{"product_id":"world-psychedelic-classics-vol-3-loves-a-real-thing","title":"World Psychedelic Classics, Vol. 3: Love's a Real Thing","description":"Love's a Real Thing is an excellent introduction into the wild sound world of West Africa in the '70s. As Ronnie Graham points out in his superb liner notes, the '60s were a time of assimilation for much of the popular music of Africa. Many bands were playing a hybrid of Latin and African music typified by the Congolese rhumba of Franco \u0026amp; OK Jazz. The '70s were a different bag, though, with the heavy electric sounds of Jimi Hendrix, James Brown, Cream, and others seeping into the consciousness of a new generation of Africans who were also contending with their own emerging sense of identity. The results are raucous, exuberant melting pots of funky soul, psychedelic rock, and honey-sweet Latin horns mixed through the sensibilities of extremely talented African bands on the cusp of developing styles like soukous, mbalax, and Afro-beat. Senegal's Star Band Number One (aka Etoile de Dakar and confusingly billed here as No. 1 de No. 1), were already seasoned veterans by the dawn of the 1970s, and the sound of their \"Guajira Van\" with its sinewy fuzz guitar solo and talking drum stabs is glorious proto-mbalax. Elsewhere, there are songs more directly inspired by rock and soul. \"Allah Wakbarr\" by Ofo \u0026amp; the Black Company has a heavy acid rock guitar lead competing with a conga drum for the top of the mix. The title cut, \"Love's a Real Thing\" by Gambia's Super Eagles, is a gritty organ and electric guitar-driven soul number that could have come out of Memphis' Stax Records. One of the later period numbers, William Onyeabor's \"Better Change Your Mind\" from 1978, is sophisticated Afro-soul riding on an alien keyboard line. \"Keleya\" from Mali's Moussa Doumbia is the funkiest of the Afro-beat songs on Love's a Real Thing; its chunky organ solo and James Brown grunts beat out the more laid-back \"Ifa\" from Tunji Oyelana \u0026amp; the Blenders and \"Awon-Ojise-Oluwa\" from Nigerian studio veteran Gasper Lawal. There have been other series that have explored Africa in this vibrant and historic period -- the fantastic Ethiopiques, Dakar Sound, and Discotheque discs document Ethiopia, Senegal, and Guinea, respectively -- but what Love's a Real Thing lacks in depth it makes up for in breadth, and the fact that it surveys the whole region rather than a single area makes it a great entry point for them all. ~ Wade Kergan","brand":"InnerSleeve","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":41909051326629,"sku":"680899005210","price":35.95,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0612\/6007\/1077\/files\/530ac0013615a9e10e214fbe7754f4c1.jpg?v=1779356794","url":"https:\/\/www.innersleeve.com\/en-ca\/products\/world-psychedelic-classics-vol-3-loves-a-real-thing","provider":"InnerSleeve","version":"1.0","type":"link"}