I say Alt. because I was attending something somewhat new. One night with a rap session earlier on then Afrobeat. The rap wasn't the first I've attended, but one of few. The rapping started a bit late after a DJ session with this style of music. I liked that although perhaps less the actual rapping. I can find it angry, although I chatted with a few practitioners and they were perfectly friendly. But the lyrics and presence can be thus and I was due downstairs for the Afrobeat anyway. This was music from a genuine Ghanaian leader, Afromoses Baidu, with his band. The band was called Afro Moses with the lineup of Afromoses and two female voices, keys, bass and drums. They had played the night before on a much larger stage for the Multicultural Festival and that would have been exciting. Smiths was quieter, especially this night with the Festival still on and some threat of rain but the music was infectious, led closely by Afromoses himself. He sang and played kalimba and ukelele or small guitar and often used a digital harmoniser for a different vocal tone. Two female singers, Emma and Lulu, were offside for some lovely harmonies and all the rest of the band had mics for their occasional vocal parts. I missed most names other than Brett Adrien on bass. The feels were relaxed with reggae and Afro grooves and indulgent harmonies. You can only love those voices and harmonies. The grooves are well known but quite different at times. I think I know reggae and Afrobeat but seeing them in real life and hearing those drum and bass lines was instructive. A very different feel, bar breakups, bass fingering and the like. This is not the blues feel that merges into jazz. So both welcoming and nourishing and surprisingly quite different in lyrical themes for example when Afromoses highlighted that Ghanaian women tend not to dance while Aussie men are the dance shirkers. Difference is a wonderful thing. Just a lovely, indulgent outing.
Afro Moses performed reggae and Afrobeat at Smiths, led by Afromoses Baidu (vocals, kalimba, ukelele or small guitar) with Emma and Lulu (vocals), Brett Adrien (bass, vocals), keys and drums (instrument, vocals).





























































