Review | Songlines

N’Djila Wa Mudujimu

Rating: ★★★★

View album and artist details

Album and Artist Details

Artist/band:

Lady Aicha & Pisco Crane''s Original Fulu Miziki Band of Kinshasa

Label:

Nyege Nyege Tapes

December/2022

This is the DIY eco-punk essence, Congo-style. Everything about Fulu Miziki has been repurposed from material rescued from the junkpile, from their instruments to their extravagant costumes that look like uniquely Congolese cyberpunk body armour with surreal masks. Almost all the instruments are percussion, alongside one or two self-invented string-things and rough synths. Melodies emerge from the natural pitches of drums, bells, cymbals and improvised noise-makers colliding in expert polyrhythm, with the bass coming from horns and thumped tubes. Shouted lyrics get the heart-rate up to the frenetic pace required by the beats, while improvised electronics and subtle production dirty everything up through layers of distortion that only add to the hyper energy.

Fulu Miziki's music has echoes from all the great Congolese groups over the past few decades –Konono No 1, Staff Benda Bilili, Jupiter & Okwess International – but within that, they bring something new, an anarchic, slightly menacing but ultimately very fun cacophony that sounds futuristic while remaining squarely on the ground. Since recording this album, Fulu Miziki have splintered into two separate groups – hence the mouthful of a band name on this release – but N’Djila Wa Mudujimu still serves as a snapshot of the group's original line-up, repertoire and ethos.

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