Les Filles de Illighadad & Edmony Krater

African Acid Is The Future – Ambiance II (Dauwd / Maryisonacid / DJ Oil Remixes)

The Vinyl Factory

VF355D

Les Filles de Illighadad & Edmony Krater

African Acid Is The Future – Ambiance II (Dauwd / Maryisonacid / DJ Oil Remixes)

The Vinyl Factory

VF355D

VF335D-artwork-3000-copy-640x640
ARTIST
Les Filles de Illighadad & Edmony Krater
TITLE
African Acid Is The Future – Ambiance II (Dauwd / Maryisonacid / DJ Oil Remixes)
LABEL
The Vinyl Factory
CAT NO.
VF355D
FORMAT
2 x 12"
RELEASE DATE
  • 30/08/2019 [INITIAL RELEASE]
TERRITORY
Worldwide
GENRE
Deep House Down Tempo Jazz
FEATURING
Dauwd DJ Oil Edmony Krater Les Filles de Illighadad Maryisonacid
MISC.
Includes second African Acid Is The Future booklet

TRACK LISTING

play all

  1. A1. Les Filles de Illighadad – Tende I  ▾
  2. A2. Les Filles de Illighadad – Tende II  ▾
  3. B1. Edmony Krater – Gwadloup  ▾
  4. B2. Edmony Krater – Lagé  ▾
  5. C1. Les Filles de Illighadad – Tende II (Dauwd & Maryisonacid mix)  ▾
  6. C2. Edmony Krater – Gwadloup (Dauwd remix)  ▾
  7. C3. Edmony Krater – Lagé (AAITF outerlude)  ▾
  8. D1. Edmony Krater – Gwadloup (DJ Oil remix)  ▾

SALES NOTES

Cult Berlin club night and label African Acid is the Future returns with the second release in their Ambiance trilogy. Taking listeners into the unique spirit of their club night. For their second release they offer a series of live recordings from the heat of the party itself.

The release features two tracks from both Les Filles de Illighadad and Edmony Krater as well as remixes from Dauwd, Maryisonacid and DJ Oil. Les Filles de Illighadad come from a secluded commune in central Niger, far off in the scrubland deserts at the edge of the Sahara. Best known for their guitar performances, this recording from AAITF finds them at their percussive best on the simply titled “Tende I” and “Tende II”. Edmony Krater is an avant-garde percussionist, singer and trumpet player, as well as a native of Guadeloupe. For his performance, Krater performs a duo of tracks separated by three decades, but united by Caribbean rhythms. “Gwadloup” was originally released in 1988 as part of the album “Edmony Krater Et Zepiss – Tijan Pou Velo,” while “Lagé” is taken from 2018’s album “Edmony Krater– An ka sonjé”

Published: 8th August 2019

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