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Home  Back Catalogue  Funk
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Back catalogue: Funk

Juno's full catalogue of Funk
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Items 1 to 14 of 14 on page 1 of 1
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z ALL
Singles
This Is Bolga!
Cat: PH 45021. Rel: 16 May 19
This Is Bolga! (part 1) (3:35)
This Is Bolga! (part 2) (3:53)
Review: German-Ghanaian group the Polyversal Souls have previously collaborated with a number of bands and solo artists from West Africa, so this hook-up with Northern Ghanaian outfit the Bolga All Stars - a collective made up of leading local kologo and frafra-gospel singers and musicians - should not come as much of a surprise. Separated into two parts for the seven-inch release, the track blends the Polyversal Souls' lolloping, late '60s style Afro-funk grooves - complete with fuzzy, period style production - and sharp horn section with glistening guitars, snaking solos and fine vocals from the Bolga All Stars. It's one of the Polyversal Souls' finest releases yet, and that's saying something.
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Tags: African | Afro Funk | Afro Jazz
 in stock $10.13
Albums
Rejoice
Rejoice (180 gram vinyl LP with obi-strip)
Cat: 405053 855749. Rel: 20 Mar 20
Robbers Thugs & Muggers (O'Galajani) (4:36)
Agbada Bougou (5:23)
Coconut Jam (3:22)
Never (Lagos Never Gonna Be The Same) (3:49)
Slow Bones (5:48)
Jabulani (Rejoice, Here Comes Tony) (5:36)
Obama Shuffle Strut Blues (4:39)
We've Landed (4:39)
Review: Two titans of African music come together for a collaboration that will sadly never be repeated after the passing of the late Hugh Masekela. Allen's instantly recognisable drumming and Masekela's iconic trumpet are a match made in heaven - after all their paths first crossed back in the 70s thanks to Fela Kuti's galvanizing energy. Forget the throwback stuff trying to capture the spirit of the originators, this IS the originators sounding cool and deadly in every way. Funk lovers, Afrobeat heads, curious ears and dancing souls take heed - this right here is an unmissable transmission from two grandmasters in their field.
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 in stock $26.49
African Voodoo
Cat: SMV 06. Rel: 09 Feb 23
Groovy Flute (2:39)
Soul Saxes Meeting (3:00)
African Pop Session (2:52)
Walking To Waza (4:00)
Out Of Score (2:46)
Ba-kuba (3:55)
Zoom 2000 (4:04)
Aphrodite Shake (3:24)
Wilderness (3:07)
Jungle Riders (2:58)
Iron Wood (2:43)
Coconut (2:09)
Review: Manu Dibango's grooves will never dull with time. The Cameroonian sax man made some of the most infectious, feel-good funk to ever transmit from the African continent, and here's one of his heavy-hitting high-watermarks, reissued by Soul Makossa. African Voodoo originally came out in 1972, a year that saw nearly all Dibango's most revered jams cut loose on an unsuspecting public. These sessions were recorded in France with Yvan Julien on trumpet, Slim Pezin on guitar, Jacques Bolgnesi on trombone and Lucien Dobat on drums to name but a part of the line-up, but of course it's Dibango holding court on the vibes, marimba, sax and organ who brings the unmistakable magic to the music.
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 in stock $25.37
Dibango 82 (remastered)
Cat: WWSCD 99. Rel: 03 Apr 25
Migilbawe (Live, 22 Dec, 1982 At Theatre La Criee, Marseille, France)
Africa Boogie
Ashiko Oumba
Waka Juju (part 1)
Waka Juju (part 2)
Waka Juju (part 3)
 in stock $20.28
Dibango 82 (remastered)
Cat: WWSLP 99. Rel: 03 Apr 25
Migilbawe (7:32)
Africa Boogie (4:21)
Ashiko Oumba (10:16)
Waka Juju (part 1) (5:04)
Waka Juju (part 2) (3:22)
Waka Juju (part 3) (6:27)
Review: Manu Dibango knew how to work a crowd. By the time he hit the stage at Marseille's Theatre La Criee in December 1982, he had long mastered the art of turning a gig into a full-blown celebration. This was the man who took makossa global, who made 'Soul Makossa' an international sensation a decade prior and who could pivot between jazz, funk and African rhythms like it was nothing. The recording, unearthed from the INA archives, captures him in peak form, leading an eight-piece band through a set that refuses to sit still. 'Africa Boogie' is all clipped guitars, tight horns and a bassline that struts like it owns the place. 'Ashiko Oumba' turns the groove alluringly, locking into intricate polyrhythms before erupting into pure brass-fuelled joy. Then there's 'Waka Juju', sprawling across three parts, moving from simmering tension to full-throttle release with the kind of control only Dibango could pull off. He's conducting, shaping the music in real-time, every solo a conversation, every break a setup for the next explosion of sound. Four decades later, the set still feels alive. It's there in the call-and-response with the crowd, the sweat-soaked momentum of a band that knows it's on fire. Dibango, effortlessly cool at the centre of it all, proves once again why his music never ages.
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Tags: Afro Funk | Afro Jazz
 in stock $36.92
Rhythm Revolution (reissue)
Rhythm Revolution (reissue) (limited red vinyl LP)
Cat: AJXLP 633R. Rel: 20 Feb 23
Be Free (3:30)
Atakpa DC 9 (3:32)
When I Come In The Road (3:43)
Brest DC10 (3:24)
Young Revolution (3:26)
Carry Me Blak (3:47)
Atinga (3:23)
Ichango (3:54)
Review: Ferry Djimmy is quite the character - he is a mysterious Afrobeat figure who also was a former schoolteacher, boxer, Jacques Chirac's bodyguard, and well as being a legendary Beninese musical visionary. He recorded this album sometime in the mid-1970s in support of the revolutionary leader of Benin at the time - Mathieu Kerekou. A fire is reported to have turned all but 200 copies to dust so it is mega rare and expensive to get an original. Acid Jazz reissues it here in all its fiery, lo-fi, gnarly Afrobeat glory. This is a fully licensed project with all new and in-depth sleeve notes by Florent Mazzoleni.
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Tags: Afrobeat | Afro Jazz
 in stock $27.91
Afro Agban: The Afro Instrumental LP (remastered)
Cat: STRUT 345LP. Rel: 01 May 25
Oda Mimian (5:47)
Ozan Koukle (5:48)
Afon (6:04)
Alow Aton (4:34)
Afro-Love (5:30)
Sikiliza (4:09)
Racubah (3:22)
Review: Popularly known to fans as "Ice" - a rare case of hypocorism in colloquial fan band nicknaming - Strut Recordings document a rare record from the vaults of the luminary Lafayette Afro-Rock Band, one that is arguably the closest in their catalogue to the signature sound defining their earlier work. Marked by an especially complex funk rhythmology, this record was pressed contemporaneously with the infamous Soul Makossa and Malik sessions; but compared to their earlier works, Afro Agban pushes deeper into jazz-rock territory. 'Ozan Koukle' has espceially become a known but coveted missing link for turntable taxonomists, who'll thank their lucky stars for the fact that it is now available in full.
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 in stock $23.66
Funky Africa (reissue)
Cat: LPWABB 116LE. Rel: 12 May 22
Funky Africa (The Ghetto) (3:30)
That Sweet Feeling (3:13)
Telephone (3:33)
Hi-Jack (Your Love) (4:24)
Bumping The Wall (3:13)
Hamba Kahle (3:09)
Some Funky Things (3:19)
Big Mama (4:18)
Ntshonalanga (3:57)
The Things We Do In Soweto (3:46)
Review: Funky Africa is an album that, as the title suggests, totally embodies the sound of Africa. Composer, guitarist, and producer Almon Memela imbues his sounds with everything that makes Afro music great from the wild trumpet lines to the throbbing rhythms and spiritual vibes that run through each tune. It first came in 1975 and has long been one of those cornerstone albums for those in the know. It has been ultra rare since first issue and packs in romantic sounds next to dance floor bait, all with great style and showmanship.
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Played by: RUSTAM OSPANOFF.
Tags: African | Afro Jazz
 in stock $32.13
Beja Power! Electric Soul & Brass From Sudan's Red Sea Coast
Beja Power! Electric Soul & Brass From Sudan's Red Sea Coast (180 gram vinyl LP + insert + MP3 download code)
Cat: OSTLP 012. Rel: 23 Jun 22
Saagama (3:55)
Qwal (6:19)
Al Amal (6:40)
Jabana (6:27)
Wondeeb (5:56)
Daleb (7:40)
Review: In a stroke of ingenuity Noori found a neck of a guitar whilst rummaging through a Port Sudan scrapyard along the Red Sea Coast in the 90s. Using their welding talents they fixed it onto a traditional four stringed tambour, creating what may be the only tambo-guitar hybrid in the world. Beja Power! Is a love letter to the Beja culture, inherently political and almost erased by the former Sudanese leader. This historically rich niche of Afro-Jazz is both nostalgic and mystical. Elements of surf rock, electric blues and psychedelia can be heard in these instrumental tracks, a 6-track capsule of a powerful identity nearly lost to the sands of time. Noori & His Dorpa Band's style is authentic and evocative and is a joyful proclamation and demonstration of the magic that is Beja sound and aesthetic.
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Tags: African | Afro Jazz
 in stock $16.07
Cooking Time
Cat: OLONECD 24. Rel: 12 Apr 24
Felantropique
Cooking Time
Tangerine
Interlude
Achtronaut
Oddacity
Hasty Train
Sunrow
On A Walk
Song For Paulo
Jello
HCR Skit
Tags: Afrobeat | Afro Jazz
 in stock $13.24
Jazz Jazz Jazz
Jazz Jazz Jazz (LP + booklet)
Cat: HABIBI 0091. Rel: 08 Nov 18
Seira Music (2:31)
Shaikan Music (3:51)
Saat Alfarah (4:46)
Farrah Galbi Aljadeed (5:01)
Kaif Halo (5:47)
Forssa Saeeda (6:55)
Nile Waves (3:57)
Azzah Music (3:49)
Bride Of Afrika (feat Osman Zeeto) (3:44)
Hilwa Ya Amoora (3:21)
Review: Habibi Funk co-founder Jannis Stuertz first came across "the Holy Grail of Sudanese funk", Saif Abu Bakr and The Scorpions "Jazz, Jazz, Jazz", while browsing eBay listings a few years back. His interest piqued, he took a trip to Sudan to track down the musicians who had made a ridiculously rare LP that was changing hands for thousands of pounds online. Some four years later, his wish to reissue the set has finally come through. It was originally recorded in Kuwait in 1980 and brilliantly joins the dots between American funk, soul and rhythm and blues, traditional Sudanese vocals and rhythmic arrangements, and even a dash of Congolese soukkous. It's the first full album Habibi Funk has reissued, and with good reason: it's near perfect from start to finish.
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Tags: African | Afro Funk | Afro Jazz | Arabic
 in stock $28.18
Teaspoon & The Waves (reissue)
Cat: MRBLP 225. Rel: 05 Mar 21
Friday Night (8:33)
Wind & Fire (7:01)
Saturday Express (5:10)
Oh Yeh Soweto (4:10)
Got Me Tight (5:51)
Review: Many will know Teaspoon & The Waves' incredible 'Oh Yeh Soweto' - a brilliant Afro-disco riff on Lamont Dozier's 'Going Back To My Roots' that has appeared on countless compilations and re-edit releases over the years - but fewer have heard the rest of the tracks on the South African band's incredible 1977 debut album (in part because original copies are rather hard to find). To those people, we'll say this: check out this Mr Bongo reissue right now! Blending Afro-jazz with jazz-funk, soul, deep funk and disco, every single track is a winner, with highlights including the celebratory 'Friday Night', the dazzling, duelling solos and heavy percussion of 'Saturday Express' and the life-affirming brilliance of 'Got Me Tight'.
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 in stock $22.84
As Shams Archive Vol 1: South African Jazz Funk & Soul 1975-1982
VARIOUS
Cat: ASA 101. Rel: 07 Feb 23
Kippie Moketsi - "Umgababa" (11:10)
Pat Matshikiza - "Dreams Are Wonderful" (10:36)
Tete Mbambisa - "Umthsakazi The Bride" (8:44)
Dick Khoza - "Lilongwe" (8:07)
Mike Makhalemele - "Spring Is Here" (6:46)
Black Disco - "Night Express" (11:16)
Lionel Pillay - "Blues For Yusef" (9:29)
Harari - "Musikana" (6:30)
Movement In The City - "Blue Sunday" (4:56)
Sathima Bea Benjamin - "Music" (8:51)
 in stock $30.72
Afrobeat Experience Vol 1
VARIOUS
Cat: 342110 6. Rel: 09 Feb 23
Manu Dibango - "The Panther" (2:27)
Ebo Taylor & Uhuru Yenzu - "Love & Death" (8:18)
Mulatu Astake - "Yegelle Tezeta" (3:14)
Super Elcados - "Get Up & Do It Good" (4:04)
Teaspoon & The Waves - "Oh Yeh Soweto" (4:09)
Pat Thomas - "Awurade Mpaebo" (3:23)
Wallias Band - "Muziqawi Silt" (instrumental) (3:45)
Marumo - "Khomo Tsaka Deile Kae?" (3:42)
Roger Damawuzan & Les As Du Benin - "Wait For Me" (3:14)
Shina Williams & His African Percussionists - "Agboju Logun" (Mr Bongo 7" edit) (4:02)
Girma Beyene - "Enken Yelelebesh" (3:21)
Tee Mac & Majorie Barnes - "Nam Myoho Renge Kyo" (5:40)
Yta Jourias - "Adore Nyueto" (5:27)
Peter King - "African Dialects" (4:54)
Alemayehu Eshete - "Tchero Adari Nègn" (4:26)
Tesfa-maryam Kidane - "Heywete" (5:14)
Amadou Balake - "Super Bar Konon Mouso" (5:24)
Kelekye Band - "Jungle Music" (5:40)
Orlando Julius & Ashiko - "Get The Funk" (5:28)
Review: A new week means yet another new compilation from Wagram. The French label has become expert at myriad different genres from staples like house and techno to more esoteric world genre niches. This time out they launch a new series that looks into the rich sounds of Afrobeat, first pioneered by the likes of Fela Kuti and his drummer Tony Allen. Neither of them feature here but the four sides of tunes we do get all make for a deep dive into this compelling rhythmical music.
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 in stock $32.41
Items 1 to 14 of 14 on page 1 of 1
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z ALL
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