Walias Band  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

(Redirected from Hailu Mergia)
Jump to: navigation, search

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

Walias Band (sometimes spelled Wallias Band; ዋሊያስ ባንድ) were an Ethiopian Jazz and funk band active from the early 1970s until the early 1990s. Formed by members of the Venus Band, Walias backed up many prominent singers with a hard polyrhythmic funk sound influenced by western artists like King Curtis, Junior Walker and Maceo Parker. In 1977 they recorded one of the few albums of Ethiopian instrumental music in collaboration with vibraphonist Mulatu Astatke, whose role as a bandleader and composer was also a major influence on Ethiopian popular music.

In 1981 Walias became the first modern Ethiopian band to travel to the United States, playing on a tour with singer Mahmoud Ahmed primarily to audiences of Ethiopian refugees. Four members—Girma Bèyènè, Mogès Habté, Mèlakè Gèbrè and Hailu Mergia—stayed in the U.S. and formed a new group called Zula Band in favor of returning to live in Ethiopia under its dictatorship. Mergia took work in Washington DC driving a taxi cab and released solo cassette tapes of traditional Ethiopian music played on analog synthesizer, electric piano and accordion. The remaining members—Yohannes Tèkola and Tèmarè Harègou—continued to play together under the Derg dictatorship for another decade.

In the late 1990s Walias Band found a wider audience in the west when the French label Buda Records reissued much of the group's music on the Ethiopiques series of compact discs. Their instrumental, "Musicawi Silt", became a popular dance number and has been covered by a number of artists.

The Walias Band's name derives from the walia ibex, an endangered species of the Capra genus native to the mountains of Ethiopia. They share no members with the similarly named Ibex Band who also backed up Mahmoud Ahmed during the same epoch.

Members

  • Girma Beyene: Piano, electric piano, arranger
  • Hailu Mergia: Organ, Moog synthesizer
  • Mahmoud Aman: Guitar
  • Melake Gebre: Bass
  • Temare Haragy: Drums, percussion
  • Yohanese Tekola: Trumpet
  • Tilaye Gebre: Tenor saxophone

Mulatu Astatke played vibraphone on Walias Band's 1977 album Tche Belew.

Vocalists that Walias worked with included Getachew Kassa, Mahmoud Ahmed, Woubishet Fisseha, Alemayehu Borobor, Seyoum Gebreyes, Netsanet Mellessè and Tilahun Gessesse.

Selected discography

Albums
  • Alemayemu Borobor and the Walias "Tez Aleng Hagere" 45 (Kaifa Records)
  • Hailu Mergia and the Walias Tche Belew LP (1977, Kaifa Records)
  • Tilahun Gessesse and Walias Band cassette (1980-81, Misratch Music; reissued on LP in 2011 by Pstchic Sounds)
  • Walias Band The Best of Walias LP (1981, Walias Records)
  • Hailu Mergia Hailu Mergia & His Classical Instrument cassette (1985, Kaifa Records, reissued on LP/CD/MP3 in 2013 by Awesome Tapes From Africa)
Contributing artist

Cover versions

  • Moges Habte & Ethio Jazz Group "Musicawe Silt" (1994)
  • The Daktaris "Musicawa Silt" on Soul Explosion (Desco 1998)
  • Antibalas Afrobeat Orchestra "Musicawi Silt" on Liberation Afro Beat, Vol. 1 (2000)
  • Secret Chiefs 3 "Musicawi Silt" (as "Safina") on Book M (2001)
  • Either/Orchestra "Musicawi Silt" on Éthiopiques Vol. 20: Live in Addis (2005)
  • Getatchew Mekuria and The Ex "Musicawi Silt" on Moa Anbessa (2006)
  • Zea "Muziqawi selt" (2007)
  • Le Tigre (des Platanes) & Etenesh Wassie'"Muziqawi Silt" (2008)
  • Debo Band "Musicawi Silt" on Flamingoh (Pink Bird Dawn) (2010)
  • Akalé Wubé "Muziqawi Silt" (2011)
  • Rattlemouth "Muziqawi Silt" (2011)





Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Walias Band" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools