#Hibotep
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iamlisteningto · 1 year ago
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Hibotep’s Saffron EP
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postpunkindustrial · 3 years ago
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C-drík's moderation - 00:00 - 05:26 Hilda Dianda - Dos estudios en oposición - 05:26 - 11:30 Natela Svanidze - Epitaphium - 11:30 - 17:30 Jing Jing Luo - Monologue - 17:30 - 23:28 Mireille Kyrou - Film Musique - 23:28 - 34:12 C-drík's moderation - 34:12 - 40:23 Sofía Scheps - Record: Idea - 40:23 - 45:59 Sukitoa o Namau - When I tripped and hit my head on the sink of the love hotel - 45:59 - 50:24 Mehrnaz Khorrami - Nocturnal - 50:24 - 54:26 Cao Thanh Lan - Tholbuth-for piano solo- Ausland 5.2017 - 54:26 - 59:23 Kei Watanabe - We've Fogotten How To Breathe 59:23 - 64:22 Hibotep - Acid Dairiah - 64:22 - END
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femalepressure · 6 years ago
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Hibotep: Dj, producer, musician, fashion designer, installation artist, filmmaker, nomad, rebel, part of Nyege Nyege collective
https://soundcloud.com/hibo-afrokush-thenomad
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#Repost @studiotopie ・・・ sketching. #drawing #sketching #camel #illustration #djane #producer #hibotep #eastafricanartists #music #ninjabi #nyegenyege #kombinatrotweiss #weloveillustration #artistmanagement https://www.instagram.com/p/Bo1EOvrjMp0/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=gjoptd714za0
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shemakesnoisefestival · 5 years ago
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HIBOTEP (DJ SET)
Toda la contracultura, la fuerza y las teorías afrofuturistas llegan al Patio de La Casa Encendida desde Kampala (Uganda) de la mano de la artista musulmana de origen somalí, Hibo Elmi aka Hibotep, en su primera actuación en Madrid después de su paso por el Sónar 2019.
Artista multidisciplinar que rompe estereotipos y fronteras hacia la mujer racializada, Hibotep es dj, productora musical, cineasta, rapera y diseñadora de moda. Un mix de talento que ha formado parte del cartel del festival de música electrónica más potente del continente africano, el prestigioso Nyege Nyege. Sus sesiones están repletas de trap, hip hop, house y ritmos propios de Tanzania o Kenia como el Taraab o del Magreb como el Gnawa.
Acaba de editar su primer EP con el sello Hakuna Kuklala que incluirá también en su set. Sin duda una oportunidad única para verla y bailarla en nuestra ciudad.
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burlveneer-music · 3 years ago
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VA - New Tangents In Kampala, London and Nairobi (Extra Soul Perception)
Extra Soul Perception is a collaboration and community music platform which started life between the UK, Kenya and Uganda, and continuing to grow and connect independent musicians worldwide. In November 2019, eight artists from Kenya, Uganda and the UK spent a week in Nairobi together exploring new tangents in soul music, the result was their 2020 debut EP ‘New Tangents In Kampala, London & Nairobi Vol. 1’. The collective was made up of Faizal Mostrixx (UG), Hibotep (UG), K15 (UK), Karun (KE), Labdi (KE), Lex Amor (UK), Lynda Dawn (UK) and Maxwell Owen (UK). Now with the with the addition of Itsmdnyt (UG), XL Middleton (US), Xenia Menasseh (KE), Sola and Azu Tiwaline (TUN), the collective are preparing to release their album ‘New Tangents in Kampala, London and Nairobi’, released 25th March. Having started life in 2019 at a writing camp in Nairobi, the album was completed remotely over course of the worldwide lockdowns of 2020 and 2021. Innovators in their own fields, each artist brings unique knowledge and musical culture to the project. Collectively they represent a broad spectrum of sound, each with a unique understanding of the power of soul music in its many forms. The album reflects this via an inspiring mixture of beautiful soul, glitchy beats, spoken word and bumping instrumentals.
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maxforz · 5 years ago
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http://acadjmia.bandcamp.com/album/a-choreography-of-interference
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williamkaen · 7 years ago
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@hibothenomad just laid down the sickest set #nyegenyege2017 #nyegenyegefestival #people #portraits #dj #hibotep #toomuchsauce (at NYEGE NYEGE FESTIVAL)
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twistedsoulmusic · 4 years ago
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Back on Blue In Green Radio with new music from Demae, Denise Sherwood, Felbm, Jyoti, Dan Jose and more. Our 'Album Of The Week' is the second full-length from Kamaal Williams.
(www.blueingreenradio.com)
1. Kamaal Williams - Toulouse ft. Miguel Atwood Ferguson 2. Denise Sherwood - Music Shall Live ft. Lee "Scratch" Perry 3. Felbm - Filatelie 4. Demae - Ford 5. KeiyaA - Nu World Burdens 6. Maassai - Tu Lips 7. Mndgsn & Sofie -Abeia 8. Jyoti - Zane, The Scribe 9. Lynda Dawn & Bes Kept - Roses 10. Kamaal Williams - Hold On ft. Lauren Faith 11. Lex Amor, Hibotep & Faizal Mostrixx - Ancestry 12. Dan Jose - Bedroom Boogie (Emanative Remix) 13. Jay Glass Dubs - Our Reversed Uniforms ft. Spivak 14. Gavsborg - Julie Mango Appreciation Tweet 15. iLLer The Abstract Giraffe - Heart ft. Oscar Lane & Joe Fenwick-Wilson 16. Mansur Brown - Back South 17. Lucked In - Debi Debi (Delonte's Debi Dub) 18. Bab L ' Bluz - Gnawa Beat 19. Sisanda, Josh Doughty, Murmurate - Phambili
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sinmusica · 4 years ago
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SYSTEM 016: Hibotep por Boiler Room Puedes escuchar más música en Top 100 Global de Apple Music.
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summerbreeze1 · 5 years ago
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試聴 / 購入: New Tangents In Kampala, London & Nairobi Vol. 1 Maxwell Owen, Lynda Dawn, Lex Amor, Labdi, Karun, K15, Hibotep, Faizal Mostrixx, Xenia Manasseh,
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randomaccessmemory · 5 years ago
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Muffin Alogorythm by Hibotep TRACK LIST Sango - Agorinha VHOOR - Baile Biting Down [Probcause Remix] Prod. by COFRESI Danileigh - No Limits Bizzey - Doe Je Dans ft. Adje, Jozo, YOUNGBAEKANSIE & Yung Felix Dopebwoy - Cartier ft. Chivv & 3robi Jairzinho - Tempo ft. Sevn Alias, BKO & Boef (Prod. Project Money) Lindigo - Milé Sèk Milé (David Montoya Edit) Pep - Me Fascina Matstubs - Spirits Flako 'Whats That Calling Me' (Mesektet Extnd - Project: Mooncircle) Grimey Roots -PQ Freak Nasty - Megan Thee Stallion
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sweetpalmwine · 5 years ago
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15 East African artists you need to hear
While contemporary African music is now getting some much-deserved attention on the world stage, often the focus is on the music of West or Southern Africa. In fact, you can probably narrow it down to four countries: Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa and Mozambique. Perhaps DRC will get a mention for its 1960s big-band sound and distinctive Lingala guitar, whose influence can be heard in African pop across the continent, and as far afield as Colombia. If it isn't Afrobeats getting a boost from Drake, then it's Diplo talking kuduro and South African house. These are amazing, influential genres of music, but they're a very limited representation of what Africa has on offer. Setting aside the issue of compressing the music of the second-most populous continent under a single label, we are still left with a massive blind spot. One region that remains under the radar (both inside Africa and elsewhere) despite consistently producing significant and forward-facing music is East Africa. Tanzanian and Ugandan acts like Diamond Platnumz and Eddy Kenzo regularly give Wizkid and Davido a run for their money on continental pop charts. Young Nairobi producers are creating thrilling new genres like shrap, which features sheng (Swahili urban slang) lyrics over trap beats. European producers have been sampling Ethiopian rhythms and melodies for decades, but some of this has been done without a proper understanding or regard for the context in which the music was originally made. Electronic music in East Africa is expanding exponentially as access to internet and software grows steadily. (Kenya, for example, has one of the world's fastest data connection speeds, faster than the US and South Korea.) As musicians draw from a rich musical history and incredible ethnic diversity, they are creating sounds that are new and unique. Working to bridge the gap between traditional music styles and commercial forms is Santuri Safari, which facilitates collaboration between musicians inside and outside the East African region, both traditional and electronic. This means they get hardware to DJs and producers in cities like Dar Es Salaam, Kampala, Nairobi and Kigali, while also working with international producers like Sam Jones and Esa Williams, hooking them up with swiftly-disappearing local instruments like the nyatiti or the embaire, a giant xylophone played by eight or more people. All of this is in service of creating club-friendly bangers that can compete with Western hits and their East African derivatives on the radio and the dance floor. Just A Band were among the first in Kenya and East Africa to make a name for themselves internationally with an undeniably electronic sound. Though the band is now on hiatus as members pursue their own projects in film, animation and music, "Blinky" Bill Sellanga continues to blaze trails as an artist, with his first solo album due later this year. Bill believes the East African music scene is experiencing a renaissance. "There's a proliferation of bands and artist communities that are seeking out sounds that represent them," he says. "They incorporate a lot of different elements from around the world, while also looking inwards and coming out with a new sound." Over in Uganda, the label Nyege Nyege Tapes grew out of an electronic dance party series and an international music festival featuring African acts alongside global artists whose work is in conversation with sounds from the continent. Passionate about the music that does not always make it to mainstream Ugandan radio, their releases are unlike anything else out there currently, and are getting embraced on dance floors both in the capital, Kampala, and in Europe. Whether it is singeli music, the furious sound of Dar Es Salaam's ghetto youth, or the eminently danceable wedding music of the Luo people of Northern Uganda, it's clear that we are going to be hearing of a lot more East African artists in the coming years. A list like this one can never do justice to the many East African artists beating against economic and geopolitical boundaries, but here are 15 who define the breadth of the scene in 2018.
Kampire Bahana, one of the bubbling region's rising stars, profiles some of her favourite DJs and live acts.
Alai K AKA Disco Vumbi (Kenya) Coming out of the '90s Nairobi hip-hop collective Ukoo Flani, Alai K's second life as an electronic producer reflects a return to his first loves: the chakacha music of the coastal Swahili people, and benga, the irresistible dance music of rural Kenya. Calling his style "Disco Vumbi"—meaning "dust disco"—his exuberant music calls to mind the outdoor parties of 1970s Kenya from which people would return home covered in dust kicked up by furious dancing.
Muthoni The Drummer Queen (Kenya) Muthoni burst onto the scene over a decade ago, founding a number of live music events including Blankets And Wine, which now takes place in three East African countries, and Africa Nouveau, one of the few festivals on the continent featuring an entirely African lineup. The recently released SHE is a pop-friendly concept album that deals with the construction of African women's identity.
Labdi (Kenya) By playing the orutu, Labdi is defying the culture she aims to preserve. It's a stringed instrument that's taboo for women to play. Yet there is no dissonance in her style, which merges traditional Luo rhythms and lyrics with popular sounds. Her forward-thinking approach to songwriting and her warm vocals make her a popular collaborator for electronic producers in both Kenya and Europe.
Ethiopian Records (Ethiopia) Working alongside Mikael Seifu and Dawit Eklund to create a style they call Ethiopiyawi Electronic, Ethiopian Records (AKA Endeguena Mulu) is at the forefront of producers and DJs pushing back against Western-imitative Ethiopian pop and Ethiopian-imitative Western house and techno to create something new, authentic and rooted.
KMRU (Kenya) Joseph Kamaru's work reflects the diversity of music coming out of a youthful Nairobi. Tending towards ambient sounds, his first EP was released by German label Black Lemon and his next EP will include collaborations with Pablo Fierro, Perera Elsewhere and Ghanaian songwriter and poet Poetra Asantewa.
Otim Alpha (Uganda) Otim Alpha has been making music for years alongside his producer Leo P'layeng, but despite being endlessly danceable, for a long time their tracks did not make it far outside of Luo communities in Uganda and the diaspora. Now, that's changing. Since last year's Gulu City Anthems, released on Nyege Nyege Tapes, Otim has played at the esteemed festivals Unsound and CTM, with plenty more dates lined up in 2018.
Hibotep (Uganda/Somalia) Young DJ, producer and filmmaker Hibotep brings a love of bass and trap to her weird-kid aesthetic. In 2018 her project Ninjabis was selected by Holly Herndon for the 2018 Forecast Platform and she will perform live at the Forecast Festival in Berlin in October.
DJ Rachael (Uganda) Uganda's first woman DJ, Rachael has been holding down the decks in Kampala for more than two decades. Through her Femme Electronic platform she is passing on skills and opportunities to women DJs in Kenya and Uganda. Her recent collaborations with The Black Madonna have brought new attention to her career, and she has performed at WOMEX and Chicago's smartbar.
Faizal Mostrixx (Uganda) Contemporary dancer turned electronic producer Faizal Ddamba Mostrixx makes "tribal house"—with a clear understanding of the role that East African instruments and Baganda rhythms play in their traditional context. His hope in merging these sounds with electronic techniques, he says, is to preserve the cultural heritage of the instruments and songs he samples. His last album, Tribal Match, is a must-listen.
Nihiloxica (Uganda/UK) Another act using traditional Baganda elements, this time a four-person percussive troupe (who also perform under a larger crew called Nilotica Cultural Ensemble) merged with electronic percussion from Blip Discs' Spooky J and his production partner PQ. Together they have created something entirely new. The group made their debut at CTM Berlin and will be all over Europe this summer, including stops at Roskilde and Strange Sounds From Beyond.
Mim Suleiman (Tanzania) Mim Suleiman brings traditional Tanzanian and Zanzibari music to the contemporary stage with collaborations with electronic artists like Spoek Mathambo and Maurice Fulton. Think Taarab vocals and percussion crossed with dub and disco. Many consider the traditions that Suleiman was brought up in to be going extinct, but her music will give you hope for its future.
Sisso Records (Tanzania) Singeli is the opposite of Tanzania's leisurely taraab sound, and the aspirational commercial values of bongo flava pop. Rabid-sounding and driven by the youngest and poorest of Dar Es Salaam's neighbourhoods, it sounds unlike anything you may have associated with Africa. With their release on Nyege Nyege Tapes, Sisso Records producer Bampa Pana and MC Makaveli have become Singeli's ambassadors to the world and just completed a spirited tour of the UK.
MC Caad Reeda and MC Memoree Cad (Tanzania) Singeli, born of slums like Tandale that are synonymous with poverty, is as male-dominated as any other music scene. But two female MCs coming to prominence, Caad Reeda and Memoree Cad, work closely with one of Sisso Studio's pioneers Jay Mitta, and will appear on a forthcoming release on Uganda's Nyege Nyege Tapes label.
Runka (Kenya) Karungari "Karun" Mungai is a member of the art collective Cosmic Homies, who merge electronica and R&B with an indie worldview. She is one of very few Kenyan women in production, and is part of the genre-defying and prolific NuNairobi movement, which includes a number of other young producers making waves like Jinku, NvFunk, Sichangi and Basthma.
DJ Raph (Kenya) The Kenyan underground continues to produce stellar DJs and producers making thoughtful and exciting new music. DJ Raph's latest release, Sacred Groves, comes out of the University Of Bayreuth's Mashup The Archive project. Sampling field recordings that are representative of the extensive archives of African art gathering dust in European collections, Raph creates access to these meaningful works by way of the dance floor. Kampire is performing at this year's Sónar Festival in Barcelona.
Words /Kampire Bahana
Published /Wed, 23 May 2018
7Fantastic to see articles like this! Thank you! Just one very quick query. Currentlg living in Mozambique myself, I was surprised to see the author claim that it is one of four African countries whose music is appreciated outside the continent. Considering the local music styles of pandza and marrabenta are totally unheard of in Europe, that the most popular local tunes tend to be sung in Changana (on the inevitable theme of weddings), and that the most popular music even in Mozambique tends to be from South Africa or Angola (the home of both Kuduro and Kizomba), I am curious as to the reasoning behind this. Anyway, thanks for the great article! Would love to see more like this!
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shemakesnoisefestival · 5 years ago
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HORARIOS 2019
FECHAS - Del 03 al 06 de octubre
03/10
16h a 20h - Torreón 1 TALLER > “ Taller digital “Interactivos” impartido por Elena Juárez
21h - Patio
CONCIERTO > Abyss X _____________________________________
04/10
16h a 20h - Torreón 1 TALLER > “ Taller digital “Interactivos” impartido por Elena Juárez 19h - Sala audiovisual
SESIÓN DE CINE - PIA HELLENTHAL > Searching Eva. Alemania, 2019. 90’. VOSE (Estreno en España) 20.30h - Patio
CONCIERTOS > Hibotep > Poison Arrow + Cornelia Thonhauser present. Uncanny Cantina (AV Show) > Juliana Huxtable
00:30h - Postparty oficial she makes noise - Stardust at Sala Cool > Natalia Escobar > Mendi > Cera Khin _____________________________________
05/10
12h - Patio
CONCIERTO EN FAMILIAS > Mursego
19h - Sala audiovisual
SESIÓN DE CINE > The Glass Note, de Mary Helena Clark. Estados Unidos, 2018. 9’. VOSE > Veslemøy's Song, de Sofia Bohdanowicz. Canadá, 2018. 8’. VOSE  > Sojourner, de Cauleen Smith. Estados Unidos, 2018. 22’. VOSE (Estreno en España) > Queen, de Kathryn Elkin. Reino Unido, 2019. 12’48”. VOSE (Estreno en España) > I hope I´m loud when I´m dead, de Beatrice Gibson. Reino Unido, 2018. 20’. VOSE  21h - Auditorio
CONCIERTOS > Clon & NWRMNTC present META (A/V PERFORMANCE) > Electric Indigo
_____________________________________
06/10
12h - Patio
CONCIERTO EN FAMILIAS > SLVJ y Rayuli - Camuflaje
18h - Auditorio CHARLA / ENCUENTRO > “20 años de female: pressure. Ayer y hoy de la mujer en la industria musical y las artes digitales” con Susanne Kirchmayr aka Electric Indigo. Modera - Estela Oliva
19h - Sala audiovisual
SESIÓN DE CINE - JENNIFER REEDER > Knives and skin, de Jennifer Reeder. Estados Unidos, 2019. 111’. VOSE
ENTRADAS: 5 euros concierto del jueves 10 euros concierto del viernes 10 euros concierto del sábado 3 euros conciertos en familias 3 euros sesión cine / día Charla / Encuentro - Entrada libre hasta completar aforo
A la venta aquí
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nataalmedia-blog · 6 years ago
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Emerging DJ Hibotep (@hibotep) brings the bounce to every dance floor in Kampala worth discovering. Nataal met up with her in the Ugandan capital to talk all things music. . Nataal would like to thank to British Council’s (@britisharts) East Africa Arts programme (@eastafricaarts) for its support of our Kampala editorial focus. . Hibotep: Link to read in bio . Photographer: Alim Karmali (@latenightrides) Words: Helen Jennings (@hellojennings) . #NataalMedia #Kampala #Uganda #Hibotep #DJ #eastafricaarts (at Kampala, Uganda) https://www.instagram.com/p/BrZ8PNDnrI6/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1z9yhplx95bz
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williamkaen · 6 years ago
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Hibo X Vata. @hibotep @vatadelgata . . . #PortraitPerfection #Portrait_Society #IGPortrait #Portraiture #PortraitOfTheDay #WithHumans #pursuitofportraits #Portrait_Mood #InstaPortrait #PostMorePortraits #Portrait_Shots #PursuitOfPortrait #PortraitPage #PortraitSociety #DiscoverPortrait #people #african_portraits #africanfashion #humans (at Africa/Kampala) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bs0w8KLl8IH/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=9um932sy5ax7
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