Available
Rob
Funky Rob Way
Available again! Rob "Roy" Raindorf, born on the 13th of May 1949 in Accra, is definitely one of the most enigmatic
artists to come out of Ghana. He appeared from nowhere with a unique and twisted sound. An admirer of American artists
Otis Redding, James Brown, Wilson Pickett and Ray Charles, Rob began his trade by learning the piano at a music school
in Cotonou, Benin. When his education ended, he ventured out to make what money he could by getting gigs with the movers
and shakers of the Beninese music scene, namely Orchestre Poly-Rythmo as well as the Black Santiagos. Absorbing and
learning the intricacies of music composition, Rob returned to Ghana where he began to write his own songs and
eventually sought the backing of a band, specifically one which possessed horns. In 1977, a young Rob travelled to the
city of Takoradi in western Ghana to approach an army band named Mag-2 whom he had seen perform in Accra. Mag-2 had an
entire section of its ensemble dedicated to horns and some of the sophisticated music equipment available in Ghana at
the time - Hofner guitars, Yamaha keyboards and the like. Belonging to the "magnificient" second battalion of the
Takoradi-based army unit, original founder Amponsah Rockson decided to aptly name the band "Mag-2." Joining the army
during the 1970s was often an easy decision, particularly for musicians, since the army provided not only good music
equipment but basic services such as food and medical care.
Mag-2 was essentially filled with the best elements of "The Parrots," a highlife band in which Amponsah was the lead
guitarist. Their primary task was to entertain soldiers and with the army tour bus, perform from town to town as well as
in reputable venues in the captial. Enticed by the style of music Rob had proposed, Mag-2 backed the Ghanaian sensation
on two of his most astonishing records - his first and second albums -"Funky Rob Way" and "Make it Fast, Make it Slow,"
both of which were recorded at Essiebons studios in Accra. Despite Rob's training and musical education, Amponsah was
responsible for the vast majority of the compositions, such as building the chord progression and arranging the horns
that Rob craved. Rob would even wait for the Mag-2 maestro's cue to begin singing.
Despite early successes, a once-unflinching interest in Afrobeat began to wane by the early 1980s and Disco Boogie
rapidly became the vogue style around which label owners and
music producers sought to capitalize upon. The style Rob had shaped his career around was in decline and an adequate
income consequently became a major concern, forcing him to travel to Hamburg, Germany in search of a financial backer.
Price
€ 11.95
Genre
Format
CD - 1 disk
Release
01-06-2011
Label
Item-nr
356162
EAN
4260126060807
Availability
In stock