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May 22, 2013
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NoMo

 

continued

Ghana's only female master drummer, in that percussion section; she performs on the group's debut album, released in May on the Ypsilanti record label, but when I saw NoMo in October at Leopold Brothers, she wasn't there.

The group brings together disparate talents into a cohesive new whole, which is the name of the game in popular music innovation. Here, jazz players who've passed through the increasingly influential U-M jazz program meet independent rock 'n' rollers and world musicians. NoMo is sometimes classed as an Afrobeat band, but what you hear first is not percussion rhythm but the impressive horn section, playing in a free unison at the start but making room for increasingly adventurous solos as a ten-minute piece unfolds.Think of what would happen if Tower of Power (or even Chicago) took on John Coltrane and Pharoah Sanders as members and then did a three-year residency in Lagos, and you've got an idea of what NoMo sounds like. Most of the music is instrumental, but one NoMo number, "Moving in Circles," is a natural extension of the sort of soul song of the 1970s that had political lyrics but could also really bring people out onto the dance floor.

And indeed you can dance to this band — the sort of dancing where people gather in front of the stage and face the band in order to pay attention to what the members are doing, but it gets pretty energetic all the same. The African drumming really makes you want to move. The avant-garde always had a little problem making music people could dance to, and it's hard to blame folks for retreating eventually into the discos.

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