Chief Commander Ebenezer Obey and His Miliki Sound cover

Chief Commander Ebenezer Obey and His Miliki Sound

Released

This 1973 album marks a significant moment in Obey’s musical journey, as he transitioned from the highlife-jùjú fusion he’d played throughout the 1960s with his band The International Brothers to the more classic jùjú sound that would make him a superstar. Obey was inspired by pioneers like I.K. Dairo and Tunde Nightingale, which kept the original jùjú-heads happy, but he also strived to appeal to new, younger audiences by experimenting with Yoruba percussion and adding more drums and guitars to weave lively dance compositions. This was before he also added keyboards and synths in the 1980s, but the interplay between the different percussions and guitars — a tenor guitar, a rhythm guitar, and a lead for the solos — is more than enough to create hypnotic, Hawaiian-tinged dancefloor fillers.

Megan Iacobini de Fazio

Suggestions
Wakafrika cover

Wakafrika

Manu Dibango
La'Ila cover

La'Ila

Akwassa
Beyanga cover

Beyanga

M'Bilia Bel, L'Afrisa International
Discothèque 76 cover

Discothèque 76

Bembeya Jazz National
Ebo Taylor & The Pelikans cover

Ebo Taylor & The Pelikans

Ebo Taylor & the Pelikans
Luyando cover

Luyando

Mokoomba
Weekend Special cover

Weekend Special

Brenda & the Big Dudes