Ex Centric Sound System Downloads

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Genres

From: North America > Jamaica, Trinidad & Tobago, United States
And: Middle East > Israel

Genres: Afrobeat, Electronica, World Fusion, Ethno-Techno

Ex Centric Sound System

The Ex-Centric Sound System is about the common thread of Black Music, past & future, using the ancient ghanian Sankofa sign, which means “looking backward in order to move forward”.

Ex-Centric-Sound System presents an original Electro/-African vibe, With their High energy performance, the musicians &dancers, create a new breed of sizzling beats &grooves, Dubby bass lines with authentic African instrumentation & chants, amplified with the latest technology –live on stage.

Besides using African field recording, Ex-Centric-Sound System is true to their name, by using original recordings of Jamaican artists specially recorded for this live sound system, Artists such as –Anthony b, Jah Maison , Prezzedent brown, Kulcha Knox, and many more …

Led by bassist/producer Yossi Fine and master musician/choreographer Nana Dadzie.
Ex-Centric Sound System broke onto the music scene in 2000 with their debut Electric Voodooland which was called “spiritual food in the pop-music desert” (Vibe) and “fostering some arresting transglobal fusions” (Chicago Reader), among many other critical accolades. The album, which was on hip-hop label Loud Records, drew fans across many boundaries.

Ex-Centric Sound System was founded by Israeli bass player Yossi Fine. His band includes musicians from all over Africa. Yossi Fine wanted lots of bass on this album. "The first time you stand next to the sound system trucks at Carnival in Trinidad it is unbelievable," exclaims Fine. "On one truck alone, the amount of low end sound, the number of speakers: it's huge! That is what we tried to create on the album," he says referring to their latest release, West Nile Funk, released on July 13, 2004.

This former bassist for David Bowie, Lou Reed, and Me'Shell Ndegocello wants you to feel the bass in your body. "When you stand in front of the trucks, you can't help it. The way you dance changes," says Fine. "You stand there once and you will be converted." Ex-Centric Sound System broke onto the music scene in 2000 with their debut Electric Voodooland which was called "spiritual food in the pop-music desert" (Vibe) and "fostering some arresting transglobal fusions" (Chicago Reader), among many other critical accolades. The CD, which was on hip-hop label Loud Records, drew fans across many boundaries.

Fine is joined by traditional Ghanaian musician-dancers Prince Nana Dadzie and Miss Adevo, and Moroccan-Israeli drummer Michael Avgil"says the sound system is a very important element in the African diaspora for gathering people. "In Africa, they do it with drums," continues Fine, who was born in Paris to a West Indian singer and an Israeli guitarist. "But in the Islands they do it with these trucks."

But there are other ambitions for West Nile Funk, the band"s second full-length release. "I am a DJ too," explains Fine. "I have spun world music dance albums, but most of them are either too soft on beats or too soft on the African element. People just get off the dance floor! Being a band with Ghanaian dancers and musicians, when we play live, people dance. I wanted to get that on record, capture the energy from our live show, but also create something that is totally progressive. A new sound for the future."

It may take a few listens to absorb all the layers. Listen on a system with good bass. Listen loud in a car and watch your mirrors bounce. Second, note that Ex-Centric turns the idea of a sample on its head. Each track includes a complete African song from start to finish, rather than small snippets repeated throughout or looped. Third, see how the grooves are driven by live bass and drums, with no guitar and very little in the way of keyboards. "This is not electronic. It is us playing live," says Fine.

Next, listen to the tempo. "A lot of people are trying to do everything with hip hop," Fine explains. "But generally African music is not suited for hip hop. Dancers in Africa need to dance faster, to get into the trance element. Our drummer plays Afrobeat but not in a "70s way. We want to take it into the future. Just as Hip Hop took a bar or two of soul and repeated it, we do that with Afrobeat. We go into a specific part of the beat and speed it up and play it over and over. It"s modernizing that stuff."

The songs themselves alternate between traditional and modern. "The Original Raga" is a Hutu wedding song. "Ebae" tells of Dadzie and Favouz"s experience as Ghanaians living in Israel. The song includes some Hebrew. The over 50,000 West Africans living in Israel have their own neighborhoods and customs. Many return to Africa with what they have learned about technology. Ex-Centric"s forward-thinking musical essence parallels the technological boom being experienced in Ghana right now. "Bring Your Calabash" is a call to party. "The calabash [a hard-shelled gourd] is perfect for this. They play it and then boom they flip it over and fill it with rice," recalls Fine. "I"ve seen it many times in Israel."

"In the beginning, I just recorded any good musicians from Africa," says Fine about the origins of the group. "But they didn"t end up in the band. "Alice in Voodooland" includes some of those other guys." The horn sound comes from a hunter from Burundi blowing and vocalizing through a pipe. He is joined by a storyteller from Togo. And Nana rounds it out with a Ghanaian dancehall vocal.

"West Nile is everything west of the Nile. Not just West Africa but the Caribbean and America too," Fine explains. "When we called our first album Electric Voodooland, it was originally going to be Electric Motherland. But it is everything that is Black. It"s the same with "Alice in Voodooland," but this time the emphasis is more on the funk elements rather than the dub element. We did the down-tempo dub element on the first album and we did not want to repeat that. I wanted a different album altogether to go completely to the future. We do not want to retro all the African things that have been done. Our logo, the Sankofa, is a Ghanaian bird looking back at its egg, and it means to look backwards in order to move forward. For this album, the forward is extremely important."

Ex-Centric Sound System's new release 'West Nile Funk' got its name because the musical ideas for the album come from anywhere west of the Nile river: from West Africa, to the Caribbean to North America. The group members combine modern funk and hip-hop with traditional ethnic music.
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Afro Riddim Sessions, Vol. 1

Featuring Anthony B, Prezedent Brown, Jah Mason, Kulcha Knox, and the new generation of Jamaican artists Modern Roots and conscious Dancehall judiciously melded with a Fine touch of ExCentric beats, percussion and trancemospherics. 

An exploration in part of the connections between Africa and Jamaica,Ex-Centric Sound System’s Israeli-West Indian founder, bassist and producer Yossi Fine ended up recording this envelope-pushing album in Israel, Africa,Jamaica and the US, taking modern JA sounds to new and different zones.

Afro Riddims merges the Ex-Centric musical concept with the new generation of conscious Jamaican dancehall and current JA roots music.
The sound is at once old and new - young Jamaicans and elder statesmen.
It was a personal journey for Yossi and a new experience for these brethren riding atypical rhythm tracks.

Yossi traveled to Jamaica in the late nineties to experience the place (“a life-long dream”), never having any idea he would wind up with enough material of sounds from Yard for more than one album.

He immediately connected, bonded and “vibed” with Jamaica’s music and culture, and Jamaica connected with him.
Ever the trans-cultural producer, he was wise enough to bring on his trip (in more than one sense) both recent unfinished Ex-Centric tracks as well as a copy of Ex-Centric’s debut disc, the hip-hop/chill out/New York-and-Africa-meet-in-Jamaica Electric Vodooland (“A triumph of the collective imagination” – Amazon).

One night, Ibo Cooper of Third World was the host of “The Cutting Edge,”Mutabaruka’s late night talk show in Jamaica on IRIE-FM.
Ibo invited Yossi on the show for an interview. That and the two tracks from the different-to-Jamaican ears Electric Vodooland that got airplay on IRIE-FM sparked interest among many of the island’s producers, musicians and DJs.
Fine was invited to play on some sessions on the island – producer and bassist Clive ‘Azul’ Hunt, among others. He also quickly found that studiosin Jamaica were set up just like Yossi’s own back in Israel! (was it in his DNA?).
The next thing to impress Yossi was learning that DJs and singers had been writing songs based on the Ex-Centric tracks they heard.

Yossi never approached anyone to do anything in Jamaica, let alone voice tracks for an album. Roots singers and conscious DJs (with the exception of Anthony B and Prezedent Brown largely unknown in Jamaica at the time),came from nowhere and approached him. “The vibe was fantastic,” says Yossi.
“We were on the same vibe. We never discussed lyrics, but lyrically there was alot of common ground. Making the album was a very spiritual journey.Very magical.I never planned it.”

After being psyched by the interest that youths and elders were demonstrating in singing and toasting over the Ex-Centric tracks and with some assistance from people like Clive Hunt, Fine decided to “book” some studio time. Soaking up more Jamaican vibes almost literally from the soil, Fine began recording at North Coast Jah Mikes’ Kariang studios in Ocho Rios.
This was a former plantation house half converted into recording studio (sound familiar?). Yossi had difficulty sleeping at night because the room above the recording studio would buzz at night with bass so severe that it literally moved the bed across the floor.
There was no running water so every morning at 7AM the artists, farmers and whoever else was around would wake up and walk two miles to a cold river to bathe.
And just because you’ve booked studio time doesn’t necessarily mean anything, As regards recording, well, you wait until the vibe hits. And that could mean two, three days of waiting… for the vibe.
You record when the artists get the vibe and are ready– whenever that is.But then, out of nowhere,magic happens. Anthony B came in, wrote “Need Love Here” in a hour, and Recorded it in one take. No words were exchanged except “Could you double your chorus?”

“The way the album is edited, it’s the way I did my [DJ] sets,” says Yossi.
“It’s the journey of a DJ.” But a DJ who is also a keen producer that has been aware of reggae for years. Yossi’s mother took him to see Bob Marley in Paris in 1978, and that’s partly why percussionist Bongo Herman, drummer Barnabas and trombonist Chico Chin were called in to add vintage authenticity to this fresh collection of current Jamaican stylings,shaped and tinged by Yossi.

What does Yossi want for and with this album?
“It should elevate people’s spirits. A lot of the albums that you hear nowadays are not uplifting.They are very impressive, they make you want to shake your booty, but this will make your spirit dance. What you hear on the album is the spirit that happened while we were doing it.”

Indicates Most Popular Song

Title

Length

Sample

Blessed Love (Intro) w/Richi Bless

0:45

Things That You Do (Juju Riddim) w/Kulcha Knox

3:12

Need Love Here (Samba Patty Riddim) w/Anthony B

3:38

1.2Nayabingy Order (The Ex-Centric Riddim) w/Al Pancho & Excalibur

3:36

Stranger in Da City (Mandinka Riddim) w/Doniki

2:38

More Love (Mandingo Riddim) w/Kulcha Knox

4:08

Babylon by Bus (Equator Riddim) w/Prezedent Brown

4:00

Babylon by Dub (Moonrise Riddim)

1:19

Livity (Livity Riddim) w/Richi Bless

3:50

Heard It on the News (Juju Version) w/Doniki

3:59

Boboman Warn (Ex-Centric Dub Version) w/Jah Maison

3:39

The 1 (#1 Announcement)

0:27

Put on the Dancing Shoe (Dungle Beat) w/Kucha Knox

3:49

Hardcore Reggae Ambassador (Togo Beat) w/Lisa Denja    

3:01

Wildest Dreams (Solomons Riddim) w/Chezedek

3:40

Wildest Dub (Solomons Dub)

3:38

Blood by Blood (New Orleans Riddim) w/Ras Haile Malekot

2:50

All songs just $0.99 each!
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West Nile Funk

To create the ultimate african/funk, Ex-Centric Sound System put together the deepest grooves from Ghana and the NYC club scene. The songs and african element are sung over deep bass and drums, creating a new and modern sound, representing the culture of our times. Based on roots, yet moving forward. These downloads are available exclusively through our catalog.

Indicates Most Popular Song

Title

Length

Sample

El Buzz (Intro)

0:52

The African Bee

4:53

The Original Ragga

3:12

Wadjo

5:28

Ebae (Tel Aviv-Ghana)    

3:30

West Nile Funk

6:19

Alice in Voodooland

5:03

Bring Your Calabashe

4:35

Djibo

5:23

Ayoyo (Harvest Time)

6:42

All songs just $0.99 each!
Listen to sound samples by clicking on
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Electric Voodoo Land

Ex-Centric Sound system's debut recording is a multi-cultural set that masterfully ranges from weighty, muscular dub to a sweet harmonized anthem, to a lullaby tribute to women raising children in embattled Rwanda.

Indicates Most Popular Song

Title

Length

Sample

Electric Voodooland-Intro

1:19

Chenki

3:38

Lo Flo

4:18

Latest

8:18

LeLe

6:45

N.L.B.

2:39

Agbae    

6:14

Roots Detective

5:54

Lullaby

5:33

Ex-Centric Dub Show

6:18

Kokobi

13:20

All songs just $0.99 each!
Listen to sound samples by clicking on
Click here for help with audio samples.


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