Konono Yes Yes by thereverseengineer
Browse the posts of this blog and you might notice a few of trends, two of which are: Konono No.1 / Congotronics, and Techno. Imagine my delight, then, when I recently discovered a series of remixes of the former in the style of the latter. So inspired was I, in fact, that I’ve made one of my very own. Read and listen on, friends…
At risk of repeating myself, Konono No.1 are the hypnotic electric thumb piano maestros of the Congo and weavers of such musical delights the likes of which my ears have never before been blessed. Congotronics is a sort of blanket name for their style of music and a series of albums featuring them and their contemporaries. There are many similarities between their music and Western dance music, particularly techno and trance, so the recent remixes are a match made in heaven. To my utter bemusement I once managed to clear a dancefloor of eclectic world music and dance fans by playing Konono No.1, so perhaps tweaking the music for a more conventional Western dancefloor has been a long time coming.
Part 1 saw Burnt Friedman let loose on Konono No.1′s Rubaczech resulting in a wonderful, funky shuffle of a tune. The scattery nature of the originial material is maintained as the muffled background whistles, whoops, plinks and plonks replicate the live nature of Konono’s records. Their trademark fuzzy thumb pianos are used to nice effect, both rhythmically and melodically. A heavy kick adds a welcome dancefloor element.
On the flip, dubstep pioneer Shackleton turns Kasai Allstars Mukuba into a dark, brooding epic. However, as seems to be characteristic of many modern production styles, rarely is an idea left to flourish or evolve, a menagerie of sections are instead allowed jostle up against eachother. The technical proficiency is undeniable – Shackleton clearly knows exactly what he is doing – but being a fan of long, evolving grooves I found this too piecemeal to really get into.
Part 2 features Mark Ernestus of dub techno outfit Basic Channel turning Konono’s Masikulu into an irresistable techno floor-filler. The Dub version is a long roller, with snapshots of delayed, distorted thumb piano filth and vocal snippets over a beautiful, rolling, bass heavy 4-to-the-floor beat. The Beat version strips the tune down to the dancefloor fundementals, delivering just the groove.
Now, when I first heard all of these remixes, I was left a little bit cold. Ok, not cold, but I wasn’t hot and flustered like I’d expected to be. Where was the stomping, up-tempo, downright dirtiness of the originals? Where were the thumb pianos? How come nobody had made a version that was, essentially, a Konono No.1 tune over a techno beat? My arrogance/naivety/ambition kicked in and I decided that if the commissioned remixers hadn’t done that then I jolly well would. With source material of such vitality to work with, surely it wouldn’t be that hard?
A couple of days and one Reverse Engineer remix later, I realise that it’s not a case of how hard it is, it’s a case of whether there’s any point. Konono No.1 et al have covered the up-tempo trance-like scattery stomp over their 25 years of music making. Why reinvent the wheel when their wheel is so goddamned perfect? Also, to make techno (or dubstep in Shackleton’s case), a producer needs to stay within a certain tempo range. This isn’t a stubborn, self-imposed limitation so much as a naturally arising trait of being a producer interested in a particular style. A 160bpm gallop ain’t dub techno.
So my effort at remixing also fell short of a ‘Konono No.1 tune with a techno beat’, and in the process of producing it I came to appreciate Burnt Friedman, Shackleton and Mark Ernestus’ expertise all the more. Nevertheless, I’m very pleased with my version, and I present it here (well, at the top of this post) for your listening and downloading pleasure. Unfortunately the official remixes are 12″ vinyl only and not online, but I encourage you to hunt them down in whatever way you can!



