“The rhythms and traditions of the drums were essential starting points for our compositions and acted as the building blocks for all the other instruments…our music has developed and evolved with each members musical background and influences being heard within the band…'Fofoulah', our first album, is a snapshot of the band at this moment in time and the result of a constantly developing sound”

Fofoulah by Fofoulah, released 19 September 2014 1. No Troubles (Kelinte) 2. Hook Up (Nango Dereh) 3. Make Good (Soumala) 4. Don't Let Your Mind Unravel, Safe Travels 5. The Clean Up (Rahas) 6. Blest (Issaâdiyen) 7. Fighting Chance 8. Reality Rek 9.

In keeping with the band’s expansive approach, the album also features an incredible roster of guest voices: Senegalese singer and Bristol resident Batch Gueye, UK singer / producer sensation Ghostpoet (courtesy of 'Play it Again Sam'), Algerian/Parisian singer Iness Mezel and the acclaimed Gambian born, Fulani musician Juldeh Camara (JuJu, Robert Plant).

It’s subtle, beckoning with its toes in the ancestral mud, but this is modern music, intriguing and well-textured
— froots
Bravely adventurous
— The Guardian
African drumming, trance grooves, dubby bass lines and rock guitar with plenty of spatial improvisation.
— Uncut
Daega Rek pushes things a lot further [than Fofoulah’s first LP for Glitterbeat] … It’s dense music, humid with electronics and keys, and gives the surprising yet exciting impression of a band who were seeking after one thing but stumbled on something else entirely.
— The Wire
FOFOULAH... are properly outlandish, teleporting the listener to some West African metropolis a hundred years in the future…this one’s fierce on every level.
— MOJO

The London-based quintet Fofoulah (meaning “it's there” in Wolof) was formed in 2011 and features Tom Challenger on saxophone and keyboards, Batch Gueye on vocals, sabar and dance, Phil Stevenson on guitar, Johnny Brierley on bass, Dave Smith on drums, and Kaw Secka on vocals and sabar.

With the rhythms of the Sabar drums - a traditional form of Wolof drumming from the Gambia and Senegal – at its heart, Fofoulah’s music has evolved into an inspired cosmopolitan mélange that also incorporates elements of electronic music, dub, improvisation and afro-rock. Like the complex city they live in, their music is shaped and lifted by diverse sound-worlds and cultures.

Fofoulah is a London-based group mixing Senegalese voice and West African rhythms with dub basslines, sci-fi synths, raw guitars and intense grooves featuring members of Juju, Robert Plant presents Sensational Space Shifters, Irok and Red Snapper. With members from Senegal, UK and The Gambia, Fofoulah blend genres and cultures to create a sound which is unique in the UK music scene.

“Some of us grew up within this culture, some of us studied the rhythms but most importantly we all realized and embraced the undeniable power and energy of these (sabar) drums” Johnny Brierley

Having performed mainly in the creative hubs of east London and Bristol, in 2013 Fofoulah released the ‘Bene Bop EP’, a collaboration with Senegalese singer Biram Seck. Later that year the band entered the famed Real World Studios near Bath to begin work on their radiant debut album ‘FOFOULAH.’

Produced by drummer Dave Smith ‘FOFOULAH’ is a previously unvisited crossroads where Sabar rhythms meet dub basslines and sci-fi synths; liquid melodies and Wolof rap entangle with trance-like dance grooves; and raw guitars, horns and samples blend with west and north African song forms. In the album’s liner notes, bass player Johnny Brierley describes the creative journey that led to the making the album:

 
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Fofoulah followed up their first record with an even more shapeshifting and adventurous recording. Daega Rek (The Truth) is brought into sharp focus by the rhythms and vocals of Gambian sabar drummer Kaw Secka and the vivid production of keyboardist/saxophonist Tom Challenger. Slippery sabar beats, dystopian electronics and echoing, shamanic chants ratchet up both the dub quotient and the dramatic tension. Creating a soundworld that is both earthy and urban, futurist and rooted.

After the release of their self-titled album, the band played extensively in the U.K. and Europe where - spontaneously - every concert would see Kaw Secka rise to the microphone (with his tama - a talking drum) and rap over the last song, cuing rhythmic patterns for the group to play in unison (called Bakas). It was decided to take this exploratory part of the shows forward into the next realm.

Daega Rek by Fofoulah, released 09 November 2018 1. Nyari Garong 2. Ndanane 3. Seye 4. Daega Rek 5. Njita 6. Chebou Jane 7. Knicki 8. Kaddy 9. Pulo "Fofoulah's foundations are dub and jazz, but these are beefed up with electronics...and, most persuasively, the sabar and tama drums of West Africa."

The concept that emerged for this album involved combining recordings of drums and percussion (laid down at Real World Studios) with improvisatory vocalizations and a production aesthetic that pushed the band’s collective sound in a much more electronic and dub-based direction.

The resultant tracks were shaped by Challenger in his studio (Brockley, London), fusing the new rhythm sessions with a variety of manipulated, previous recordings of the band – while also adding an array of synthesizers and a vast sample palette. Secka then came in to lay down vocals and it was these contributions that went on to define the final songs.

The rhythmic propulsion of the initial recordings made by Smith and Secka at Real World, melds with a backdrop of constantly shifting sonic colors - Brierley’s deep, melodic bass lines, underpin the evolving patterns of Stevenson’s guitar which in turn, intersect with Challenger’s keyboards and the urgency of Secka’s incantations. The emphasis on the sonic structure and the identity of the material showcases its influences - traditional sabar drumming meeting glitchy electronics; and dub textures blending with elements of footwork and drum & bass.

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Artwork by Albert Fielder

Artwork by Albert Fielder

In October 2019 Fofoulah performed at Womex in Tampere, Finland. This came at the end of an amazing year of music making and touring. Highlights included Celtic Connections, Alice, The Holburne Museum, Wilderness Festival, Cambridge Folk Festival, WOMAD Festival and The Jazz Cafe supporting Aziza Brahim. Fofoulah’s work and touring has been supported by Arts Council England, PRS Foundation, the International Showcase Fund* and Glitterbeat Records.

*Fofoulah is supported by PRS Foundation’s International Showcase Fund, which is run by PRS Foundation in partnership with Department of International Trade (DIT), British Underground, Arts Council England, The Musicians’ Union (MU), PPL, Creative Scotland, Wales Arts International and Wales Arts International”