Strut team up with New York's Knitting Factory for the exclusive
worldwide release of 'Live In Detroit, 1986', the first new Fela Kuti
material to be issued since his final studio album, 'Underground
System', in 1992.
Recorded live at the Fox Theater in Detroit in November 1986, the
concert marked a triumphant return to the USA for Nigeria's Afrobeat
master, Fela Anikulapo Kuti. He had tried to leave his home country to
tour the States two years earlier before being arrested and imprisoned
on dubious charges of "currency trafficking". An Amnesty International
campaign helped secure his release in April 1986 and, just two months
later, he appeared on stage as part of Amnesty's 'Conspiracy Of Hope'
American tour. The evening's audio recorder, Bob Teagan, claimed the '86
Fox Theater show to be Fela's best performance, "It was like seeing Bob
Marley, Frank Sinatra, Michael Jackson, Marvin Gaye, and James Brown
all rolled into one. Fela captured the revolution of Marley, the love of
Marvin Gaye, he sung with a rare and exquisite charcoal voice like
Sinatra but he would scream himself out and go hoarse by the end of the
three hour marathon show. All the while he danced like Michael Jackson
or a ballerina, and captivated the crowd with the showmanship of James
Brown."
The Detroit concert was part of Fela's debut US tour with his Egypt 80
band and the recording finds them on strident form, showcasing all-new
material in free-flowing extended workouts: 'Just Like That' recalls
Fela's memories of the Nigerian Civil War, 'Confusion Break Bones' (an
update of his earlier track, 'Confusion'), compares the present African
situation to a permanent traffic jam at a town centre crossroads,
'Teacher Don't Teach Me Nonsense' swipes at the oyinbos (white men)
forcing sham versions of democracy on Africa and allowing "democratic"
rulers to line their own pockets at the expense of the people while
foreign-owned multi-nationals are allowed to freely strip the continent
of its natural resources, 'Beasts Of No Nation' reflects on Fela's
recent court case and imprisonment in Nigeria and, more widely, on the
issues around Apartheid. The messages here resonate as powerfully as
anything from Fela's career.