RTS The Michigan Daily Friday, May 15, 1987 Page 11 King Sunny Ade brings Afrobeat to town By Alan Paul King Sunny Ade is an African superstar. The Nigerian native released 40 albums in a little over ten years, selling hundreds of thousands of each. He plays juju, a music whose origins date back to the '20s when guitars were first added to traditional Yoruba rhythms. A reknowned innovater, Ade has made several changes in the traditional juju style, using multiple electric guitars, electric bass, Western trap drums and even the pedal steel guitar. Ade, who performs tonight at the Michigan Theatre with his 22 piece African Beats, which includes six lead guitarists, is in the midst of only his second American tour. He spoke with the Daily recently from his Boston hotel room. Daily: Have your receptions been very good so far? Ade : Oh very good, very good...Tremendous. Yes, tremendous. D: Does it make you feel very satisfied? A: Yes please. D: Do you think there's been a wider acceptance now of African sounds and rythyms? A: Definitely, you can judge from Paul Simon's album. Yeah.. D: What do you think of that album? Records Ladysmith Black Mambazo Shaku Zulu Warner Bros The more I listen to Paul Simon's Graceland, the moreI tend to seperate Simon from the artists who are backing him. Lyrically and tonally, Simon is still Simon, and there is little in the printed lyrics that suggests appreciable growth ,even from Bookends. The stars of Graceland are Good Rockin' Dopsie, Los Lobos, and above all, Ladysmith Black Mambazo, the ten-member South African ensemble heard on the record's biggest hits. Ladysmith, unlike Los Lobos, and zydeco music, was rarely, if ever heard in America before Simon's album, and to his credit, } Simon has produced this record, and is working hard to promote it as well as his own. But it seems to A: I would say that the album is very good, making people aware very much of African music as well. D: He has been criticized for recording in South Africa. What do you think of that? A: Well, if he recorded in South Africa by the Black South Africans I don't think there's a problem with that and even if he worked some with the whites, eventually the credit goes to the Black South Africans. D: You're very popular in Africa so is it a little bit weird to come here and not be as big of a star. A: Well I would say that Rome was not built in a day. We're just on the way. We'll keep moving on and one day will be one day. D : Do you do all the arrangements? A: Yes I do everything. My boys, they be at my side always. More or less we do it together as a family. Yes. D: Being from a royal family, when you decided to be a musician was that controversial? A: Yes, the reaction came because they didn't like me to do it and I had to do it on my own without letting them know until I formed a group and cut a record before they could know. D: Were your early musical influences mostly African or Western sounds? A: Mostly African because I love traditional musicians and traditional instruments including the traditional players. I love them very much. People like Tunde Nightingale and I.K. Dairo they been in the business over 50 years ago and introduced guitar and I followed them by introducing the guitar and I do much for the guitar with other musicians as well. So later we introduced drums and keyboards and so forth. D: Are you still playing very long sets? A: Yes please. But sometimes there are restrictions so we can not. D: What do you think of that? A: (laughs) Well, there's nothing you can do. The law is the law and a policy is a policy and wherever you play you must follow that. There's nothing you can do except make it all shake. D: Not waste a minute? A: Well, start with very, very, very hot numbers and be with the people and let them be with you in time. Yeah. If there's long hours, you have to build it together, build it gradually, gradually, gradually until the middle of the night but if it's a minimum time you have to be very hot. No room for you to sit down, no room for you go to the bathroom or anything else. It's just PLAY! ma r - King Sunny Ade King Sunny Ade and His African Beats perform tonight at the Michigan Theatre at 8. While it is doubtful that he will play a six hour set as he has been known to do, the evening promises to be unique and fun. Tickets are $13.50 at the box office, Schoolkid's Records, andPJ's Used Records - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - me that this record, along with a Simon-produced Los Lobos album, and a Simon-produced zydeco compilation, would eliminate the need for Graceland. Shaka Zulu is breathtaking--the unfettered sound of Ladysmith, singing a capella about their lives, rather than Simon's, is a revelation. There is the unity of eight and nine voices, sliding, groaning, rasping together, and above them, Joseph Shabalala, a tenor with a STATE STREET SPECIAL! In ml I. I TANNING CENTER U El IN I 216 S. STATE (above Marti Walker) PH. 747-88441. M I MI (walk-ins in :110 Sessions welcome) 4 essions l for sessions good for I. $3I only at 00I 00 campus location --------ExpiresMay 31, 1987 !EEEUEEEmmaEEEEEEEEEEEE resonant quiver in his upper Africa, songs of a woman named register. There is the language of See RECORDS, Page 12 $EARN CASH I I ~LYING DOWNI at theI I I I I I I YPSILANTI PLASMA CENTER I I with this ad: Seorn $18 upon first visit "*earn up to $110per month Wte* open for new donors IWaer ToerI I N w U Mon., Wed., and Fri. 9 - 12:30 I Ohr I W E ft Tue., Thurs. 1- 5:45 Please call for appointment' Min.Ave- VP and more information 482-6793 813 W. Michigan Ave. 482-6790 . - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ j