POSTED ON

December 13, 2008

Ebenezer Obey & his International Brothers, Decca West Africa, 1969

Ebenezer is back here with an oldie, from 1969 this is ‘Ebenezer
Obey in London’. On this LP the numbers are devided as to European
standards. It’s been released in Lagos Nigeria by Decca West Africa.

tracks;

1 Egba
2 Ijesha
3 Ibadan
4 Iba foluwa/Ajokadabi ile
5 Ijebu
6 Ondo/Ogbomosho
7 Ori mi ko ni buru
8 Ore se rere
9 Omoba sijuade/Moti wa e

downloadbutton

This entry was posted in

8 Comments

  1. david 15 December 2008 at 02:24 - Reply

    Thanks for another african gem. I am particularly grateful for you indroducing me to Thomas Mapfumo’s brilliant Mr Music album and the Syliphone/West african treat’s a little while back. Never thought I’d get a chance to find those. If you do have any Malombo/Philip Tabane records you like to post I would also be very greatful. Matsuli recently did a nice post on his discography. Keep up the good work and many thanks!

  2. david 15 December 2008 at 02:24 - Reply

    Thanks for another african gem. I am particularly grateful for you indroducing me to Thomas Mapfumo’s brilliant Mr Music album and the Syliphone/West african treat’s a little while back. Never thought I’d get a chance to find those. If you do have any Malombo/Philip Tabane records you like to post I would also be very greatful. Matsuli recently did a nice post on his discography. Keep up the good work and many thanks!

  3. avocado kid 16 December 2008 at 02:59 - Reply

    OBEY!

  4. avocado kid 16 December 2008 at 02:59 - Reply

    OBEY!

  5. Martoo 19 December 2008 at 12:17 - Reply

    will you ever stop putting this great great records on inet? keep up the great work you’ve done so far, and long live the juju music!
    see ya

  6. Martoo 19 December 2008 at 12:17 - Reply

    will you ever stop putting this great great records on inet? keep up the great work you’ve done so far, and long live the juju music!
    see ya

  7. Martoo 19 December 2008 at 12:22 - Reply

    another thing: i think your “Rough First Rips” filosophy’s great, it shows a lot of respect for the music’s soul, the beatiful feeling of the cracks and noises in vinyls that reveals us the crushing effects of time… congrats again!

  8. Martoo 19 December 2008 at 12:22 - Reply

    another thing: i think your “Rough First Rips” filosophy’s great, it shows a lot of respect for the music’s soul, the beatiful feeling of the cracks and noises in vinyls that reveals us the crushing effects of time… congrats again!

Leave A Comment