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Mahmoud Ahmed

 
Artist: Mahmoud Ahmed

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Aragaw Bedaso, Alèmu Aga

Followers:

Formal Connection With:

Alemayehu Eshete, Fèqadu Amdè-Mesqel, Giovanni Rico, Tèwodros Meteku
  • Born: May 18, 1941, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: World
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Soul of Addis", "Ethiopiques, Vol. 6: Almaz", "Ethiopiques Vol. 19: Alemye
  • Representative Songs: "Ere Mela Mela", "Tezeta", "Abbay Mado

Biography

In Ethiopia the word is "eskeusta," which roughly translated means ecstasy, more specifically it is a shaking sensation that begins at one's shoulders, quivering down the spine and into the legs and feet. And of all of the great male vocalists that Ethiopia has produced (don't laugh, there have been quite a few) none are able to create eskeusta better than Mahmoud Ahmed.

For 30 years Mahmoud Ahmed has deftly combined the traditional Amharic music of Ethiopia (essentially a five-note scale that features jazz style singing offset by complex circular rhythm patters which gives the music a distinct Indian feel), with pop and jazz yielding some of the most adventurous, passionate, ear-opening, downright surrealistic sounds this side of the deepest, darkest, dub or the most out-there free jazz. In fact, until you've heard Ahmed's sweeping multi-octave voice in full workout, words hardly do it justice. As with the late great Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, he simply has to be heard to be believed and appreciated.

Ahmed has been a star in Ethiopia almost since the day he began recording. His swooping vocals, complimented by the freewheeling jazziness of the Ibex Band (with whom he recorded his masterpiece Ere Mela Mela) is very different from what normally is lumped into the broad expression afro-pop. The rhythms are repetitive and intense, not too dissimilar from, say, Fela, just a little less hard. But it's Ahmed voice: swirling high notes that sound as if they're chasing one another, impeccable tone and phrasing that is the distinguishing element. By singing in this style Ahmed has attempted to fuse the past and present. He's not an elitist when it comes to singing older Ethiopian music but rather he hears the similarities in Ethiopian pop that have thrived over time and is keen to bring them together.

As the western critical attention to afro-pop centered on the music of sub-Saharan Africa, Ethiopian artists like Ahmed and Hirut Bekele, Ali Birra, and Alemayhu Eshete were less likely to receive coverage in the music press. Recently, younger performers such as Aster Aweke (who emigrated to the US in the mid-1980s), and Netsanet Mellesse have received more ink thus opening the doors for those so inclined to explore the music that influenced the. And for those so inclined that means becoming familiar with brilliant, demanding, but unknown artists such as Mahmoud Ahmed. ~ John Dougan, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Mahmoud Ahmed
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Mahmoud Ahmed (born May 8, 1941) (Amharic: ማሕሙድ ኣሕመድ) is an Ethiopian singer of Gurage ancestry.

Contents

Biography

Born in Addis Ababa, Mahmoud shined shoes in that city before becoming a handyman at the Arizona Club, where he first sang professionally in the early 1960s. He sang for the Imperial Body Guard Band until 1974, and recorded with other bands for the Amha and Kaifa record labels throughout the 1970s. He opened his own music store in Addis Ababa's Piazza district during the 1980s while he continued his singing career.

In addition to the Imperial Body Guard Band, Mahmoud has sung with the Ibex Band, the Venus Band, the Walias Band, the Idan Raichel Project, and the Roha Band over the course of his career. Since the late 1990s he has enjoyed a resurgence in popularity in Europe and the Americas since Buda Musique launched the Ethiopiques series on compact disc, leading to new recordings and tours in Europe and the United States with Boston's Either/Orchestra & Badume's Band.

Discography

  • Soul of Addis (1997, Earthworks/Stern's Africa STEW35CD)
  • Slow Collections (1998, Sounds of Abyssinia SAC-022)
  • Live In Paris (1998, Long Distance 302671)
  • Ethiopiques Volume 6—Almaz 1973 (1999, Buda Musique 829792 (originally released 1973))
  • Ethiopiques Volume 7—Erè Mèla Mèla 1975 (2000, Buda Musique 829802; originally released 1975 and rereleased on Crammed Discs in 1986)
  • Yitbarek (2003, Yene Production 77414, rereleased by Nahom Records in 2007)
  • Tizita Vol. 1 (The Best of...) (2003, AIT Records AIT-10304)
  • Tizita Vol. 2 (The Best of...) (2003, AIT Records AIT-10305)
  • Ethiopiques Volume 19—Alèmeyé (2005, Buda Musique 860106)
  • Ethiogroove: Mahmoud Ahmed & Either/Orchestra (2007, EthioSonic DVD)

References

  • Liner notes. Soul of Addis by Mahmoud Ahmed. Earthworks/Stern's STEW35CD, 1997.
  • Falceto, Francis. Liner notes, Ethiopiques Volume 6—Almaz 1973 by Mahmoud Ahmed. Buda Musique 829792, 1999.

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