Tcheka

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Agonia 02:32 Tools
Amizadi si 03:59 Tools
DJan Kre Bejabu 05:17 Tools
Fla Mantenha 04:21 Tools
Tuti Santiagu 05:45 Tools
Satanas 04:29 Tools
Sabu 04:06 Tools
Makriadu 04:43 Tools
Pexera Porto 03:06 Tools
Antuneku 04:11 Tools
Mamai Doka 04:02 Tools
Kriadu Assim 03:58 Tools
Rozadi rezadu 06:49 Tools
Ana Maria 04:59 Tools
Da-M Bu Mon 04:27 Tools
Naia 02:55 Tools
Storia Estrada 04:06 Tools
Djan bedja 04:50 Tools
Kre ka nha 05:11 Tools
Strada pico 05:49 Tools
Lonji 04:26 Tools
Talulu 03:49 Tools
Satanaz 04:47 Tools
Nu monda 05:25 Tools
Transason 03:21 Tools
Língua Pretu 04:23 Tools
Telemóvel 03:38 Tools
Moça De Classe 03:50 Tools
Mamai 04:23 Tools
Tchoro Na Morte 03:17 Tools
Sisterna 02:47 Tools
Dor De Mar 03:09 Tools
Madalena 03:31 Tools
Primeru Bes Kin Ba Cinema 04:03 Tools
Tadja Korbu 03:35 Tools
TéTé Landin 04:20 Tools
Árgui 03:35 Tools
Tenpul Nona Negul Pinha 03:26 Tools
Faka Na Prega 04:33 Tools
Forti Bu Dan Cu Stango 03:07 Tools
Primeru DJobi 03:29 Tools
djuana 04:37 Tools
kumbossa 04:03 Tools
kalaboço 04:03 Tools
pexin pexon 04:21 Tools
santa 03:09 Tools
tabanka assigo 05:45 Tools
Tadja Corbu 03:35 Tools
naie 06:18 Tools
Son Di Tchuba 02:57 Tools
Maria Soni 05:36 Tools
Argui! 02:32 Tools
Agonia [Agony and the Ecstasy Prologue] 02:32 Tools
Makriadu [Rude 66 808 Remix] 02:32 Tools
Djan Bedja [I'm Old] 02:32 Tools
Amizadi Si [Is This Friendship] 04:13 Tools
Strada Pico [Pico's Raod] 05:51 Tools
Nu Monda [Let's Plow] 05:26 Tools
Maria soni (Portuguese) 05:26 Tools
Djuana (Portuguese) 05:26 Tools
Kumbossa (Portuguese) 05:26 Tools
Transason [Mixture from Sevilla] 05:26 Tools
Sananaz [Satan in High Heels Mix] 05:26 Tools
Djan Kré Bejabu [I Want to Kiss You] 05:17 Tools
Kre ka nha (Portuguese) 05:17 Tools
Fla Manthena 05:17 Tools
Nayaé 05:17 Tools
Strada 05:17 Tools
Djan Kré Bajabu [I Want to Kiss You] 05:17 Tools
maria son 05:17 Tools
son di tchiba 05:17 Tools
Basalisco 00:00 Tools
Argui ! 00:00 Tools
Primeiru Djobi 00:00 Tools
Storia Strada 00:00 Tools
07 rozadi rezadu 00:00 Tools
Primer Bez Kin Bá Cinema 00:00 Tools
Pexin pexon (Portuguese) 00:00 Tools
Tenpul Nona Negul Pinha 00:00 Tools
Kalaboco (Portuguese) 00:00 Tools
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Manuel Lopes Andrade, aka Tcheka, was born on the 20th July 1973 in the port of Ribeira Barca, Santa Catarina district, on Santiago, the most African island of the Cape Verde archipelago. At a very early age, he began to perform alongside his father, Nho Raul Andrade, a highly popular violinist at the island’s village dances and festivities. Tcheka was in good hands. Every wrong note brought a rap on the knuckles from his father’s bow, but he learned quickly and soon made his mark at dances, weddings, baptisms and so on. However, the boy had other ambitions. At 15, he began to develop a more personal style, based on batuque, one of Santiago Island’s more popular beats, originally played by women. One of the first pieces he wrote, “Man’ba des bes kumida dâ”, gave a clear idea of the musical path he wished to follow. His aim was to widen the appeal of batuque, turning it into a beat that everyone would love. Batuque is a beat specific to the island of Santiago in the Cape Verde archipelago, conveys the collective memory and identity of a people. Batuque was first played after work in the fields, traditionally by women. Sitting in a circle, they tapped on a “tchabeta”, a bundle of cloth, normally made of piled loincloths that they rolled up and held between their legs. Depending on the thickness and compression of the fabric used, these cloth drums produced a variety of sounds. Batuque provided an accompaniment for “finaçon”, a vocal style that the women improvised to suit their audience and the occasion. Following African tradition, the singers commented on village events, celebrated farming festivals, births and marriages, and commemorated deaths. Sometimes one of them would enter the “terrero” (the inside of the circle) and dance. Today, these inflexible traditions have been radically updated. Firstly, the women make their drums from plastic bags. Secondly, young men, Tcheka is not alone, are adopting these traditional styles, batuque and finaçon, to assert their African identity more actively. As a young man, Tcheka left his rural home and went to live in Praia, where he became a cameraman for national television, a job that involved travel and broadened his horizons. In Praia, Tcheka met journalist Julio Rodrigues and wrote a number of songs with him. The two played informally in the bars of the Cape Verdean capital and other musicians soon joined them: percussionist Pery, bassist Kizo, flautist Robert Pemberton (a Scotsman who lived in Cape Verde) and, more recently, percussionist Raul. Today, Tcheka is well-known in Praia for his work in modernising “batuque”, in much the same way as Catchas updated Funana, the other great Santiago beat, in the seventies. Providing a new reading of batuque while conserving its traditional structures is the message of Tcheka’s first album, entitled “Argui” , “rise / stand up” in Creole. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.