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Event Details

On sale Friday, 11/10 at 10am!

$30 ADV | $35 DOOR

Doors 7pm | Show 8pm


HAILU MERGIA

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Hailu Mergia’s new album Yene Mircha (“my choice” in Amharic) departs from the fiery acoustic trio jazz of 2018’s Lala Belu, his first recording in over 15 years. That album clarified Mergia as a living legend making vital contemporary music.  It was hailed by international press, including the New York Times, BBC, and Pitchfork, which called his music “triumphantly in the present.”

Mergia is in no way stuck in nostalgia for the “golden age” of 1970s Ethiopian music. 

Yene Mircha enters a new field of sound with expanded instrumentation and a focus on Mergia’s own compositions and arrangements. His DC-based trio is the highly stable nucleus.  They’ve burned a path across three continents playing this hard-to-categorize approach to jazz, funk, and a rainbow of Ethipoian styles at more than 40 shows last year. 

Mergia often says there should be many kinds of Ethiopian music.  His philosophy is evident on Yene Mircha as it floats along a spectrum of sound and genre.  He has made over a dozen albums since the early ‘70s, each a refraction of the one before it, never doing quite the same thing twice. 

“You can do anything with Ethiopian music, it shouldn’t be only this sound or that sound.  That’s why I called the album My Choice.  This is the sound I choose.”

Mergia has retained relevance all these years by changing his sound with the times, he says.  “I believe in sound changing.  It’s good for listeners when they hear a different sound every time they listen to me.  Maybe next album I will do something else completely.”

The changes Mergia envisions on Yene Mircha are immediately apparent.  2018’s Lala Belu featured a round upright acoustic bass sound and warm, heavy drums while the new album is anchored by Alemseged Kebede’s nimble electric bass and Ken Joseph’s kyperkinetic, bright drum feel.

Mergia brought in an ancient instrument to keep things contemporary.  Master mesenqo player Setegn Atenaw joined on “Semen Ena Debub” because Mergia was inspired by the cherished tradition stringed instrument’s resurgence after disappearing from pop music in the ‘70s.  “Tigrinya, pop music, traditional music all use it now but in the ‘60s and ‘70s mesenqo was not very popular,” according to Mergia.  Juxtaposed with the extured, resonant timbres of the mesenqo and Mergia’s trademark accordion are electric guitar and synthesizer. 

At the same time there are vocals on Yene Mircha—something rare for the artist who’s known back home as a pillar of instrumental music.  For “Abichu Nega Nega” and “Shemendefer,” celebrated Ethiopian traditional vocalist Tsehay Kassa sings alongside Mergia, who adds some studio techniques to make it sound like a small choir.  The horn section on “Yene Mircha” is fortified by a key member of Mergia’s former Walias Band, Moges Habte on saxophone.

Mergia has a process for his creative flow: “I was thinking about the trio recording first, which took two days.  I knew I would have more ideas about where to go from there.

First, we did acoustic piano bass and drums, no keys, nothing.  I listened, then I got more ideas about what to change and where I could add sounds.  We built the sound piece by piece.  There are a variety of things going on there.  I always think of the current day’s recording when I arrive at the studio.”

After he emigrated from Ethiopia and built a life in Washington, D.C. around 1981—where he worked as an airport taxi driver until recently—keyboard and accordion player Hailu Mergia’s career followed a humble trajectory.  He made a few recordings in America and kept making music on his own and with friends.  But after the early 80’s, his gigs in the U.S. mostly dried up.  Mergia recently charted a new path following a series of reissues of his classic works via Awesome Tapes From Africa.  Mergia has crisscrossed Europe a dozen times in the years since playing all over North America including Radio City Music Hall and Montreal Jazz Festival. 


ORCHESTRA GOLD TRIO

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Orchestra Gold’s vibrant sound is spearheaded by the dynamic Mariam Diakite,whose raw, hypnotic vocals deliver heartfelt and thought-provoking lyrics in the highly symbolic Bambara language. The music of Orchestra GOLD represents the powerful intersection between Mariam of Mali and Erich Huffaker of Oakland,CA. Their original, retro sound results from their decade-long collaboration,transcending borders and boundaries to be a force of healing within the community.


PASSIONFRUIT

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Passionfruit hosts 'Wabi Sabi' on NTS and is a contributor at In Sheep's Clothing HiFi, an analog music culture outfit and listening bar based in New York and Los Angeles. Known for her extensive archive of records, she collects songs like souvenirs, each recalling precious moments found leafing through dusty foreign record shops or the catching of sonic fragments on the radio of bumpy taxi rides. Listen as she delicately guilds together these memories and shares music from lesser known and under represented musicians from across the decades.


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Event Location

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Great American Music Hall

859 O'Farrell St., San Francisco, CA, 94109

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Talent

Hailu Mergia

Orchestra Gold Trio / Passionfruit