Soro N'Gana) 9:01
10. Essemon Moupoh (Jean Guehi) 5:47
11. Ogningwe (Prince Dgibs) 3:32
12. La Ilaha Illalahou (Ali Ibrahim) 5:46
13. True Love (Rato Venance) 2:39

Details

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With a plethora of bygone vintage African compilations out there, what sets this one apart is that you can actually party to it — from start to finish Ivory Coast Soul is that good. The songs here were carefully mined from the annals of obscurity thanks to diligent vinyl hounds — though it’s not the rareness of these gems that shines so much as the quality of the grooves radiating from them. Pierre Antoine’s “Kalabuley Woman” is a solid jam fruitful with percussive layers setting a solid foundation for buttery bass runs and a festive horn section; but it’s Okoi Seka’s “Melokon Mebun ou” that really gets things going with an infectious afro-beat and funky electric guitar riffs exchanging rhythms with conga drums while Seka sings like a man possessed. A small helping of Western disco even surfaces on Jimmy Hiacynthe’s bellbottomed “Yatchiminou” and the silky strut of Santa Nguessan’s “Manny Nia,” a blossoming garden of dance-floor funk where wah-wah pedals seem to fall from trees. Ernesto Djédjé infuses Allman Brothers-esque guitar jams into the sunny strut of standout cut “Zadie Bobo.”