Tony Allen: Afrobeat’s Impossible Drummer
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- Опубліковано 22 тра 2024
- Tony Allen, the man who created Afrobeat alongside Fela Kuti, is often described as one of the greatest drummers who ever lived, thanks to his incredible polyrhythms and huge innovations. This is his story.
Intro: 00:00
Career: 00:40
Technique: 06:23
Legacy: 09:27
Written by Jochan Embley
#tonyallen #felakuti #afrobeat
Music credit:
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He was living in New York City at one point later in his life and I regret never heading out to see him playing. Whenever a favorite older musician performs, advice: go. Don’t postpone it, go - show the love and go enjoy what senior musicians do.
Well said and plain spoken.
100%. I happened to be in London last fall and caught a Billy Cobham show. Would not have missed that for the world!
Billy Cobham - the king of Jazz Rock and the open handed left hand drumming style. The best in the world right now, he lives in Switzerland now
Musicians die young.
It's really fascinating how so much modern music is heavily influenced by a people most people have never heard of.
I was lucky enough to know Tony well and had many adventures with him including in Nigeria, DR Congo and across the world. I was lucky enough to be at his very last show at Church of Sound in London in March 2020, a few weeks before he died. He gave me his signature sticks at that show and they are one of my most treasured possessions as I saw him hit his very last symbol crash with them at the end of that show. oh how he is missed !
To be able to make the statement is profound. May you have peace after losing a friend.
I had the privilege to play with tony allen 2 times in oslo in a club called BLUE it was amazing , the first time i joined his band and i sang , the second time i was playing my concert and he came with his band and joined me : I m so thankfull
I remember hearing him say one of the reasons he left Africa 70 was because there were too many people on stage (that is, a lot of people getting paid for not doing much). Him being replaced by four drummers is ironic.
As a teen in the UK, in the ‘80s, in my circle, it wasn’t uncommon to find Fela Kuti vinyl in peoples record collections, often these were original from the ‘70s, handed down from the record collections of parents or older friends, or perhaps found in one of the plethora of record shops dotted around the city. If the sleeves were tatty, they nevertheless invariably had fascinating artwork that declared loudly the political revolutionary nature of the content. Often these records had a half hour track on each side, and the hypnotic funky drumming was of course Tony Allen.
I played along to them often as I taught myself bass guitar.
I used to hear these guys were a huge influence to some British acts like Peter Gabriel and Phil Collins.
Would appreciate more insight on that, but this video is an essential reminder we all need 🙏
Jay Dilla was a genius for that flip! Respect to the Legendary Tony Allen!!
Loved Tony Allen:fantastic ,relaxed, innovative and propulsive .All simultaneously!
The most underrated drummer, he's half of afrobeat but seldom talked about... Thanks for sharing! Also, I had no idea he was playing on "La Ritournelle", I always loved that groove not realizing!
I was fortunate to jam out with him once in a tiny late night bar in Paris, after a chance encounter. He came across as a mischievous, yet humble man always eager to play, even though he was in his late seventies back then (must have been around 2019). A true legend, his passing will always mark a real loss to anyone who loves real music... and most of all the world will now be short one truly authentic, kind soul. Rest In Peace. Thanks for this well-informed and respectful tribute.
i never heard of him, i will start being more gentle because of him
I'm not a drummer but I had the good fortune to be in the studio when he recorded once. I was amazed by how little he moved while playing. Like you say in the video he only lightly touches the drums and his upper body is almost still. I love some of his own albums as well - Black Voices (sampled by J Dilla for Common) and also The Source which is his tribute to Blakey. Great video. Subscribed
Agreed. And also you should check out Bill Bruford . He’s another very “ergonomic” drummer.
That’s my favorite style now. I liked the drummers who thrashed about wildly when I was younger, but now I think the best drummers have good upright posture and have all the movement in their hands and feet
Being a heavy handed Rock and Funk drummer this individual just blows me away 100%respect thanks for the BIO bro
I bought a cassette tape of Fela in the early 80's, not knowing what I was buying, and to only be following this drummer ever since.
Subtle brilliance ❤
This was great, and Mr Allen deserves all his flowers for being pretty much the foundation of Afrobeat. The part of Africa 70 that I have trying to figure out forever was the bass player. Apparently, the bass player would always be changed or swapped out between different bass players. But man the basslines from Africa 70s work was always so cold to me!!!
Awesome...Tres EDUCATIONAL...Thank YOU...bigggtime.
He onces played 2 gigs with a Finnish jazz big band. 2 rehersals. A horn player said that from the rehersal you couldn’t really be sure what to expect from the guy. Then back stage before the first performance Tony Allen had done some yoga moves for warm up, kept mostly to himself and smoked a joint. This made the horn guy a bit worried-afterall it was very structured music and a big band - not some jam with a quartet or quintet for example.
A couple of bars into the first song, the whole band was completely locked in into a very tight time - and leaning a 100% on Allen, said the brass guy. Easiest time keeping ever, he also said.
Rip Tony Allen
A HELL of a drummer.
I fucking love Tony Allen
I've seen him once. He is a great inspiration for me!
Subscribed and liked after 30 seconds. I never do that. Good shit.
All I meant by my comment I wish for peace and love for this world we live in. This cat happens to be one of my favorites and a huge influence.
Expensive Shit and Water No Get Enemy were absolutely life changing for me. Glad to see Tony Allen getting more much deserved attention
Respect to Baba Tony,his grooves remains with us .
I'd like it if these videos were longer and we saw more playing. I'd happily sit through a whole song at the end in particular.
Yeah, but surely there is lots of footage of this guy? Just search.
“Be the change you wish to see in the world, bro”
Very worthwhile!
Substantial content, thank you 🙌🏼
Caressing the drums...❤
Thx for this tribute !
I had the chance to see him live several times in different styles and different groups. It was always magical and I'm pretty sure he used to live in my neighbourhood in Paris as I was seeing him on the streets of Belleville quite often.
I think he lived in Montreuil but he was in Belleville a fair bit, aye.
Just remarkable. Check out the album he did with Fela and Ginger Baker.
Yeah, I got video of Ginger in Africa as well. Probably the last time Ginger sounded great.
Nice spot! Tony is one of my favorite drummers, up there with Max, Elvin, Art. I didn't know too much about his early years, so this is cool. Another person on that list is Changuito, who weaves a similar set of influences: Yoruba, Funk, and Jazz, but through a Cuban lens. He was also very similarly revolutionary, and his innovations are instrumental to Songo, Timba, and modern Salsa as well. Worth a look.
The words of a scholar and a gentleman
Changuito was a legend....
would have enjoyed more music clips. great quote: I don't beat the drums; I caress them. Astounding.
Very nice, well done!!!
I love these videos, and will definitely check out many of this albums!!
Legend. Thanks, this channel rules man.
Ghost Thud - for Mr. Allen
Great video, I love Tony's music and I love how you empahsised his approach to constant innovation, well done!
Fantastic tribute -deserving a sub
Im an American musician who really loves Afro Beat. I made a track as BKstank called "Thats That Shit" inspired by these kind of grooves.
It might be too much to expect other drummers to play such complex and interesting parts as Tony. However it would be great is there were at least a few who could play with the same level of self control and not hit them so hard.
Great! Not often the drummer gets a shout.
love this
I played the drums for many years and i can usually pick up the beat of any song pretty quickly. Tony Allen is the only one in which i have to put an outworldly effort to understand exactly what he was doing.
very insightful comment! he really was totally unique, especially the way he dropped ghost strokes. only thing I can think to compare it to is Clyde Stubblefield on James Brown's "Funky Drummer"...
have you seen this Tony Allen masterclass? ua-cam.com/video/zNru-AhcBwo/v-deo.html
5:55 in he shows how to build an Afro-beat groove from the bass drum up -- incredible!
Awesome video, thank you!
Saw him play live multiple times with TV ON THE RADIO. Awe inspiring.
Fascinating! Loved this!
brilliant
Fantastic!
Stellar
The Legend!☝🏾
Thanks
This was very informative! Thank you!
So original
Such a cool channel, never heard of this man yet I sense his widespread influence. I will research him more bc of this video. Subbed, thank you!
Don't forget his collabs with Jimi Tenor
Check out the song YeYe De Smell by Fela Kuti on the album "Live" that song has both Tony Allen and Ginger Baker playing on it and they each have their own solos back to back! Its amazing. The whole album is a masterpiece from top to bottom, no skips... so much energy, passion, and groove all throughout. And if you've ever seen the movie The Harder They Fall you will also recognize the first song "Let's Start" from the end of that film.
hey thanks
And he’s first team all-Defence.
Absolute metronome in a metronome
Peace to Tony Allen. He always gave his credit to Black American funk and James Brown. He said all African drummers copied Black American music to its core.
African American - Not Black American
@@timdumah7737 same thing, but don’t get it confused a Nigerian American is not a Black American/AA. I prefer BA though. We are a distinct ethnic group that descend from slavery in the US.
My group Loose Caboose, acted as opening act for King Sunny Ade, near the univ. of Massachusetts, in the early 80’s, on their first american tour. 20 musicians, and we loaned them all of our equipment, to enable our promoter to host the show.
I played guitar from the mid 1960’s, tracked jazz musicians, as a child. I was drawn to the open space/jam music, where a musician would begin to speak in his own voice, like Archie Shepp, would say, to us, in person.
Roy Haynes, was knocking it out of the Boston musical park, and I learned early, who had the mojo workin’.
When it came time, early 70’s to promote the reality of riddim music, 5-7 points of light occurred. Afrobeat was the root though not a commercial offering.
The real racist music publishing apartheid, in amerigo round, was circled in a wagon train. Round about 1976. I was surrounded by musicians who wanted to chase obscure Grateful Dead ideas, that were not money makers.
At the time, I and I musicians, broke from the limited industry, and began to play interesting black and brown music, to diversify, and unite the ‘smarter students’ ,in the class.
A singer came to me, and my 5- piece stage band, who was Tina Turner’s cousin, from the Bullock clan in N.C., born in Boston, as we were.
Long story, my singer loved Bob Marley, and went right to him. We’d bring herbs fe de musicians dem. Eventually , being recorded by Tough Gong, fe 2 albums.
In the massa-choose-its reality, we opened acts, for bigger recording artists, like Taj Mahal, Gil Scott Heron, Bonnie Raitt, Black Uhuru, Junior Reid, Half Pint, and more if I could remember.
For the people who don't know the history of Afrobeats
Subbed
Where can we found the video with the solo at the end ?
Rly nice video man ! Ty
Never heard Max Roach called "Roach" before...
❤
I compilated Tony Allen greates drums groove in playlist Tony Allen - Afrobeat Drums Groove Score Collection: ua-cam.com/play/PLYsXiOiqESq2d66So6qJgj-ZIhcMhcse1.html
gret
Like to know he got the knowledge form a Chicago source, nice: )
Has anybody seen Tony Allen and Dikembe Mutombo in the same room? I have my suspicions! 🤣
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
What is that ride?
I think this video is fantastic, however its missing a very big exploit about the creation of afrobeat.. It was when Fela met James Brown and heard what he was doing in the 70's... We all know what happened after...Love it!
poison - rocket juice and the moon
Another victim of the pandemic. Of all the drummers I have seen live, & I have seen some greats, he was the most impressive
What polyrhythms?
Peace Tony, thanks for the inspiration, hope you're having fun there on the other side!
So important to rennet the snare drum is all level and very little accents. The hats and snare are just dancing.
Kobe Bryant had a ton of respect for this guy, and you can clearly see why in this video
Nobody comes close.
Dear friend, High-Life music comes from Brazilian music and not Western Jazz. King Sonny Ade the High-Life stile front runner said in his book. At the Brazilian Quarter in Lagos Capital of Nigeria.
lot of 6
"Damon Albarn - Blur's impossible twat"
Those great sounding Afro 6-8 grooves were the lovely sound of a good percussion section, not a drummer alone, all I hear is a very good but pedestrian Afro drummer just like many good players, but come on! In modern drumming , showed me nothing more than what I hear in that style I haven’t heard just look at the real greats ,then talk. don’t mean to be mean but sorry look.
I enjoyed the video, Tony Allen is a legend! But I'm guessing the content creator isn't an educated musician - Allen virtually never plays polyrhythmically. From Wikipedia: "Polyrhythm is the simultaneous use of two or more rhythms that are not readily perceived as deriving from one another, or as simple manifestations of the same meter." He plays complex patterns within the same meter, but rarely if ever juxtaposes different time signatures.
i understand your point, but there are moments in the vid where top drum moves toward three from two
Black voices
I was actually very interessted but unfortunately the incessant chatter annoyed me !
Chatter.
Don't you just love these videos where we never get to hear more than a couple seconds of the artist they're talking about and have to listen to some nobody blab on and on and on and on and on.
As a drummer I was really digging this documentary ,Then racism was brought up and my beliefs are rare but I think of us all as humans, nothing else. I believe if everyone would stop talking and using race as a crutch, racism would fade away and we could just live and love. The days of Hitler and plantation and all those horrible things have been over a long, long time. People need to just live and let live. It's over and people just keep adding fuel to the fire. Yes there's history, but history of some sorts are being demolished and no matter what you tear down, or change names of streets, the history remains. Live in the now people and let's just be humans. and leave the past in the past. Enough is enough. Oh and police officers put their lives on the line daily and people that get shot or beat, they are breaking laws and resisting arrest. I've seen plain and simple. I'm a human of many mixtures of Irish, German, Scottish and others. Basically a mutt. And I've resisted being arrested more than a few times and had my ass by police. I learned finally if you comply with authority you should be fine. There's bad cops yes, but we're humans and there is bad people in every line of work. It's not the color of ones skin, it's the mentality of ones mind and soul. Not my opinion folks, just facts
Great story.. interested in one of the best drummers or your own issues? You've never lived during a military dictatorship have you? "I learned finally if you comply with authority you should be fine." WTF? Focus dude :)
Interesting take on things. But if you are white in a white majority country, potentially you have not encountered racism on a meaningful level. I am white, I live in Europe, I encounter a bit of light racism because of my home country, but nothing that bothers me. However, one of my best friends got breathalysed while sitting in a stationary car. Her phone had run out of charge so she went to the car to charge it quickly and the police had her out of the car and were questioning her and breathalysing her. I was shocked. She was not shocked, just angry. That's when I realised we lived in different worlds. I have never, ever, been stopped by the police.
Your comment is almost entirely opinion, not "facts". Racism does not just exist in the past, and if we'd all complied with authority as you recommend we'd still have legal slavery! You really believe racism "would fade away" if everyone stopped taking about it? Stifling the conversation is what the racists want.
Sorry that reality hurt your feelings.
That's entirely your own opinion... and a horrible one in mine.
*From where I’m sitting, Tony Allen is insanely over rated. Help me understand. It seems like I’m missing something and I’d genuinely love examples of his masterful “one of the greatest drummers who ever lived” tier drumming. This sounds like rockabilly with a basic hat shuffle and a basic hat chick pulse. Nothing revolutionary or particularly difficult or creative.*
Help me understand. Send me the evidence of his greatness.
You’re probably not a drummer, that’s why you can’t see it
lol, "evidence of his greatness"? Who are *YOU* to make demands?🤦♂
Active listening requires you to listen attentively to the video's narrator, understand what they're
saying and reflect on all that has been said, and retain the information so as to not pander to
ill-informed and 'know-it-all " individuals like yourself.
Btw .
The term rockabilly literally means "Rock 'n' roll" that was culturally appropriated by hillbillies.
"Rock 'n' roll" which also has its roots in the African American experience of the
1940s and '50s - in gospel, blues, jazz, boogie, swing, and even country music. 😭
The primary instruments were piano and saxophone, before the guitar became the iconic
symbol of the genre with the arrival of the legendary Chuck Berry."😭
In the words of DJ Khaled, '"Another One".
Johnny Guitar Watson - Space Guitar?😭😭😭
Not credit to Africans as usual
You yabbing rubishhhhh