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The Very Best|Warm Heart of Africa

Warm Heart of Africa

The Very Best

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At the very least, this is some of the most joyous, life-affirming music out there. The Very Best's debut album finds Malawian singer Esau Mwamwaya and London-based production duo Radioclit (Etienne Tron and Johan Karlberg) more than making good on the promise of the internet mixtape that introduced their partnership to the world. That tape, one of 2008's most celebrated (and celebratory) releases, displayed a truly boundary-defying yet immediately cohesive and recognizable sound: a euphoric global mélange of pop, dance, hip-hop, world-folk, sunny indie rock, electronica, cinematic new age lushness, and the African sounds of marabi, highlife, and kwaito, all highlighted by Mwamwaya's deliriously infectious Chichewa crooning. This time out, without the launch pad of familiar source material that sometimes made the mixtape's slew of remixes, interpolations, and covers feel slightly like a cheeky arithmetic mashing-up of reference points, the threesome have crafted something even more distinctive and organic, dissolving together their panoply of influences into a set of songs (not merely "tracks") that feel blissfully free of formulas and forerunners.
To be sure, the Very Best's sound is essentially an extension of the globalism already increasingly prevalent in 21st century indie and dance music; a connection reaffirmed by a pair of delightful guest appearances from two of that trend's most visible exponents. Ezra Koenig of Vampire Weekend, whose "Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa" was marvelously reworked on the mixtape, returns the favor here by duetting with Mwamwaya on the album's irresistibly effervescent title track. The other big guest shot, naturally enough, is from M.I.A., reigning monarch and mascot of globetrotting beat excursions, who can't help but inspire some smiles on the silly, spunky "Rain Dance." But Mwamwaya hardly requires a famous foil to be utterly captivating. His voice, which is often multi-tracked into toothsome harmonies, is equally capable of conveying majesty, urgency, and exuberance; sometimes -- as on the giddily anthemic "Julia" (which borrows a bit of "Paper Planes"' lazily loping swagger) -- all three at once. But if that voice is undeniably essential to the group's sound, Radioclit's contributions shouldn't be understated either: Karlberg and Tron have outdone themselves with a kaleidoscopic array of Afro-leaning grooves to complement Mwamwaya's contagious melodicism, relying remarkably little on their typically gritty, muscular "ghetto-pop" style. While there are some traces of more straightforward club-derived rhythms - the percussive "Nsokoto" and glittery "Mfumu" both gesture toward disco's 4/4 thump, while the string-laced "Kada Manja," in an amped-up variation on the mixtape's "classical" version, flirts with the hard-hitting sound of kuduro - most of the album is eminently danceable without slotting neatly into any specific idea of "dance music."
But as vivacious and energetic as it is, there's something even more fundamentally potent and potentially profound going on here (not to suggest that dancing isn't profound -- indeed, that might be precisely the point). Take "Chalo," an unabashedly uplifting barrage of Enya-esque synth stabs which was reportedly (amazingly) recorded on the same night that the group's three members first met, and whose lyrics they've described as about "using love to stop the world's problems." This is the sort of thing that helps explain why the Very Best can sport such a ticklish moniker with such evident aplomb: somehow, with these guys, it comes off not so much as a boast (albeit an improbably credible one) but as an encapsulation of the boundless optimism and idealism reflected in their songs and in their sound -- a fervent, infectious belief in music's power to bring out the very best in the world and in the human spirit.

© K. Ross Hoffman /TiVo

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Warm Heart of Africa

The Very Best

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1
Yalira
00:03:39

Esau Mwamwaya, Composer - Johan Karlberg, Composer - The Very Best, MainArtist - Etienne Tron, Composer

2009 Moshi Moshi Records 2009 Moshi Moshi Records

2
Chalo
00:03:11

Esau Mwamwaya, Composer - Johan Karlberg, Composer - The Very Best, MainArtist - Etienne Tron, Composer

2009 Moshi Moshi Records 2009 Moshi Moshi Records

3
Warm Heart of Africa
00:03:48

Ezra Koenig, FeaturedArtist - The Very Best, MainArtist

2009 Moshi Moshi Records 2009 Moshi Moshi Records

4
Mwazi
00:01:06

Esau Mwamwaya, Composer - Johan Karlberg, Composer - The Very Best, MainArtist - Etienne Tron, Composer

2009 Moshi Moshi Records 2009 Moshi Moshi Records

5
Nsokoto
00:05:28

Esau Mwamwaya, Composer - Johan Karlberg, Composer - The Very Best, MainArtist - Etienne Tron, Composer

2009 Moshi Moshi Records 2009 Moshi Moshi Records

6
Angonde
00:04:52

Esau Mwamwaya, Composer - Johan Karlberg, Composer - The Very Best, MainArtist - Etienne Tron, Composer

2009 Moshi Moshi Records 2009 Moshi Moshi Records

7
Julia
00:04:06

The Very Best, MainArtist

2009 Moshi Moshi Records 2009 Moshi Moshi Records

8
Mfumu
00:03:50

Esau Mwamwaya, Composer - Johan Karlberg, Composer - The Very Best, MainArtist - Etienne Tron, Composer

2009 Moshi Moshi Records 2009 Moshi Moshi Records

9
Ntende Uli
00:03:20

Esau Mwamwaya, Composer - Johan Karlberg, Composer - The Very Best, MainArtist - Etienne Tron, Composer

2009 Moshi Moshi Records 2009 Moshi Moshi Records

10
Rain Dance
00:04:26

Esau Mwamwaya, Composer - Johan Karlberg, Composer - The Very Best, MainArtist - Etienne Tron, Composer - M.I.A., FeaturedArtist

2009 Moshi Moshi Records 2009 Moshi Moshi Records

11
Kamphopo
00:03:21

Esau Mwamwaya, Composer - Johan Karlberg, Composer - The Very Best, MainArtist - Etienne Tron, Composer - Cameron Bird, Composer

2009 Moshi Moshi Records 2009 Moshi Moshi Records

12
Kada Manja
00:04:33

Esau Mwamwaya, Composer - Johan Karlberg, Composer - The Very Best, MainArtist - Etienne Tron, Composer

2009 Moshi Moshi Records 2009 Moshi Moshi Records

13
Zam'dziko
00:02:29

Esau Mwamwaya, Composer - Johan Karlberg, Composer - The Very Best, MainArtist - Etienne Tron, Composer

2009 Moshi Moshi Records 2009 Moshi Moshi Records

Album review

At the very least, this is some of the most joyous, life-affirming music out there. The Very Best's debut album finds Malawian singer Esau Mwamwaya and London-based production duo Radioclit (Etienne Tron and Johan Karlberg) more than making good on the promise of the internet mixtape that introduced their partnership to the world. That tape, one of 2008's most celebrated (and celebratory) releases, displayed a truly boundary-defying yet immediately cohesive and recognizable sound: a euphoric global mélange of pop, dance, hip-hop, world-folk, sunny indie rock, electronica, cinematic new age lushness, and the African sounds of marabi, highlife, and kwaito, all highlighted by Mwamwaya's deliriously infectious Chichewa crooning. This time out, without the launch pad of familiar source material that sometimes made the mixtape's slew of remixes, interpolations, and covers feel slightly like a cheeky arithmetic mashing-up of reference points, the threesome have crafted something even more distinctive and organic, dissolving together their panoply of influences into a set of songs (not merely "tracks") that feel blissfully free of formulas and forerunners.
To be sure, the Very Best's sound is essentially an extension of the globalism already increasingly prevalent in 21st century indie and dance music; a connection reaffirmed by a pair of delightful guest appearances from two of that trend's most visible exponents. Ezra Koenig of Vampire Weekend, whose "Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa" was marvelously reworked on the mixtape, returns the favor here by duetting with Mwamwaya on the album's irresistibly effervescent title track. The other big guest shot, naturally enough, is from M.I.A., reigning monarch and mascot of globetrotting beat excursions, who can't help but inspire some smiles on the silly, spunky "Rain Dance." But Mwamwaya hardly requires a famous foil to be utterly captivating. His voice, which is often multi-tracked into toothsome harmonies, is equally capable of conveying majesty, urgency, and exuberance; sometimes -- as on the giddily anthemic "Julia" (which borrows a bit of "Paper Planes"' lazily loping swagger) -- all three at once. But if that voice is undeniably essential to the group's sound, Radioclit's contributions shouldn't be understated either: Karlberg and Tron have outdone themselves with a kaleidoscopic array of Afro-leaning grooves to complement Mwamwaya's contagious melodicism, relying remarkably little on their typically gritty, muscular "ghetto-pop" style. While there are some traces of more straightforward club-derived rhythms - the percussive "Nsokoto" and glittery "Mfumu" both gesture toward disco's 4/4 thump, while the string-laced "Kada Manja," in an amped-up variation on the mixtape's "classical" version, flirts with the hard-hitting sound of kuduro - most of the album is eminently danceable without slotting neatly into any specific idea of "dance music."
But as vivacious and energetic as it is, there's something even more fundamentally potent and potentially profound going on here (not to suggest that dancing isn't profound -- indeed, that might be precisely the point). Take "Chalo," an unabashedly uplifting barrage of Enya-esque synth stabs which was reportedly (amazingly) recorded on the same night that the group's three members first met, and whose lyrics they've described as about "using love to stop the world's problems." This is the sort of thing that helps explain why the Very Best can sport such a ticklish moniker with such evident aplomb: somehow, with these guys, it comes off not so much as a boast (albeit an improbably credible one) but as an encapsulation of the boundless optimism and idealism reflected in their songs and in their sound -- a fervent, infectious belief in music's power to bring out the very best in the world and in the human spirit.

© K. Ross Hoffman /TiVo

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