
Sortie : 1976
Style : World music , South Africa
Tracklist :
1 Tamatie yoyo no. 3
2 Langa more
3 Emarabini
4 Sekusile
5 Insizwa
6 Amangwane
7 Jimmy
8 Isinkwa no fishi
9 Sihamba kancane
10 Izinto ezinhle
11 Umtshi tshimbo
12 Umlando
13 Soze ndende
14 Lomfazi uyangihlupha
15 Izintombi zika Mogatusi
16 Amahlokohloko
17 Bayangi zonda
18 Rosie
thanks http://globalgroovers.blogspot.com
The Dark City Sisters were a group of session singers who came together to record an album and in the process popularized an innovative new style of singing. Rather than singing a common four-part harmony, the Sisters used five parts, which created a richer tone. Sometimes known as "vocal jive," this technique was subsumed under the umbrella term "mbaqanga," meaning, literally, dumpling, and figuratively, a homegrown style.
~ Leon Jackson
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