The Homeless Wanderer - Ethiopia to Europe to Jerusalem

Posted over 5 years ago
Many of us have come to know and love the Ethiopiques series. And for folks that didn’t already know the amazing music, Jim Jarmusch’s last feature film, Broken Flowers introduced a few million new listeners to the sounds. A while back, (the lastest in the series) Ethiopiques Volume 21 was released, this was a departure for the usually upbeat, and often ensemble recordings of semi-danceable rhythms that appear on many of the Ethiopiques volumes. Volume 21 features a woman named Emahoy TseguÈ-Maryam GuÈbrou playing solo piano.Emahoy was born into a prominent Ethiopian family in 1923, she was the daughter of the heralded Ethiopian writer and intellectual, Kentiba GuÈbrou. She spent a good deal of her youth and young adult years away from her native Ethiopia. She was sent as a child to Switzerland, where she studied violin and piano. She continued playing the piano when she returned to Ethiopia, and then continued her studies under a Polish teacher in Egypt. At some point during her studies she was living in England and for some, most likely retarded patriarchal reason, she was prevented from continuing her music studies, so at that point she decided to become a nun. The lifestyle must have afforded her the time to at least occasionally practice, compose and evolve as an artist because it shows in her beautiful work.You can see the imprint of her European studies in Beethoven, Strauss and Chopin and it said that she was also at least vaguely aware of the happenings of early Ethiopian Pop artists like Tilahun Gessese, Hirut Bekele, Mahmud Ahmad and Bizunesh Bekele and was influenced by the religious music of the Ethiopian church as well. I think she is still alive, living as a Christian nun in a Jerusalem monastery.The tracks on this disc are culled from sessions ranging from 1963 when she was 40 years old up to some sessions in the early 90’s when she was in her early 70’s. It seems that she was mostly self-recorded.Its not that the music is completely different from anything you’ve ever heard. That’s just it....her compositions pay homage to beautiful elements of European and Ethiopian styles, its smooth enough to play for your grandma and hip enough to impress the indie record store clerk. Meditative, adventurous and extremely pleasant. The first track, 'The Homeless Wanderer' gets me everytime. Check it out.

Comments (7)

  1. CrashPryor says ...very, very nice...
    Permalink posted 12/22/2006
  2. Hattie says Thank you for this post. Wow. Just reading your second to last sentence gave me the chills. Peace, Hattie.
    Permalink posted 12/22/2006
  3. fistula spume says Number 21?! I'm only on 9. It's going to take me a few years to get to this one. Looks like a great album. They're all really good. Haven't hit a bad one yet. Nice post. Praise Haile Selassie!
    Permalink posted 12/22/2006
  4. Kate says I'm glad you wrote about this CD. I am with Fistula, though- it's going to take me for-evah to really digest all the Ethiopiques discs. Plus i'm kind of stuck in Mali right now, as far as African music goes, and I want to finish exploring Moussa Diallo and Tom Diakite first. I really just need an extra brain and ears that can stay home and listen to music 24 hours a day.
    Permalink posted 12/22/2006
  5. fistula spume says Oh my god Kate. That is it! Extra brain and ears. It all makes sense to me. I now see my destiny laid out before me. No one will want to look at me but it will all be worth it. Muahahahaha!
    Permalink posted 12/22/2006
  6. willywag says Indeed, indeed! Thanks fro reminding me of this wonderful series, I shall get back into it once I've returned home from the English countryside..perhaps I'll see her walkiing the Malvern Hills. Se you soon, Proscriba.
    Permalink posted 12/26/2006
  7. magdalenus says Who doesn't like a nice evening of Ethiopiques? Seriosly good stuff. Amen. 21 albums. Eh. So they're prolific. Doesn't mean you have to digest every one. :)
    Permalink posted 05/16/2007

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