Providing the rhythms for African music icon Fela Anikulapo-Kuti
has had a double-edged effect on Nigerian
drummer Tony Allen's
reputation. His work is ubiquitous, but his name recognition is
negligible. Allen played with
Fela's Afrika 70 orchestra for fifteen
years, but Fela is now celebrated as the sole inventor of Afrobeat.
Afrobeat is a
fusion of traditional West African percussion with late
'60s/early '70s soul and funk. Allen's rhythmic legacy is
preserved on
more than three dozen Fela records, including landmark classics Shakara, Gentleman, Confusion, Zombie,
and Roforofo Fight.
Allen's most recent releases are the Allenko Brotherhood Ensemble
(Shanachie) and Psycho On Da Bus (Comet). As a session player, he is featured on Jamaican guitarist Ernest
Ranglin's Modern Answers To Old Problems (TelArc) and Soul Ascendants' Variations
(NuPhonic).
Whatever the new direction, Allen's understandable goal is "to make
sure this Afrobeat
spreads--like what reggae has done, like what funk
has done, what jazz has done. Now is the time for this
music."