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Total ratings: 1837
Length: 4:55
Plays (last 30 days): 2
Happy, happy Africa
They sing a-bing-a-bang-a-bingo
They have a ball and really go
Skokiaan, Skokiaan, Skokiaan
Oh, take a trip to Africa
Take any ship to Africa
Come on along and learn the lingo
Beside a jungle bungalow
Skokiaan, Skokiaan, Skokiaan
Hot drums are drumming, the
Hot strings are strumming, and
Warm lips are blissful, they're
Kissful of Skokiaan
Oh, when you go to Africa
Happy, happy Africa
You live along like a king-o
Right in the jungle bungalow
Hokey-Skoki, Skoki-oki-aan
Okey-Dokey, anybody can
(Skoki-Skoki) man, oh man, oh man
You sing a-bing-a-bang-a-bingo
In hokey-pokey Skokiaan
Skoiaan
Oh, far away in Africa
Happy, happy Africa
They sing a-bing-a-bang-a-bingo
They have a ball and really go, go, go
Oh, take a trip to Africa
Any ship to Africa
Come on along and learn the lingo
Beside a jungle bungalow
Hot drums are drumming, the
Hot strings are strumming, and
Warm lips are blissful, they're
Kissful of Skokiaan
Oh, if you go to Africa
Happy, happy Africa
You live along like a king-o
Right in a jungle bungalow
Skokiaan, Skokiaan, Skokiaan, Skokiaan
Oh, right in a jungle bungalow
Skokiaan
In the early days of my listening to.RP this used to come on a few times a month. Glad it's been a while. Still sounds great.
Not familiar with that song so I'll have to do some investigation work.
Stay tuned!
Lovin the Satchmo!!
trivia: Satchmo was his nickname from folks saying he had to have a Satchel (a horse feed bag) Mouth in order to blow like he did.
Cool stuff. New stuff. Syncopation stuff.
New Orleans named its airport after him.
skokiaan
An illicit home-brewed alcoholic drink made from yeast, sugar, and water.
Origin
Perhaps from Zulu isikokeyana 'small enclosure', referring to the practice of hiding illicit liquor in holes in the ground.
Perhaps, but were it not for Armstrong opening countless doors for those guys (Gillespie and Davis in particular), they would not have even been allowed to walk through the doors that they would eventually be blowing off.
So cool ...
Kind of truncated ... but it is very nice to be exposed to African-US cross-pollination from the 50s ...
(there are probably hundreds of versions of this song, but the 'real' Louis Armstrong version is closer to 5 minutes long and includes some Armstrong vocals)
I guess Bill changed the record, because I hear Louis sing the entire song.
I really really like it. 9 from this 1982 product.
Edit: I was wrong. The mentioned lyrics are not all sung in this track. I request the entire song!
Always makes me want to go to Happy Happy Africa; if only that were possible now.
Thanks
So cool ...
Kind of truncated ... but it is very nice to be exposed to African-US cross-pollination from the 50s ...
(there are probably hundreds of versions of this song, but the 'real' Louis Armstrong version is closer to 5 minutes long and includes some Armstrong vocals)
kingart wrote:
Opinion, of course, but hard to argue with the idea that he managed to both originate and transcend genres over multple decades and remain the top paid performer during his long, long life. It's a feat not matched by anyone else so, yes, it's probably not hyperbolic to say that he was the greatest of all time.
kingart wrote:
I tried some of this stuff in Mozambique last Fall. It was not disgusting, until I discovered that the women who fermented the skokiaan (it tastes more like a beer with high alcohol than true booze, milky and slightly sticky) used spit to start the process.
Needed this music then.
You caught me!
suesblues wrote:
Wiki says:
"Skokiaan" is a popular tune originally written by Rhodesian musician August Musarurwa (d.1968) (usually identified as August Msarurgwa on record labels) in the tsaba-tsaba big band style that succeeded marabi. Skokiaan (Chikokiyana in Shona) <1> refers to an illegal self-made alcoholic beverage typically brewed over one day that may contain a dangerous ingredient, such as methylated spirits.<2><3> The tune has also been recorded as "Sikokiyana," "Skokiana," and "Skokian."
It goes on to say the song has been covered many times.
Love Satchmo!
Just so fine
This made me smile as soon as it started. Had to have a look who it was, and glad to see i'd previously rated it a 9.
OK, you've convinced me. 8 -> 9.
Great fun and makes me happy.
"Satch says, ‘Leave it all behind ya!'"
heaven forbid!
This made me smile as soon as it started. Had to have a look who it was, and glad to see i'd previously rated it a 9.
I'm bothered by this if only because I don't think Louis ever missed anything. My guess, and it's only a guess—which is just as valid as the Wikipedia writer's guess—is that Louis knew exactly what "skokiaan" was/is and ...
Right on. Louis Armstrong was very smart, and his public persona was just that, a persona. No doubt he was well aware of the history behind the song. Maybe he performed it as a slap in the face to the racists who actually believed the stereotypes, who knows? Taking an insult and appropriating it as your own is not without precedent.
Love the song. And enjoy learning more about its background: finding out stuff like that adds immeasurably to the listening.
Exactly why I listen every day
Louis Armstrong by ~mercurium
©2006-2010 ~mercurium
Tools: pencils (2H-3B)
Original size: 15x17 cm
Time spent: 8 h
Nice, very nice
Louis Armstrong by ~mercurium
Elina ©2006-2010 ~mercurium
Tools: pencils (2H-3B)
Original size: 15x17 cm
Time spent: 8 h
Maybe you ought to find a different station...one that plays Britney Spears?
Rather than dish an insult to both AdyMiles and Britney Spears, say what you like about it.
Maybe you ought to find a different station...one that plays Britney Spears?
Thanks Bill, if only all radio were as good as this.
I fear my day will be going down-hill from here on in .
10+
The end of this one, too.... good stuff all 'round.
Satchelmouth gets a 10!
I'm bothered by this if only because I don't think Louis ever missed anything. My guess, and it's only a guess—which is just as valid as the Wikipedia writer's guess—is that Louis knew exactly what "skokiaan" was/is and performed the song with a determined, teeth-clenching irony like The Drifters did with "White Christmas." Why did he do it? Why did The Drifters do "White Christmas?" Don't know. There's a lot of truth to the notion that around then black performers in general had to do a lot of stuff they didn't like in order to do what they wanted. Louis's career hadn't quite risen yet to the point that he was embraced as an international ambassador—that would happen later—and like a lot of older, black jazz players, he was looking for ways to connect to a post-War audience. His Wiki bio is curiously empty between 1949 amd 1964—perhaps telling. Finally, the song reached its height of popularity in 1954, and Louis's version is just one of many, a fairly common phenomenon then. Someone records a hit which first breaks regionally. Then all manner of folks get into the act, either trying to corner another regional market or get lucky and break it nationally. If the Wiki article's facts are correct, Louis's version wasn't even close to being the most popular/best selling.
Well yes, Cincinnati is over the top, but they always seem to pull through. It's the Great American Dream that keeps them in the saddle. .... SOB
Very true. Our governement and economy are collapsing around our ears and all we can think of is who's going to be the next American Idol.