World Music Matters

Cult 1984 album 'Sons of Ethiopia' enchants new audiences in 2020

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Sinopsis

Admas, a quartet of young Ethiopian musicians living in exile in Washington DC, had a ball recording an album of synth-heavy, funked up versions of Ethiopian classics. 'Sons of Ethiopia ' was soon forgotten but became cult among fans of ethiojazz. Now reissued by Frederiksberg Records, it reflects happier times from a generation that "just escaped" the worst of the Derg. Some records are far more than the sum of their parts, and Sons of Ethiopia is one such.The seven tracks were recorded in 1984 by the band Admas: Henock Temesgen, Abegasu Shiota, Tewodros “Teddy” Aklilu and Yousef Tesfaye.Like so many Ethiopian expats in the U.S. at the time, the four young men had fled the Derg: the military junta that deposed Emperor Haile Selassie in 1974. As the White Terror gave way to the Red Terror, over a million people died in the violence.Aklilu, the band’s keyboard player, left Addis in 1977, aged 15, just before the worst of the Red Terror began.“It was so sad, kids killed each other,” he told RFI on the line from