Chadwick Stokes with Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars

I’m a big fan of Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars and was able to see them play live a handful of times when I lived in Boulder. I recently came across a song they did with Chadwick Stokes called Coffee and Wine and I can’t get it out of my head.

Here’s the song:

A little background about the Refugee All Stars (source):

Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars have risen like a phoenix out of the ashes of war and inflamed the passions of fans across the globe with their uplifting songs of hope, faith and joy. The band is a potent example of the redeeming power of music and the ability of the human spirit to persevere through unimaginable hardship and emerge with optimism intact. From their humble beginnings in West African refugee camps Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars have performed on some of the world’s most prestigious stages and matured into one of Africa’s top touring and recording bands.

Throughout the 1990s, the West African country of Sierra Leone was wracked with a bloody, horrifying war that forced millions to flee their homes. The musicians that would eventually form Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars are all originally from Freetown, and they were forced to leave the capital city at various times after violent rebel attacks. Most of those that left the country made their way into neighboring Guinea, some ending up in refugee camps and others struggling to fend for themselves in the capital city of Conakry.

Ruben Koroma and his wife Grace had left Sierra Leone in 1997 and found themselves in the Kalia refugee camp near the border with Sierra Leone. When it became clear they would not be heading back to their homeland anytime soon, they joined up with guitarist Francis John Langba (aka Franco), and bassist Idrissa Bangura (aka Mallam), other musicians in the camp whom they had known before the war, to entertain their fellow refugees. After a Canadian relief agency donated two beat up electric guitars, a single microphone and a meager sound system, Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars were born. [Read more...]

Here’s a clip from the 2005 documentary on the All Stars:

Here’s a little behind-the-scenes clip:

Enjoy!

Wax Tax

I was knocked out with a nasty bug a couple of days ago. Unpleasant as it was, it gave me the opportunity to go through and master some live recordings from the old days with my band.

Recording was always a challenge – we didn’t have a lot of money to put into equipment, but we were lucky to have a buddy to help us out. As an improvisational act, recording our live shows gave us the chance to go back and hear if we came up with any ideas worth developing into songs. Every now and then we had some magical moments and we wrote a lot of our music that way.

This wasn’t one of those moments.

It’s the finished product and not a developing idea, but it’s the only recording we have of it and it’s from our farewell show at The Spot in Boulder, Colorado on April 26, 2008, so it’s near and dear to my heart. The recording is from our pre-show sound check and was done using a couple of room mics, and the levels fluctuate a bit as the stage and house sound systems kick-in. My mastering skills are fairly rudimentary – I’m brand new to using Audacity (yeah open-source!) – so go easy on me.

Anyway, without further ado, I present Wax Tax – it’s so nasty we have to tax your ears for listening (if the track every finishes buffering… or click here to listen if it doesn’t).


A little eye-candy to help set the mood, from one of our earlier shows at the Fox Theatre.

Music For Your Friday Night: Balkan Beat Box

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About Balkan Beat Box
BBB is the reaction of musicians who want to erase political borders (as our ears don’t have them, why should we?). BBB creates a new musical breed that surpasses real world borders, and just takes people and culture in their extended roots.

With deep knowledge of their own Mediterranean roots, and in collaborations with artists from Bulgaria, Morocco, Spain, Israel, and Palestine, BBB has created a magical show. Their live show is akin to a semi-circus event, with a basic core band on stage of 7-8 musicians and local artists. The event is synchronized and keeps the audience guessing where the next surprise will appear from.