KPFA 94.1FM Tuesday, December 26, 2006 Playlist for Music of the World with Host Victoria
1. Susana Baca – Viento Del Olvido – Travesias – Live KPFA recording – Y
2. Susana Baca – Siempre – Travesias – Live KPFA recording – Y
3. Interview with Susana Baca – Part 1 (Connections)
4. Susana Baca – Merci Bon Dieu – Travesias – Live KPFA recording – Y
5. Interview with Susana Baca – Part 2 (Negroes, Indios y Mujeres)
6. Susana Baca – Pensamiento – Travesias – Live KPFA recording – Y
7. Interview with Susana Baca – Part 3 (Negro Continuo) Part 4 (New Orleans & Chicago)
8. Susana Baca – Lunadero – Travesias – Live KPFA recording – Y
9. Hamza El Din – Anesigu – A Wish – Sounds True – N
10. Jahle – Lullaby – The Rough Guide to the Music of Iran – World Music Network – Y
11. Riffat Sultana – Hosh – Sufi, Folk & Love Songs – http://riffatsultana.com – Y
11:00AM
12. Omar Faruk Tekbilek – Ole Aman – Tree of Patience – White Swan Records – Y
13. Alpendub vs. The Man Cable – Jaga Ode (Dubtronik) – The Rough Guide to Yodel – World Music Network – Y
14. Gigi – Anten – Gold & Wax – Palm Picutres – Y
15. Buscemi vs. Kocani Orkestar – Alone At My Wedding – Electric Gypsyland 2 – Crammed Discs – Y
16. Cibelle – Arrete La, Menina f. Seu Jorge – The Shine of Dried Electric Leaves – Six Degrees Records – Y
17. Sidestepper – San Juan – Continental – Sony BMG – Y
18. Omar Sosa – Muevete En D – Live a FIP – Ota Records – Y
19. Quantic – An Announcement to Answer – An Announcement to Answer – Ubiquity Recordings – Y
20. Thunderball – Electric Shaka f. Afrika Bambaataa – Cinescope – ESL Music – Y
21. Tommy Guerrerro – War No More – From the Soil to the Soul – Quannum Projects – Y
22. Greenskeepers – Bloodclot – Polo Club – OM Records – Y
23. El Vez – En El Barrio (at Xmas time) – Sno-Way Jose – Graciasland Records – N
24. Richard Cheese – Ice Ice Baby – Silent Nightclub – Surfdog Records – Y
KPFA 94.1FM Tuesday, December 19, 2006 Playlist for Music of the World with Host Victoria
1. Marcel Khalife – Part One – Taqasim – Nagam Records – Y
2. Riffat Sultana – Naina re Naina – Sufi, Folk & Love Songs – riffatsultana.com
3. Ali Farka Toure – Savane – Savane – World Circuit – Y
4. Arian Band – Afsoongar – The Rough Guide to the Music of Iran – World Music Network – Y
5. Rahim Alhaj – Taqsim Maqam Mukhalif – When the Soul Is Settled: Music of Iraq – Smithsonian Folkways – Y
6. Jahle – Lullaby – The Rough Guide to the Music of Iran – World Music Network – Y
7. Abdel Gadir Salim with Emmanuel Jal – Ya Salam – Rhythm of the River – Riverboat Records – Y
8. Amr Diab – Ya Nour El Ein – The Rough Guide to Latin- Arabia – World Music Network – Y
9. Sierra Maestra – El Son No Puede Fallar – Rhythm of the River – Riverboat Records – Y
10. Cheb Sahraoui – Je Suis Naif – The Rough Guide to Latin- Arabia – World Music Network – Y
11. John Santos & The Machete Ensemble – You Don’t Know What Love Is f. Destani Wolf – 20th Anniversary – Machete Records – Y
11:00AM
12. Destani Wolf – Enchanted Soul (aka Tranquilo) – Again & Again – Brave Wolf Productions – Y
13. Marisa Monte – Infinito Particular – Infinito Particular – Metro Blue – Y
14. Tommy Guerrero – Salve – From the Soil to the Soul – Quannum Projects – Y
15. Hector Buitrago – Fruto Real f. Fernanda Takai – Conector – Nacional Records – Y
16. Aterciopleados – Fan #1 – Oye – Nacional Records – Y
17. Gotan Project DJ Set – Confianzas – ‘Inspiracion – Espiracion’ – XL Recordings – N
18. Do f. Omar Soso & Greg Landau – Los Dos Lados -
Emerging Artists Sampler Vol. 1 – Six Degrees Records – Y **available in digital format only**
19. Greenskeepers – 15 Minutes – Polo Club – OM Records – Y
Susan Baca
Interview & Live Studio Performance
May 22, 2006
Susana Baca – Vocals
Sergio Valdeos – Acoustic & Requinto Guitar
Juan Medrano Cotito – Cajon
David Pinto – Double, Electric & baby bass
Hugo Bravo – Percussion
The session starts with two songs from her latest album “Travesias”. First is Viento Del Olvido followed by Siempre, a song wrought with emotion – the emotion that comes with asking your querido to be there during your final moments of life.
The tenderness & beauty of her voice envelopes you when you hit play on the machine. In person in her concerts are no different. Susana Baca comes out to the stage; she extends arms wide as if to give you, the audience, a tender virtual group hug. She sings with a love, a real passion, for the music she interprets. Her voice & her band envelope you in the beauty of their music.
VZ: Welcome to KPFA.
SB: Thank you very much Victoria. I’m happy to be on your show.
VZ: Thank you, I’m not sure you understood what I just said but (laughter)…it’s all good. We just heard various songs from your new disc, Travesias (Voyages). It’s the fourth CD you’ve released with Luaka Bop. On this CD you sing…on the last CD you sang in English but on this one you sing in Spanish, French, Haitian Patois, Neapolitan and English.
SB: And no…in Portuguese. (Laughter)
VZ: Oh yes, I forgot the Portuguese. You have always interpreted songs written by poets. On this CD I notice the presence of poets and composers from places like Peru, Brazil, Haiti, Cuba, and Chile. I notice that you chose politically engaged composers – many of these were exiled from their respective countries of birth. Was this an intentional choice of yours? How did you choose these songs? Was there a particular theme?
SB: I don’t know…I journey around the world and…I sometimes come across feelings and textures that move me…they speak to me and make me want to sing them, you know? I’ve had the opportunity of enjoying the sensitivities of people like…this Greek woman who spent her exile on the Black Isle during the Greek dictatorships. This woman – Da? – produced a piece on Neruda. So I have some poems by Neruda put to music by this woman. Then there is Guillermina…on our CD that…there are things that coincide on this CD. There is a desire to cross paths, to make a connection with other peoples, with other sensitivities. I sometimes have felt a bit of the limitation of language and I try…I want to achieve a much stronger closeness than that which can be ordinarily attained – do it through the music, you know.
In that sense Travesias is very, very ambitious. And it’s true; you are making me realize that many politically outspoken composers are brought together on this CD. I have much to say. I love what we chose of Violeta Parra’s. It’s a song that obsessed me intensely. We didn’t do the whole song because it carries tremendous emotional weight – so we did three of the five verses. Then there is a song that seems to be thanking God for all he has given us…for the life he’s given us. It’s tinged in irony and double meaning, like all Afro Peruvian songs are. There are songs completely coated in double meaning sung by slaves or blacks – sung by us – that intend to connect with someone like us but that won’t be understood by other people. In the case of Merci Bon Dieu, God is apparently being thanked, yet in fact it talks about there not being enough food to eat, and that the maize hasn’t grown sufficiently or if it has they still can’t get to eat it. So…thank you God for the misery…that’s a strong statement!
And I remember hearing this song on the radio about twenty years ago and falling in love with it. In those days we would tape stuff off the radio. (The importance of radio…some day I should talk about that.) So we taped it and I learned it…I looked for the pronunciation because it was in Creole. And when we were going to debut it in New York some three years ago we happened to be traveling in this taxi. The taxi driver was this very black gentleman, and we started rehearsing the song in the taxi. I was with Ricardo. So we start rehearsing and I start singing, and the driver turns around and says, “that is from Haiti,” and begins speaking in French. And then he starts singing with us. The guy was Haitian and it was his song! What a way to connect…music is so beautiful; it connects you with others like that. It connects you with people that aren’t necessarily intellectuals, poets, or poetry connoisseurs. It creates bonds with common folk who feel it and that’s what is most beautiful about looking for and finding these songs, and finding that they are connected.
I invited Marc Ribot to play on this CD. And when I sent him the demo he flipped out because one of the songs belonged to his guitar teacher Franz Casseus. Marc has produced a whole project on the works of Franz Casseus. And it so happens that Merci Bon Dieu is by Franz Casseus. So everything keeps on linking up and linking together…it seems magical.
VZ: Yeah, that is very magical. It’s miraculous how we make these connections without intending to.
SONG ID: MERCI BON DIEU
VZ: After putting out so many CD’s you still seem to feel the need to promote Afro Peruvian culture. Has the attitude towards indigenous people and blacks changed in Peru? Or is there still a level of silence…in English we call it internalized hatred, a hatred towards being black or indigenous?
SB: The reality is that…I still feel there exists insecurity and a relationship between poor, black and indigenous. You know? So there is relationship between this and people sometimes hide, they sometimes hide what they feel, what they express. So I believe the importance of highlighting forgotten cultures is a never-ending priority…on…on the radio waves…invade. Invade it because the there were so many years of silence. So we must compensate for that silence.
On an emotional front, I will always want to open up more space for that silenced history and that silenced music. I feel its dissemination is wider now, its receiving commercial attention and all that. But the connection to that human being is missing, the one who is listening to it on some corner somewhere – that lady or youngster who says, “Yeah, I’m black. I am a mix of indigenous and black, and this is what I am. And I have worth.” It’s important. It’s very important.
Of course, up until a few years ago I was very preoccupied and felt like I was on a mission…doing this important work of showing the world, of showcasing Afro Peruvian music and culture on big stages around the world, as I’ve had the chance to. Interestingly, now that my music is well known, there has been a boomerang effect back in Peru as well. Young musicians in Peru who have my music and material as a frame of reference are now also looking inwards and searching for the roots and are creating their own styles of expression. They are combining electronica with cajones. They are combining rock with Afro Peruvian music. So there is a new scene emerging that fills me with happiness. This…this shows it wasn’t in vain. It wasn’t in vain.
And now, with the new album Travesias, I felt I wanted to open myself up a bit more to the world. I wanted to reach out to other frontiers, cross other borders. So I looked for love songs, poems that coincidentally always speak of women, of the beauty of women. This was also a conscious choice. Why? Because I heard many, many songs as a child that spoke horribly of women. So I feel that, through knowing some incredible women, as Silvio Rodriguez’ song says, “There is no story that can hold them back.” So I feel I will always sing to women’s beauty, to women’s power, because I have known extraordinary women, because I know extraordinary women.
VZ: I’m glad you gave me that piece of information because I wanted to ask you about that. I’ve noticed you always sing love songs written by men for women, right? And sometimes, when female interpreters sing those songs they change the gender. So…
SB: [Laughter] I don’t like that. [More laughter] I don’t like it and I think it’s beautiful to say…for example in Pensamiento, “tell her I think about her even if she doesn’t think about me.” That’s what the author said! Plus, the author was…his nickname was Teofilito but it was Rafael Gomez. So, this gentleman was at a party and he was trying to court this woman and he refers to her through a flower’s name so that no one will notice. So, who are we to modify that? You can’t change that; you don’t have the right to change that. You have to sing it with the same emotion…
VZ: Well done is what I say.
SONG ID:
PENSAMIENTO
VZ:Your comments lead me to another question. Many years ago you and your husband founded an institute, Negro Continuo. I wanted to know how that institute is doing and if you are still involved in it.
SB: Yes, we are very immersed in it. So immersed that we have decided to move the Negro Continuo Institute. We are moving it 100 kilometers out of Lima, to the coast….to a place where sugar cane and cotton were grown and exploited. Both of these are powerful symbols of the work slaves endured, of the economic abuse, of the abuse of worker’s rights – and this place eventually became a cooperative. The plantations were expropriated and converted into cooperatives, but without any formation or preparation – they were simply laws passed at a particular political juncture. When…what do you call it when…they pass a law…I’m forgetting the name. But it’s something that looks good on the surface but doesn’t tackle the root of the issue. In other words, they instituted an agrarian reform but didn’t give people the education and training to move it forward. So that cooperative has had to focus on simple survival. It’s a very poor place with a very rudimentary economy where people are peasants and fishermen/fisherwomen. It’s an impoverished place. Since they are also few in numbers, they have no worth politically speaking. So no one heeds them any attention. We’ve gone to live there. We’ve set up shop there. We moved Negro Continuo there. We are in the process of building a cultural center. It’s going to include a museum. It has a
documentation center and will have a small recording studio to access the talent of some of the young folks there. You can find them there, working on their stuff.
But it isn’t just a cultural project – we are becoming part of the community. Gaining an understanding of their necessities. They said it themselves, “You are an important person. The president honored you when you won the Grammy. Could you please tell him that we need a drainage and sewage system?” The freeway was going to cut straight through the town. The community was able to stop this. The community now has a drainage system. A pre-school meal hall has been set up with German assistance. So many beneficial things have been achieved for the community. So we plan to go work there to promote a revival of the culture, to foster and grow the talent that exists there.
VZ: It’s great that you have been able to provide that kind of support.
SB: Culture, society, and reality…it’s imperative that artists…if we only inhabit our fantasy worlds, the beauty of making music, the happiness of creating it, if we don’t….that’s not the only thing out there. Many wrongs are taking place around us. An artist needs to be conscious of and interacting with that reality.
VZ: We only have a little time left and I want to ask you about…you came to the U.S. in August of 2005 to study at Tulane University. I believe you were going to do research on the music of the African Diaspora, as well as study Louis Armstrong’s music. Can you tell us a bit about that?
SB: Yes, the importance of African-Americans in music. And also the social component. It’s a co-scholarship I’m sharing with Ricardo Pereira (her husband). I did the first five months. I had the chance to be in New Orleans in August. At the time, there were festivals taking place all over the city. I had never been in New Orleans before. It was my first time and I was very happy to be in a place whose hero is a musician and black. So, for me it was…I was writing these letters to Cotito. Juan Medrano ‘Cotito’ is the percussionist – he plays the cajón. And I told Cotito, “This is our city. We have to come sing here.” Then the tragedy of Katrina struck and those were very, very sad months. I still feel pain when I think back to that moment that we, that the world, experienced by seeing New Orleans – a beautiful city with its people, musicians and culture – abandoned, completely abandoned. We couldn’t believe that in a country like the U.S., with the capacity and infrastructure to deal with all sorts of challenges…I couldn’t believe so many days passed and New Orleans was ignored, I mean there were people rescued days later who had received no food aid whatsoever. How doctors had to struggle just trying to save their patients’ lives. That story, I believe the true story of what went down in New Orleans needs to be documented.
VZ: Yeah, that was an incredible tragedy.
SB: In the end, I believe the residents of New Orleans will know that the American people – the American people – the people rushed to the Red Cross to donate medicines… it’s the government that neglected New Orleans. Not the people. The people rushed to their aid. I saw it in Chicago. They rushed to help and donated what they didn’t even have to…to solve the problems New Orleans was facing. In any case, I was luckily able to continue my scholarship at the University of Chicago. They courteously opened their doors to me. I stayed in Chicago. That university has the most important archives on music from New Orleans in the Chicago area. So I continued my work…but I will forever carry the pain of witnessing the destruction of New Orleans.
VZ: And you are now using everything that you researched at the University of Chicago in your work…
SB: Yes, soon I expect to present some of that work. The neatest thing is to encounter areas of musical coincidence, which are things that we still…we still need to research in more depth…I don’t feel comfortable speaking to it directly. I am not a researcher; I’m just a curious person. And I’m getting a chance to study the work done by historians – true researchers. It is very serious work. So I don’t dare say more other than that we will be bringing musicians from New Orleans and Afro Peruvian musicians together. And that coming together will not only be a passionate musical encounter, it will also express a connection with the past, the present and the future of music. That’s what I feel. KPFA is obviously invited to this event…
VZ: …Thank you. So what comes next after this tour? Are you thinking of another album?
SB: Well, we have to finish the work on New Orleans. We have…we have a collaborative project pending with a modern dance group from Chicago, Luna Negra. We will put on a collaboration that…we will put on a workshop that showcases Afro Peruvian dance and then will do two concerts together in Chicago in November. The musicians and the dancers from Luna Negra will be under the direction of Eduardo Vilaro. That’s a collaboration that has me very excited.
As to my work in Peru…I have to…it’s…that work happens like droplets of water, you know? Singing in Peru is very, very challenging. Why? Because we demand a certain level of professionalism. So our presentations need to be on the same level as they are all over the world. Our shows back home need to reflect the same quality as a concert at the Queen Elizabeth Hall. In other words, the show can’t be half assed simply because we are performing in Latin America or in the Third World, you know? It can’t be. It has to have the same stature. And we are up to the challenge. But, there is a lack of production…the technical infrastructure, those details needed for a good concert, you know? That’s the struggle we are facing. And I’m very stubborn.
VZ: I want to thank you for joining us today. Talking with you and listening to your musicians has been an honor and a privilege. Before we sign off, can you tell us who your musicians are?
SB: Well, I’ve been working with this group of musicians for many years. At this point we aren’t just colleagues, we’ve become family. I am a godmother to some of their kids; I’ve been the matron of honor at weddings…we are very, very connected. A lot of love exists between us. And that comes through in our music. Sergio Valdeos is the guitar player, and he is probably the youngest of the group. He was the last one to join the group, yet he’s been with us for about five years. Juan Medrano “Cotito” is in charge of the Afro Peruvian percussion and plays the cajón –an instrument that occupies a central role in our music. I’ve been working with him for about…20 years. David Pinto is the musical director and he plays the double, electric and baby bass. Hugo Bravo plays all sorts of percussion and creates the shades and nuances that are so necessary to…express our music, you know? I have a very strong spiritual connection to him. He comes from a village on the northern Coast of Peru, Sana, on the Lambayeque, that occupies a very important place within the African Diaspora. And then there is Fico Hoyle who is our sound engineer and who we see as another musician within the band. He is a musician who does his thing and plays his part while controlling the switches in the sound booth. So that’s the band…there’s a bigger group of people who work with us as well, but that list is too long to enumerate.
VZ: Thank you for telling us a bit about the musicians.
You have been listening to an interview with Susana Baca here on KPFA 94.1FM. Thank you Susana.
Credits
Fernando Fico Hoyle – Sound Engineer for Susana Baca
Michael Yoshida – KPFA Sound Engineer
Elena Pena – Tour Manager
Mateo Nube – Transcript Translation
KPFA 94.1FM Tuesday, December 12, 2006 Playlist for Music of the World with Host Victoria
1. Marcel Khalife – Beirut f. Oumayma Al-Khalil – Stripped Bare – Nagam Records – N
2. Marcel Khalife – Road Noise f. Oumayma Al-Khalil – Stripped Bare – Nagam Records – N
3. Marcel Khalife – Part One – Taqasim – Nagam Records – Y
4. The Idan Raichel Project – Bo’ee (Come With Me) – The Idan Raichel Project – Cumbancha – Y
5. Gustavo Santaolalla – Deportation / Iguazu – Babel:Music from & Inspired by the Motion Picture – Concord Music Group – Y
6. Omar Sosa – Nuevo Manto – Live a Fip – Ota Records – Y
7. President’s Breakfast – Journey – Formidable Foe – presidentsbreakfast.com – Y
8. Tartit – Tabey Tarate – Abacabok – Crammed Discs – Y
9. Balkan Beat Box vs. Mahala Rai Banda – Red Bula – Electric Gypsyland 2 – Crammed Discs – Y
10. Jef Stott – Saracen (Kemanche mix) – Sampler Vol. 1 – Six Degrees Records – Y (Digital Only Release)
11:00 AM
11. Gal Costa – Ave Maria No Morro – Global Rhythm Collector’s CD Jan 2007 – DRG Records – Y
12. Forro in The Dark – Forrowest – Bonfires of Sao Joao – Nublu Records – Y
13. Radio Citizen – Championsound f. Bajka – Berlin Serengeti – Ubiquity Recordings – Y
14. Nouvelle Vague – Heart of Glass – Bande A Part – Luaka Bop – Y
15. Michael Franti & Spearhead – Yell Fire – Yell Fire! – Boo Boo Wax – Y
16. Coco Freeman f. U2 – I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For – Rhythms Del Mundo – APE Vision – Y
17. Thievery Corporation f. David Bryne – The Heart’s A Lonely Hunter – ESL Remixed: The 100th Release of ESL Music – Y
18. Greenskeepers – 15 Minutes – Polo Club – OM Records – Y
19. Home Video – Peguin (The Loving Hand Remix) – Home Video Peguin 12″ – Defend Music – Y
20. Rachid Taha – Rock El Casbah – Global Rhythm Collector’s CD April 2005 – Wrasse Records – Y
KPFA 94.1FM Tuesday, November 21, 2006 Playlist for Music of the World with Host Victoria
1. Chavela Vargas – Te Me Acostumbraste – Babel Disc One – Concord Music Group – Y
2. Marisa Monte – Pernambucobucolismo – Infinito Particular – Metro Blue – Y
3. Forro In the Dark – Forrowest – Bonfires of Sao Joao – Nublu Records – Y
***Interview with Irene Hernandez about Chillin Brings You on Dec. 2, 2006 @ Mezzanine in SF. Chillin brings together 60 fashion designers, 80 painters & photographers & 60 filmmakers offering up their art for you.***
4. Omar Sosa – Nuevo Manto – Live a FIP – Ota Records – Y
5. Marisa Monte – Beija Eu – Mais – World Pacific – N
**Chatting it up with Andrea Lewis from KPFA’s Morning Show***
6. Thomas Mapfumo – Kuvarira Mukati – Rise Up – Real World – Y
7. Nuru Kane – Niane – Rhythm of the River – Riverboat Records – Y
8. Buscemi vs. Kocani Orkestar – Alone at My Wedding – Electric Gypsyland 2 – Crammed Discs – Y
9. Nickodemus – Mi Swing Es Tropical (Quantic f. Tempo) – Endangered Species – ESL Music – Y
10. Upground – Oye Chica – Feel The Vibe – South Ferris Reords – Y
11:00AM
11. Aterciopelados – Cancion Protesta – Oye – Nacional Records – Y
12. Pistolera – Guerra (Bilingual Bob Marley cover) – Recorded Live in KPFA Performance Studios
13. Toto La Momposina y Sus Tambores – Mapale – La Candela Viva – Real World Records – Y
14. Urban Legend – La Fuerza De La Musica f. Destani Wolf – Tranquilidad Cubana EP – Blind Lemon Music – Y
15. Destani Wolf – Revelation – Again & Again – Brave Wolf Productions – Y
***Interview with Destani Wolf. Destani is performing at the Independent (628 Divisidero @ Hayes, SF) in celebration of the cd release, Again & Again.***
16. Destani Wolf – Enchanted Soul (aka Tranquilo) – Again & Again – Brave Wolf Productions – Y
17. Tommy Guerrero – Salve f. Curumin – From the Soil to the Soul – Quannum Projects – Y
18. Quantic – An Announcement to Answer – An Announcement to Answer – Ubiquity Records – Y
KPFA 94.1FM Tuesday, November 14, 2006 Playlist for Music of the World with Host Victoria1. Gustavo Santaolalla – Tazarine – Babel: Music from & Inspired by the Motion Picture – Concord Music Group – Y
2. Marisa Monte – Infinito Particular – Infinito Particular – Metro Blue – Y
3. Susana Baca – Guillermina – Travesias – Luaka Bop – Y
4. John Santos & the Machete Ensemble – You Don’t KNow What Love Is – 20th Anniversary – Machete Records – Y
5. Eliane Elias – Running – Around the City – Bluebird – Y
6. Eliane Elias – Oye Como Va – Around the City – Bluebird – Y
7. Novalima – Mandinga – Afro – Quango Music Group – Y
8. Nickodemus – Give the Drummer Some f. Real Live Show & Nappy G – Endangered Species – ESL Music – Y
9. Hector Buitrago – Damaquiel – Conector – Nacional Records – Y
10. Quetzal – Migra – Die Cowboy Die – Quetzal Music – Y
11:00AM
11. Toto La Momposina y Sus Tambores – La Candela Viva – La Candela Viva – Real World – N
12. Daara J – Boomerang – Boomerang – Wrasse Records – Y
13. Skye – Jamaica Days – Mind How You Go – Cordless Recordings – Y
14. Eccodek – 100 Drums – More Africa In Us – White Swan Records – Y
15. Dhamaal – Chalan – Dhamaal Sound System – Surya Vault Records – Y
16. Los De Abajo – Tan Lejos, Tan Cerca (Te Vere En Mis Suenos) f. Natacha Atlas – LDA v. The Lunatics – Real World – Y
17. Natacha Atlas – Hayati Inta – Mish Maoul – Mantra Recordings – Y
18. Aterciopelados – Complemento – Oye – Nacional Recordings – Y
19. Los Abandoned – Me Quieren En Chile – Mixtape – Vapor Records – Y
20. Owusu & Hannibal – Lonnie’s Secret – Living With… – Ubiquity Recordings – Y
KPFA 94.1FM Tuesday, November 7, 2006 Playlist for Music of the World with Host Victoria
1. Marisa Monte – Pernambucobucolismo – Infinito Particular – MEtro Blue – Y
2. Cibelle – Green Grass – The Shine of Dried Electric Leaves – Six Degrees Records – Y
3. Marco Pereira – Brasileiro – Luz Das Cordas – Label? – Y
4. Zero 7 – Futures – The Garden – Atlantic – Y
5. Sierra Maestra – El Son No Puede Fallar – Rhythm of the River – Riverboat Records – Y
6. Tartit – Abacabok – Abacabok – Crammed – Y
7. Sally Nyolo – Bikoutsi – Sally Nyolo & the Original Bands of Yaounde – Riverboat Records /World Music Network – Y
8. Jhelisa – Freedom’s Land – A Primitive Guide to Being There – Infracom! – Y
9. Thunderball – Get Up With the Get Down f. Miss Johnna M. & Mustafa Akbar – Cinescope – ESL Music – Y
10. Radio Citizen – Nightingale f. Bajka – Berlin Serengti – Ubiquity Records – Y
11. Cholo Soy – Todos Vuelven – Peruvian Waltz Chillout – Quadrasonic – Y
11:00AM
12. Mexican Institute of Sound – Dub-A El Tiempo es Muy Largo – Mejico Maxico – Nacional Records – Y
13. Pistolera – No Suspires – Siempre Hay Salida – Pistolera.net – Y
14. Pistolera – Mentirosos – Siempre Hay Salida – Pistolera.net – Y
15. Interview with Sandra Velasquez & Ani Cordero of Pistolera
16. Pistolera – Cazador – Siempre Hay Salida – Pistolera.net – Y
17. Pistolera – Acerate – Siempre Hay Salida – Pistolera.net – Y
18. Interview with Sandra Velasquez, Maria Elena, Inca B. Satz & Ani Cordero of Pistolera
19. Pistolera – Guerra – a cover of Bob Marley’s War – Pistolera.net – Y
20. Trouble in Paradise – Desperado – Demo
21. Aterciopelados – Don Dinero – Oye – Nacional Records – Y
22. Aterciopelados – Cancion Protesta- Oye – Nacional Records – Y
***Interview with Andrea from Aterciopelados. Aterciopelados are coming to Club Barcelona in Sunnyvale Friday, Nov. 10, an in store appearance at Amoeba’s in SF & Slim’s in SF on Sunday, Nov. 12***
KPFA 94.1FM Tuesday, June 27, 2006 Playlist for Music of the World with Host Victoria
1. Susana Baca – Lundero – Travesias – Luaka Bop – Y
2. Sara Tavares – Balance – Balance – Times Square Records – Y
3. Cibelle – Train Station – The Shine of Dried Electric Leaves – Six Degrees Records – Y
4. Thievery Corporation – Angels: Wax Poetic f. Norah Jones – Versions – ESL Music – Y
5. Gotan Project – Mi Confesion (f. Koxmoz) – Lunatico – XL Recordings – Y
6. Sidestepper – In The Beats We Trust – 3am (In Beats We Trust) – Palm Pictures – Y
7. Sidestepper – Paloma – New Promo release Palm Pictures – Y
8. Bebe – Siempre Me Quedara – Pafuera Teleranas – EMI Music Spain – Y
9. Juana Molina – Malherido – Son – Domino Records – Y
10. Hector Buitrago – Altisimo – Conector – Nacional Records – Y
11:00AM
Interview with Hector Buitrago
11. Hector Buitrago – Fruto Real – Conector – Nacional Records – Y
12. Hector Buitrago – Damaquiel – Conector – Nacional Records – Y
13. Los Pinguos – Maldito Corazon – Live in Los Angeles – Kufala – Y
14. Los Pinguos – Alegria – Live in Los Angeles – Kufala – Y
15. Los Pinguos – La Cubana- Live in Los Angeles – Kufala – Y
16. Ska Cubano – Soy Campesino – Ay Caramba! – Cumbancha – Y
17. Los De Abajo – Adios Negrita – LDA v The Lunatics – Real World – Y
18. Nomo – Fourth Ward – NewTones – Ubiquity Recordings – Y
KPFA 94.1FM Tuesday, June 20, 2006 Playlist for Music of the World with Host Victoria
Artist – Track – Title – Label – New?
1. Susana Baca – Merci Bon Dieu – Travesias – Luaka Bop – Y
2. Amadou & Miriam – Coulibaly – Dimanche a Bamako – Nonesuch / Warner – Y
***Amadou & Miriam perform June 25, 2pm at Stern Grove***
3. Amadou & Miriam – Artistya – Amadou & Miriam Live – Nonesuch / Warner – Y
4. Cheikha Rimitti – N’ta Goudami – N’ta Goudami – GPM / Because Music – Y
5. Los Pinguos – Maldito Corazon – Live in Los Angeles – Kufala Recordings – Y
***Saturday, June 24th – THROCKMORTON THEATRE, Mill Valley, CA
http://www.142throckmortontheatre.com
***Sunday, June 25th – SIERRA NEVADA WORLD MUSIC FESTIVAL, Boonville, CA,
http://www.snwmf.com
***Tuesday, June 27th – ELBO ROOM, San Francisco, CA, http://www.elbo.com
6. Juana Molina – Salvase Quien Pueda – Tres Cosas – Domino Records – N
7. Juana Molina – Malherido – Son – Domino Records – Y
8. Bebe – Siempre Me Quedara – Pafuera Teleranas – EMI Music Spain – Y
9. Bebe – Ella – Pafuera Teleranas – EMI Music Spain – Y
***July 5 Bebe performs at the Independent in SF with opener Sarah Tavares***
11:00AM
10. Hyim – D.O.G. – Hyim & The Fat Oakland Orchestra – Family Productions – Y
***Hyim & The Fat Oakland Orchestra perform Friday, June 23 at the summer solstice celebration, a benefit for Coronado Elementary After School Music program, at the Shattuck Downlow in Berkeley; http://www.hyimvibe.com ***
11. Hyim – Sunny Day – Hyim & The Fat Oakland Orchestra – Family Productions – Y
12. Hyim – These Are No Foolish Dreams – Hyim & The Fat Oakland Orchestra – Family Productions – Y
13. Hyim – Fools With Dreams – Hyim & The Fat Oakland Orchestra – Family Productions – Y
14. Thievery Corporation – Tanara: Ustad Sultan Khan – Versions – ESL Music – Y
15. Jorge Drexler – La Edad Del Cielo – La Edad Del Cielo – EMI Music Spain – N
16. Sidestepper – Deja – 3am (in beats we trust) – Palm Pictures – N
*** June 30 Sidestepper performs at the Independent in SF ***
17. Ska Cubano – Soy Campesino – Ay Caramba! – Cumbancha – Y
18. Hector Buitrago – Altisimo – Conector – Nacional Records – Y
KPFA 94.1FM Tuesday, June 13, 2006 Playlist for Music of the World with Host Victoria
Missed the show? click here: June 13
1. Susana Baca – Siempre – Travesias – Luaka Bop – Y
2. Cibelle – Instante de Dois – The Shine of Dried Electric Leaves – Six Degrees Records – Y
3. RH Factor – Crazy Race – Distractions – Verve Music Group – Y
4. Aimee Mann – Humpty Dumpty – Lost in Space – Superego Records – N
***June 18 Aimee Mann performing at Stern Grove with opener Seu Jorge ***
5. Seu Jorge – Bem Querer (My Dear) – Cru – Wrasse – Y
6. Juana Molina – Malherido – Son – Domino Records – Y
****June 17 Juana Molina performing at Bimbos 365 Club with Jose Gonzalez & Psapp***
7. Jose Gonzalez – Stay in the Shade – Stay in the Shade EP – A Hidden Agenda Record – Y
8. Bebe – Ella – Teleranas Pafuera – EMI International – Y
***July 5 Bebe performs at the Independent in SF with opener Sarah Tavares***
9. Sara Tavares – Bom Feeling – Balance – Times Square Records – Y
10. Novalima Regresa – Con La Capilla – La Mujer De Mi Hermano: Music Inspired by the Film – Nacional Records – Y
11. Hector Buitrago – Altisimo f. Alex Ubago & Andrea Echeverri – Conector – Nacional Records – Y
12. Thievery Corporation – Tanara: Ustad Sultan Khan – Versions – ESL Music – Y
***July 20 Thievery comes to the SF Concourse****
11:00AM
13. Gigi – Anten – Gold & Wax – Palm Pictures – Y
14. Cheb i Sabbah – Sadats: Les Filles de Marrakech Remix – La Ghriba La Kahena Remixed – Six Degrees Records – Y
***June 16 Cheb i Sabbah opens for Baaba Maal at the Masonic****
15. Natacha Atlas – Hayati Inta – Mish Maoul – Mantra Recordings / Beggars Group – Y
16. Cheb i Sabbah – Madh Assalhin: The Zen Breaks Remix – La Ghriba La Kahena Remixed – Six Degrees Records – Y
17. Nomo – Fourth Ward – Newtones – Ubiquity Records – Y
18. Si*Se – Sometimes – More Shine – Fuerte Records – Y
***June 24 Si*Se comes to Bimbos 365 Club***
19. Gotan Project – La Viguela – Lunatico – XL Recordings – Y
20. Tanghetto – La Muerte del Prejuicio (Aetherea Mix)
21. Amadou et Marian – Artistya – Amadou & Marian Live – Nonesuch – Y