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Tak Shindo
Mganga!
Japan goes to Africa ! It's more than a bit ironic that Tak Shindo's most "exotic" album, the superb Mganga!, boasts no connection to his own Japanese heritage, instead focusing on the primal rhythms and tribal chants of Africa. Rooted largely in the arranger's experience on the Latin jazz circuit, its Afro-Cuban rhythms, sampled animal sounds, and chants capture an African musical culture based far more in fantasy than reality, much as rival exotica maestros like Martin Denny and Les Baxter conjured interpretations of the Far East driven by suppositions and daydreams. Shindo documents an Africa informed by libraries and dancehalls, not first-hand experience. That said, Mganga! is vibrant and intoxicating, with a rhythmic intensity quite uncommon for its era. For an artificial experience, it packs a genuine wallop.
A1
Mombasa Love Song
A2
Safari To Kenya
A3
Nyoba Festival
A4
Slave Chains Of Mtumwa
A5
Bantu Spear Dance
A6
Rains Of Okavango
B1
Huts Of Kichwamba
B2
Mganga
B3
Mwanza Market Place
B4
N'Ga - The Maiden
B5
Watusi Drum Dance
B6
Port Of Trinkitat



