Aka Moon

Aka Moon is a Belgian jazz trio. Their name is commonly mispronounced "AKA Moon" like the acronym for "also known as". The correct pronunciation is "AH-kah MOON".

Aka Moon
OriginBelgium
GenresJazz, World Music
Years active1992 – present
LabelsCarbon 7, Cypres, W.E.R.F. Records, Outhere Records
Websitehttp://www.akamoon.be
Members

Music career

Founding and style

The founders of the trio are saxophonist Fabrizio Cassol, bassist Michel Hatzigeorgiou, and drummer Stéphane Galland. All three were in groups, including the Nasa Na Band with guitarist Pierre Van Dormael, before forming Aka Moon. They formed the band after spending time in the Central African Republic studying the musical habits of Aka pygmies. In 1992, they released their first, self-titled album, inspired by how pygmies created music.

Aka Moon combines jazz, rock, and world music.[1] Their refreshing approach to jazz gives the trio a highly distinctive sound. They could be compared musically and philosophically with the M-Base movement and M-Base founder Steve Coleman, Belgian ensemble Octurn, Stéphane Payen's Thôt, Sylvain Cathala 's Print, Vijay Iyer, and Rudresh Mahanthappa. After their encounter with the AKA Pygmees, Aka Moon’s focus has shifted towards various different African, Indian, Maghrebian, Cuban, Arab, Afro-American and European traditions, due to their extended collaborations with international artists.

Albums

Their first few albums released in the early 1990s (Aka Moon, Rebirth, and Live at Kaai) featured the original trio. In the mid-90s, the band included Indian musicians and music for Akasha Vol. 1 and Akasha Vol. 2, which used flute, tabla, and mridangam. Ganesh added guitarist Marc Ducret. Elohim featured a more electric line-up, with vocalist David Linx and keyboardist Benoit Delbecq. Live at Vooruit featured percussionist Doudou N'Diaye Rose.

In the late 1990s, the group produced the trilogy Invisible Mother, Invisible Sun, and Invisible Moon. The concept was based around the Chinese I Ching (book of changes). Invisible Mother has the trio playing with the Ictus Ensemble, a European chamber band. The music showcases a dark, chamber string-quartet side of the band and lays the groundwork for the follow-up albums in the trilogy. Invisible Sun is an eleven-piece big band. Invisible Moon features Umayalpuram K. Sivaraman and Benoit Delbecq. Aka Moon revisits and rearranges several themes found in different spots throughout the trilogy.

In Real Time (2001) was composed for ballet company of Anne-Teresa De Keersmaeker Rosas.[1] Guitars (2002) included jazz guitarist David Gilmore. Like earlier works, there are examples of recurring, rearranged themes within the album as the group pays hommage to several different guitarists and their styles: like John Scofield, Bill Frisell, and Paco De Lucia. Amazir (2006) included Magic Malik (flute, voice) and Fabian Fiorini (piano). For Culture Griot (2009) the band invited Baba Sissoko and for The Scarlatti Book (2015) pianist Fabian Fiorini.

In 2017, the band celebrated their 25th anniversary with a music box, Constellations Box (Outhere Music), which consists of 20 albums. The last album is called Light Ship Trio on which you can hear an unpublished, old recording. In 2018, the group releases the trio album NOW (Outhere Music).

Discography

On Carbon 7 Records:

  • Aka Moon (1992)
  • Nzomba (1992)
  • Rebirth (1994)
  • Akasha Vol. 1 (1995)
  • Akasha Vol. 2 (1995)
  • Ganesh (1997)
  • Elohim (1997)
  • Live at Vooruit (1998)
  • Live at the Kaai (1999)
  • Invisible Mother (1999)
  • Invisible Sun (2000)
  • In Real Time (2001)
  • Invisible Moon (2001)

On De W.E.R.F. Records:

On Cypres Records:

  • Amazir (2006)
  • Culture Griot (2009) with Baba Sissoko & Black Machine
  • Aka Moon + DJ Grazzoppa's DJ Bigband (2010)
  • Unison (2012)

On Outhere Records:

  • Double Live: Aka Balkan Moon & AlefBa (2015)
  • The Scarlatti Book (2015) with Fabian Fiorini
  • Nasa Na (2015) with Pierre Van Dormael
  • Constellations Box (2017)
  • NOW (2018)
  • Opus 111 (2020)
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gollark: I think politics is probably about as controversial as theology. Most people here are probably not the demographic to care much about theological conflict stuff.
gollark: We probably only need info, introductions/welcome (could be merged), computers, maths, politics/economics, general "things" (#3d-printing/<#694964719135490078>/<#677752722761711618>/<#677667174826901513>), media (music, creative works, video games, misc and links), images/things in the world (aviation/images/luxury hotels/surface transport/restaurants/pets).
gollark: I feel like this is an unproductively large number of channels.
gollark: No idea, not really, yes, people do that a lot, that's kind of done a bit, no.

References

  1. Prato, Greg. "Aka Moon | Biography & History | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
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