CD AGR 004
The Return of Peeni Waali
1) Nice Time (Fizzè) 4’54” drums: Daniel Spahni / bass & guitar: Dennis Bovell / trombone: Rico Rodriguez / the captain: Lee “Scratch” Perry / jodel: Ligia Godinez, Heinz Vetsch, Georg Steiner / tuba, euphonium, trombone & fluegelhorn: Shirley Hofmann / baritone, tenor & alto sax: Steve Gregory / hackbrett: Roland Schiltknecht / ukulele & vibrato guitar: Cédric Vuille / accordion: Tobias Morgenstern / balafon: Gilles-V. “Dizzi” Rieder
2) (Hip) Hop Schwiiz! (Fizzè / T. Morgenstern) 3’19” drums: D. Spahni / bass: Fizzè / darbouka: Dizzi / turntables: Maurice Nigg / beatbox: Philip Willi / accordion & clavinet: T. Morgenstern / hammond C 3 organ: Barbara Dennerlein / ukulele: C. Vuille / guitars: John Kpiaye
3) Game (Fizzè) 5’05” drums: Leroy “Horsemouth” Wallace / ukulele & bass: C. Vuille / guitar: Earl “Chinna” Smith / trombone: Rico / fluegelhorn: Lukas Nüesch / sax: Philip Kunz / tenor sax solo: Steve Gregory / Hammond organ solo: Barbara Dennerlein
4) Afrinity (Fizzè) 3’58” drums: D. Spahni / bass: D. Bovell / rythm guitar: C. Vuille / pick guitar: Fizzè / shaker & balafon: Dizzi / accordion: T. Morgenstern / tenor sax solo: Michael “Bammie” Rose / hammond C 3 organ lead: B. Dennerlein / hackbrett: R. Schiltknecht / milkpots: Pascal Cuche / reeds: S. Gregory / tuba & bone: S. Hofmann
The Triptychon (15’32”):
5) Eve – for our mothers (Fizzè) 5’25” drums: Leroy “Horsemouth” Wallace / bass & pick guitar: D. Bovell / riddim guitar: Fizzè / electric lead guitar: J. Kpiaye / accoustic guitar: Rainer Rohloff / accordion: T. Morgenstern / fender rhodes: Stefan Kling / hackbrett: R. Schiltknecht / kanun: Hossam Shaker / panflute: Frank Mehlin / soprano sax & reeds: S. Gregory / euphonium & brass: S. Hofmann
6) Elemental (El Emmental) – for our fathers (Fizzè / C. Vuille) 5’27” repeater & drums: “Horsemouth” / bass, ukulele & guitars: C. Vuille / slide trombone: Rico / tuba, euphonium & valve trombone: S. Hofmann / violins: Helmut Lipsky / accordion: Tobias Morgenstern / alto sax & tenor sax solo: S. Gregory / harmonica: Marc “Nof-Nof” Tourtchaninoff / soprano and alto sax solos: Dean Frazer
7) Sang Neuf – for our children (C. Vuille / Fizzè) 4’40” drums: D. Spahni / electric bass, cuatro & guitars: C. Vuille / string bass: Sylvain Gagnon / kanun: H. Shaker / hackbrett: R. Schiltknecht / violins: H. Lipsky / accordion: T. Morgenstern / balafon, darbouka & djembe: Dizzi
8) Sleep Dub – (Strekosa’s Chant) (Fizzè) 4’30” drums & perc: “Horsemouth” / bass: Sydney “Juinior Dan” Gossine / guitars: “Chinna” / throat vocals of Altai & topshur: Nohon & Bolot / komus (jew’s harp): Bolot / clavinet: Dr. Pablo Black
9) Dream (Fizzè / Rico) 5’15” drums: “Horsemouth” / riddim guitar: “Chinna” / bass & pick guitar: D. Bovell / trombone: Rico / reeds: S. Gregory / brass: S. Hofmann / vibraphone: Fizzè
10) Blues for Eddie Boyd (Fizzè) 5’03” drums: D. Spahni / bass: D. Bovell / voice: Taj Mahal / milkpots: P. Cuche / spoons, darbouka & cabassa: Dizzi / lead & rythm guitar: J. Kpiaye / slide & pick guitars: C. Vuille / wah-guitar: Fizzè / reeds: S. Gregory 2nd tenor sax solo: “Bammie” / trombone: S. Hofmann / hammond C 3 organ: B. Dennerlein / 2nd piano: Georgie Fame / messenger: Samuel “Balz” Burckhardt
11) Rebirth (Linton Kwesi Johnson) 3’49” drums: D. Spahni / bass: Linton Kwesi Johnson / pick guitar: J. Kpiaye / riddim guitar: Fizzè / soprano sax & flute solo: S. Gregory
12) Still Life (C. Vuille – arr. S. Gregory) 3’48” drums, percussion & handclaps: D. Spahni / bass & handclaps: C. Vuille / alto & tenor sax: S. Gregory / trumpets: Hans Hämmerle / guitars: C. Vuille, Jean-Vincent Huguenin & Julien Baillod
13) Still Love (Alton Ellis) 4’13” drums: D. Spahni / bass, riddim & pick guitars: D. Bovell / reeds: S. Gregory / brass: S. Hofmann / lead guitar: J. Kpiaye / hammond C 3 organ lead: B. Dennerlein
Bonus Gags (lite!):
14) Nice Time 2’50” (the Radio Edit – short version)
15) Animals (Bob Dylan) 5’05” vocal & programming: Fizzè
16) Lintus (Fizzè / T. Morgenstern) 3’07” drums: D. Spahni / cello: Raphael Zweifel / bass, guitar & xylophone: Fizzè / percussion: Dizzi / accordion: T. Morgenstern
17) nomol eis…
Produced, arranged, recorded & mixed at Studio Mensch by Fizzè (flute, Hammond C3 organ, keyboards, bass, guitar, vibraphone & xylophone except where otherwise noted)
all songs c & p by Mensch Music except “Rebirth” published by LKJ Music Publishers Ltd., “Animals” & “Still Love” are copyright control
More Info
in 1997 – catalogue number: CD AGR 009
After I finished “The Dawn of Peeni Waali” I still had lots of ’embryo’_material together and the ‘old contacts’ came in handy to start a second serve.
Every meeting with a new musician meant another pleasurable anecdote. No single ‘rent a player’ occurred (‘cept Robbie Shakespeare). For most, it was always more like an invitation of respect to become a party of fun and joy to record with. At the same time, I became involved in a lot of ‘side-productions’ that fuelled new aquaintances and the musicians took a liking to come over to Switzerland and record in ‘hedonistic conditions’.
e.g. I wanted to do a blues rendering in tribute to my musical mentor Eddie Boyd (a blues singer from Mississippi with whom I grew up). However, Eddie passed away before we’d finish the tune. While I was recording the bass with Dennis Bovell, I told him the original plan and mentioned on the side, that I’d have to abandon the idea, because the only voice that could ‘substitute’ Eddie – if ever – would be someone like blues-titan Taj Mahal. Now Dennis being good friends with Taj, count two and two… Next time, Taj toured in Switzerland he came over and the blues was in the can…
Getting to know LKJ better through the years, naturally I met the players from his band, e.g. Steve Gregory who in turn was to become the backbone in terms of reeds for many recording session here. Steve introduced me to his old friend Georgie Fame. The link wasn’t so farfetched, because Georgie was also the first British guy to play with Rico as far back as 1962…
Listening back to the organ takes of Georgie Fame, I thought, the stake could be put even higher, so I called Barbara Dennerlein. We’d set the logistics and a few days later, Barbara came over and blew me away by not only being an extraordinary player, but also a very charming, wit and fun being to work with.
When I mixed the Cairo band ‘Sharkiat’, I’ve got to know the kanun player Hossam Shaker (R.I.P.). He was curious enough to ask and hear what kind of music I’m doing, so I played him some raw tunes.
He took to it immediately, improvised to it for fun and, of course, I miked him up and he joined the party with another colour, another exotic touch (sic).
While recording another album for the Face Music label Holot & Nohon from Altai, the same thing happened: they were curious to hear “what I got”. I suggested they’d bring in their throat vocals on the one harmony riddim “Sleep Dub” to accentuate even more the monotony and enhance the trance-like feeling of “Strekosa’s (Peeni Waali in Altai language) Chant”; a welcome change to all the complicated scoring and intricate musical structures of most of the other tunes.
Sometimes we have to work for vein patrons; people who believe – because they have money, they can take any liberty, allow themselves to take liberties…
One of such “producers” produced (sick) his singing house-wife; an ill-fated project. I had to cast a set of skilled accompanying musicians which I found in the trio L’Art de Passage from Berlin who backed Swiss troubadour Linard Bardill at the time. The meeting and working with Rainer Rohloff (guitar), Stefan Kling (piano) and Tobias Morgenstern was a revelation for all of us! The relations with these brilliant musicians and nice people made us enjoy the synergies of meeting people making music…
With Tobias, I found yet another ‘mental brother’. Tobias immediately took to the idea of exchange and it wasn’t all too surprising, that Morgenstern’s first solo-album soon came out on Mensch Records.
Getting to use accordion extensively, I glanced in the direction of other ‘typical’ Swiss instruments such as the hackbrett and asked a local player, to participate on some tracks. In exchange, I’d mix and release his own venture (“Tunsch”). 10 years later we teamed up as “Peeni Waali vs. Schildpatt” (or the Schildpatt posse vs. the Peeni Waali posse) within the album SHA , a classification defying “collage” of teamworks, remixes from improvisations of old and new, i.e. “Nice Time in Swiss” in its humptiest molting…
To integrate local colour, a guitar-playing neighbour joins in: Hubert Osterwalder with whom I soon started a teamwork lasting up to this present day on many musical journeys, e.g. the great R’n’B band Gumbo.
And yet another fantastic player joined the round while he was here for another project: violinist Helmut Lipsky from Montreal, Canada. Highly skilled, classically trained, Lipsky skillfully contributed with a flabbergasting fiddle solo!