urbanists.social is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
We're a server for people who like bikes, transit, and walkable cities. Let's get to know each other!

Server stats:

553
active users

#ethiopia

7 posts7 participants0 posts today

Hailu Mergia and The Walias – Tche Belew (1977, Ethiopia)

Our next spotlight is on number 10 on The List, submitted by umrk. This was the first album added to The List that really got me jazzed up (pun intended)! I think any music fanatic will enjoy giving this fantastic instrumental Ethiopian jazz album a spin without knowing anything about it, but I have a hunch that knowing the political context it came out of might deepen one’s appreciation of the music.

Want to read more? See the full spotlight: 1001otheralbums.com/2025/04/17

Want to skip straight to the music? Here's the Bandcamp: hailumergia.bandcamp.com/album

Happy listening!

1001 Other Albums · Hailu Mergia and The Walias – Tche Belew (1977, Ethiopia)
More from 1001 Other Albums

@1001otheralbums.com

An essential listen!

And once you are done with that, you must run out and find the 30+ volumes of the Éthiopiques compilations. Just an incredible collection of music from an almost lost pocket of culture from the late '60/early '70's music scene of Addis Ababa & #Ethiopia

So many great artists: Gétatchèw Mèkurya, Mulatu Astatke, Emahoy Tsege Mariam Gebru

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89th
#Jazz #EthiopianMusic #JazzEthiopiques #music

en.wikipedia.orgÉthiopiques - Wikipedia

Hailu Mergia and The Walias – Tche Belew (1977, Ethiopia)

Our next spotlight is on number 10 on The List, submitted by umrk.

This was the first album added to The List that really got me jazzed up (pun intended)! I think any music fanatic will enjoy giving this fantastic instrumental Ethiopian jazz album a spin without knowing anything about it, but I have a hunch that knowing the political context it came out of might deepen one’s appreciation of the music. As such, below I quote extensively from the Bandcamp description:

Dozens of cherished recordings were made during the legendary “golden age” of Ethiopian music, an era stretching from the early 1960’s through the mid-1970’s. Less-discussed are the songs made in the aftermath of the 1974 revolution that toppled Emperor Hailu Selassie I. The acclaimed and highly sought-after LP by Hailu Mergia and the Walias, Tche Belew, an album of instrumentals released in 1977, is perhaps the most seminal of these recordings. The story of the Walias band is a critical chapter in Ethiopian popular music, taking place during a period of music industry flux and political complexity in the country.

Hailu Mergia, a keyboardist and arranger diligently working the nightclub scene in Addis Ababa, formed the Walias in the early 1970’s with a core group of musical colleagues assembled from the remnants of prior working bands attached to the Zula and Venus clubs. One of the first “private” bands, the Walias got a steady gig at the prestigious Hilton Addis Ababa and remained independent from the government-supported bands of the time as well as from the clubs who employed bands.

While the oppressive and often brutal, Socialism-inspired Derg government (1974-1987) had a firm grip on Ethiopians following the revolution, Walias organized their own contracts and eschewed government patronage. Unlike the celebrated bands of the run-up to Selassie’s removal—the Police Orchestra, Imperial Bodyguard Band, National Theater Band, Ethiopian Army Band, Hager Fikir Theater Band, City Hall Theatre Folkloric Group and so on—the Wailas developed fame on their own terms and maintained control of their instruments and performances. They played the blues-, funk- and soul-informed tunes Mergia was writing and arranging, while cutting 45rpm recordings released by Kaifa Records with popular vocalists, including Getachew Kassa and Alemayehu Borobor.

After several singles, Mergia decided to do something different: record a full-length album. The band—which at the time featured Moges Habte (saxophone and flute), Mahmmud Aman (guitar), Yohannes Tekola (trumpet), Melake Gabrie (bass guitar), Girma Beyene (piano), Temare Haregu (drums), Abebe Kassa (alto saxophone) and special guest Mulatu Astatke (vibes)—entered Radio Voice of the Gospel studios to record their first long-player…

Influenced in large part by Jimmy Smith, Mergia and the Walias merged the popular international sounds available in Ethiopia at the time with the traditional tunes that formed the foundation of most musicians’ repertoires…

While the band never travelled outside Addis Ababa, they performed at top hotels and played the presidential palace twice. The Walias’ relationship with the Derg regime was complex though, evidenced by the removal of one song from the record by government censors because it included mention of the previous government. The regime’s broad policy of violence and censorship—including a period called the Red Terror that featured genocide-level disappearances of students, activists and villagers and the indiscriminate imprisonment of journalists—ultimately resulted in half the band staying in the United States following their first tour outside Ethiopia in the early 1980s. Today the musicians remain scattered between Addis Ababa and Washington D.C.

Happy listening!

Continued thread

Social Media Platforms Are Spreading Violent Warmongering Content Encouraging All-Out War Between Ethiopia and Eritrea, Again

A statement from @DAIR at dair-institute.org/blog/tigray

"For the last 3 years, we have been researching and documenting the role of social media platforms in exacerbating the 2020-2022 Tigray war. We performed computational analyses to quantify the level of hate speech on these platforms, and interviewed content moderators to better understand the organizational practices that have resulted in the platforms’ failures to adequately curb genocidal language. These platforms pledged to do better following the revelation that they promoted violence that incited genocide against the Rohingya in 2016. Facebook claimed to do “longstanging work to protect people in Ethiopia” when confronted with its moderation failures during the 2020-2022 Tigray war which resulted in the genocide of Tigrayans. But we are seeing an acceleration of the same type of warmongering on social media platforms that we documented at the beginning of the catastrophic Tigray war in 2020.

It's not enough to perform a postmortem analysis after millions have been killed, maimed, or displaced, and merely promise to do better without delivering on that promise....

This spread of violent language is not unique to Facebook. Clear calls for mass violence and warmongering on TikTok, X (formerly Twitter), and YouTube are exponentially growing with no signs of action by these companies. Supporters and opponents of both the Ethiopian and Eritrean governments have spent months antagonizing each other on these platforms, threatening to destroy each other on the battlefield, promoting the recruitment of fighters, and demonizing enemy factions. Renowned Ethiopian government-backed activists with hundreds of thousands of followers have flooded these platforms with clear calls for all-out war against Eritrea and the annexation of its territory."

www.dair-institute.orgSocial Media Platforms Are Spreading Violent Warmongering Content Encouraging All-Out War Between Ethiopia and Eritrea, AgainThe Distributed AI Research Institute is a space for independent, community-rooted AI research, free from Big Tech’s pervasive influence.

#Algorithmocracy / Kenya court green-lights $2.4bn lawsuit: Meta's algorithms linked to Ethiopian violence

Kenya court allows $2.4bn lawsuit against #Meta to proceed. Ethiopian plaintiffs claim #Facebook promoted hate speech leading to violence, including murder of professor after his address was posted on platform. Lawsuit demands algorithm changes, more African content moderators, victim restitution fund, and formal apology. Meta argued Kenya lacks jurisdiction but was overruled.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

theguardian.com/technology/202

#SocialMedia
#Ethiopia
#DigitalColonialism #profitoverpeople
#fuckzuck #hatespeech

The Guardian · Meta faces £1.8bn lawsuit over claims it inflamed violence in EthiopiaBy Dan Milmo