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词条 Draft:Music for Saharan Cellphones
释义

  1. Content

  2. History

  3. Critical reception

  4. Track listing

  5. References

{{AFC submission|t||ts=20181203145438|u=72.43.200.112|ns=118|demo=}}{{Album infobox
|name=Music from Saharan Cellphones: Volume 1
|released=2010
|producer=Christopher Kirkley
|type=Compilation
|length=43:18
|label={{flatlist|
  • Sahel Sounds
  • Mississippi

}}
}}{{Album infobox
|name=Music from Saharan Cellphones: Volume 2
|released=January 5, 2013
|producer=Christopher Kirkley
|type=Compilation
|length=45:53
|label={{flatlist|
  • Sahel Sounds
  • Mississippi

}}
}}

Music from Saharan Cellphones, incorrectly labeled by some writers as Music for Saharan Cellphones,[1][2] is a series of three albums of tracks compiled by Christopher Kirkley and released by the label Sahel Sounds.

Content

Sahel Sounds categorized the styles of music on Music from Saharan Cellphones as including "spaced out Tuareg Autotune, Ivorian Club Jams, Mauritanian Synth, and Malian Hip Hop electro."[2]

History

In 2009,[4] Christopher Kirkley went to Mali with an initial attention to make field recordings of the desert.[3]

First released on cassette in 2010,[4] the first volume of Music from Saharan Cellphones was covered in a Pitchfork feature about music scarcity, written by Mark Richardson and published on October 22, 2010.[4] At the time the article was released, the artist of the tracks on the compilation and their names were unknown.[4] Subbacultcha writer Zofia Ciechowska claimed Music from Saharan Cellphones "gained a lot of hype and subsequently got remixed by a number of unknown dudes."[9] The vinyl release of the second volume was crowdfunded through Kickstarter for a goal of $4,000, rewards for crowdfunding including digital, cassette, and SD card versions of the album, cellphones found in West Africa that contain MP3 files, and a ticket to attend a DJ set by Kirkley.[5]

The third volume, titled Music For Saharan Cellphones: The International Reworks Compilation, was released by Boomarm Nation on 10 October 2011.[1] It is a set of remixes of the songs from the first two volumes,[1] The formats it was released in include a free download and limited runs of cassette tape and SD card versions.[1]

Critical reception

Richardson opined that most of Music for Saharan Cellphones's appeal came from how hard the music on it was hard to find in the first place: "If the comp was called Music Downloaded From the Soulseek Folders of College Kids in the Sahara, that wouldn't be as interesting. Digital-to-digital is banal. That's what we live with everyday. But the fact that this music was once in someone's pocket and couldn't easily make its way from there around the world is what makes it special."[4] Ciechowska called the album "mindblowingly awesome" for the fact that, thanks to the wide release of it, the previously-rare music on it "has crossed so many different borders on so many different levels that it makes my head hurt when I think about it."[6]

Track listing

{{Track listing
|headline=Volume 1[7]
|extra_column=Original artist
|title1=Tinariwen
|extra1=Group Anmataff
|length1=6:16
|title2=Abandé
|extra2=Yeli Fuzzo
|length2=3:31
|title3=Alghafiat
|extra3=Amanar
|length3=6:37
|title4=Guetna
|extra4=Negib Ould Ngainich
|length4=1:14
|title5=Yereyira
|extra5=Papito featuring Iba One
|length5=4:48
|title6=Tahoultine
|extra6=Mdou Moctar
|length6=5:37
|title7=Moribiyassa
|extra7=Kaba Blon
|length7=3:40
|title8=Faroter
|extra8=Joskar and Flamzy
|length8=5:27
|title9=Aicha
|extra9=Bayta Ag Bay
|length9=6:08
|total_length=43:18
}}{{Track listing
|headline=Volume 2[8]
|extra_column=Original artist
|title1=Anar
|extra1=Mdou Moctar
|length1=4:34
|title2=Imidiwane
|extra2=Mouma Bob
|length2=5:17
|title3=Friday
|extra3=(uncredited)
|length3=1:01
|title4=Amidine
|extra4=Hasso Akotey
|length4=6:15
|title5=Soul Tamashek
|extra5=Lakal Kaney
|length5=6:07
|title6=Peguele
|extra6=DJ Mopao
|length6=5:03
|title7=Souvernir Nam Adjosa
|extra7=Koudédé ]
|length7=3:59
|title8=Waihidjo
|extra8=Pheno S.
|length8=4:34
|title9=All (Remix)
|extra9=Iba One
|length9=5:04
|title10=Hwa Heda
|extra10=Cheba Wassila
|length10=3:59
|total_length=45:53
}}

References

1. ^{{cite web|last=Singer|first=Matthew|date=10 October 2011|url=https://www.wweek.com/portland/blog-27720-cut-of-the-day-brainstorm-tahoultine-music-for-saharan-cellphones-the-international-reworks-compilation.html|title=Cut of the Day: Brainstorm, "Tahoultine," Music For Saharan Cellphones: The International Reworks Compilation|work=Willamette Week|accessdate=6 December 2018}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=https://shop.sahelsounds.com/collections/frontpage/products/music-from-saharan-cellphones-vol-1|title=Music from Saharan Cellphones Vol. 1|publisher=Sahel Sounds Official Website|accessdate=4 December 2018}}
3. ^{{cite web|last=Wright|first=Mic|date=1 November 2010|url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/musicblog/2010/nov/01/music-from-saharan-cellphones-mali|title=Desert discs: how mobile phones are at the root of Saharan music|work=The Guardian|accessdate=5 December 2018}}
4. ^{{cite web|last=Richardson|first=Mark|date=22 October 2010|url=https://pitchfork.com/features/resonant-frequency/7876-resonant-frequency-74/|title=Five Thoughts on Music Scarcity|website=Pitchfork|accessdate=4 December 2018}}
5. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.thewire.co.uk/news/19239/music-for-saharan-cellphones-vol.2-crowdfunding-lp-release|title=Music For Saharan Cellphones Vol.2 crowdfunding LP release|work=The Wire|date=21 August 2012|accessdate=4 December 2018}}
6. ^{{cite web|last=Ciechowska|first=Zofia|date=December 2011 – January 2012|url=https://issuu.com/subbacultcha/docs/subbacultcha-december2011-january2012|title=5 Albums You Missed|page=43|work=Subbacultcha|accessdate=3 December 2018}}
7. ^{{cite web|url=https://sahelsounds.bandcamp.com/album/music-from-saharan-cellphones|title=Music from Saharan Cellphones|publisher=Sahel Sounds Official Bandcamp|accessdate=3 December 2018}}
8. ^{{cite web|url=https://sahelsounds.bandcamp.com/album/music-from-saharan-cellphones-volume-2|title=Music from Saharan Cellphones: Volume 2|publisher=Sahel Sounds Official Bandcamp|accessdate=3 December 2018}}
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