AUTOR

Thursday, November 2, 2023

Mombasa-African Rhythms and Blues (1975)

Lou Blackburn was a renowned American musician who rose to fame in the 1950s and 60s performing alongside jazz legends such as Lionel Hampton, Lou Rawls, and Duke Ellington. He also established a successful solo career, releasing albums like "Jazz Frontier" and "The Complete Imperial Sessions". In the early 1970s, he moved to Europe and founded the Mombasa project, a group that fused African rhythms with jazz. In 1975, under the German independent label Spiegelei, he recorded the group's debut album, "African Rhythms and Blues", an extraordinary recording where exotic rhythms, rural and folk blues, spirituals, and jazz intertwine in a fascinating and enchanting fusion. Besides Lou Blackburn (trombone), the rest of Mombasa consisted of Donald Coleman (congas and flute), Charles Jefferson (trumpet), Gerald Luciano (double bass and African percussion), and Cephus McGirt (drums). Produced by German engineer Manfred Schmitz, the album contains an anthology of repertoire that makes it one of the finest recordings of ethnic jazz ever made.