Ringo Starr at the Ryman - 17. Africa (Steve Lukather with Richard Page) video free download


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Duration: 06:23
Uploaded: 2013/04/18

July 7th 2012.

"Africa" is a song by rock band Toto, and one of the band's most recognizable songs. It was included on their 1982 album Toto IV, and reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in February 1983 and number three on the UK Singles Chart the same month. The song was written by the band's keyboardist/vocalist David Paich and drummer Jeff Porcaro.

The initial idea for the song came from David Paich. Jeff Porcaro explains the idea behind the song: "... a white boy is trying to write a song on Africa, but since he's never been there, he can only tell what he's seen on TV or remembers in the past."

David Paich said: "At the beginning of the '80s I watched a late night documentary on TV about all the terrible death and suffering of the people in Africa. It both moved and appalled me and the pictures just wouldn't leave my head. I tried to imagine how I'd feel about if I was there and what I'd do."

Musically the song took quite some time to assemble, as Paich and Porcaro explain:

"On 'Africa' you hear a combination of marimba with GS 1. The kalimba is all done with the GS 1; it's six tracks of GS 1 playing different rhythms. I wrote the song on CS-80, so that plays the main part of the entire tune."

Jeff Porcaro reminisces about how the song's percussion tracks took shape:

"I was about 11 when the New York's World Fair took place, and I went to the African pavilion with my family. I saw the real thing; I don't know what tribe, but there were these drummers playing, and my mind was blown... It was the first time I witnessed someone playing one beat and not straying from it, like a religious experience, where it gets loud, and everyone goes into a trance. I have always dug those kind of orchestras, whether it be a band or all drummers... and I said, 'Gee, someday there's going to be a little drum orchestra where everybody plays one thing, and you don't stray from it. You do it until you drop. You're banished from that land if you move from that one part.'

"So when we were doing 'Africa', I set up a bass drum, snare drum and a hi-hat, and Lenny Castro set up right in front of me with a conga. We looked at each other and just started playing the basic groove.... The backbeat is on 3, so it's a half-time feel, and it's 16th notes on the hi-hat. Lenny started playing a conga pattern. We played for five minutes on tape, no click, no nothing. We just played. And I was singing the bass line for 'Africa' in my mind, so we had a relative tempo. Lenny and I went into the booth and listened back to the five minutes of that same boring pattern. We picked out the best two bars that we thought were grooving, and we marked those two bars on tape. We made another mark four bars before those two bars. Lenny and I went back out; I had a cowbell, Lenny had a shaker. They gave us two new tracks, and they gave us the cue when they saw the first mark go by. Lenny and I started playing to get into the groove, so by the time the that fifth bar came -- which was the first bar of the two bars we marked as the cool bars we liked -- we were locked, and we overdubbed shaker and cowbell.

"So there was bass drum, snare drum, hi-hat, two congas, a cowbell, and a shaker. We went back in, cut the tape, and made a one-bar tape loop... Maybe it would have taken two minutes to program that in the Linn, and it took about half an hour to do this. But a Linn machine doesn't feel like that! So we had an analog groove. We took that tape, transferred it onto another 24-track for six minutes, and David Paich and I went out in the studio. The song started, and I was sitting there with a complete drumset, and Paich was playing. When he got to the fill before the chorus, I started playing the chorus, and when the verse or the intro came back, I stopped playing. Then we had piano and drums on tape. You have to realize that there are some odd bars in 'Africa', so when you have a one-bar loop going, all of a sudden, sometimes Lenny's figure would turn around. So Lenny went in and played the song again, but this time he changed his pattern a little for the turnarounds, for the fills, for the bridge, for the solo. We kept the original part and the new one. Then we had to do bongos, jingle sticks, and big shakers doing quarter notes, maybe stacking two tracks of sleigh bells, two tracks of big jingle sticks, and two tracks of tambourine all down to one track. I was trying to get the sounds I would hear Milt Holland or Emil Richards have, or the sounds I would hear in a 'National Geographic' special, or the ones I heard at the New York World's Fair."

"Africa" continues to be played at all of Toto's live concerts. It was sung by David Paich at the 2009 Millennium Development Goals Awards Ceremony

Comments

8 years ago

Manuela brandl

Es macht so viel Spaß, euch bei der Musik zu zuschauen und zu hören, ich wünschte ihr würdet auch mal nach Deutschland kommen und so ein Konzert hier abzuliefern, ihr alle seid super, aber für mich ist Richard noch ein bißchen besser

8 years ago

Jordi Batalla Murciano

Ringo Starr at the Ryman - 17. Africa (Steve Lukather with Richard Page)

8 years ago

craig clayton

Best version yet, well done

8 years ago

NeoSalvation

Awesome version! Way to go Steve and Richard!!!

9 years ago

Antonis Minardos

Περήφανος που μεγάλωσα με τέτοια υπέροχα ακούσματα...!!!

9 years ago

Darius Lawson

The fellow playing acoustic guitar looks like Micky Rourke. lol

9 years ago

David Rogers

Brilliant version! RIP Mike Porcaro.

9 years ago

mrs sexy

super nice song.....

9 years ago

okrajoe

Great version of a great song by great musicians.

9 years ago

maría moraleslopez

Mis favoritas los 80

9 years ago

Glen Ferris

Blimey what a great version.

9 years ago

godmac28

Yeah, Mr Mister were an absolutely awesome band.

9 years ago

Rodrigo Aguiar

Estranho ver o Lukather fazendo a voz principal nessa música... mas ainda assim ficou bom demais. :)

9 years ago

Jalexa Laine

Perhaps my favorite version of the song.

9 years ago

Mark T

I love this version. It's awesome to hear Richard Page singing the chorus too! If you watch him closely on the second chorus, you can see Richard make a mistake on his bass. He's half a fret off, looks at it and quickly corrects it. If you have good bass on your speakers / headphones you can hear it too , but it actually fits well too! Even the pros make mistakes, they just make them sound good. No playback here!

9 years ago

eljefeazul

Ringo puede tocar cualquier melodía pop pues perteneció al grupo más importante en la historia de la música, el grupo con mayores armonías y de todo tipo, adelantadas a su tiempo; a day in the life , Eleanor Rigby, Maxwell Silver Hammer,Hey JUde,etcNíngún otro grupo tiene la variación y riqueza armónica en cantidad de melodías tan disímbolas unas de otras, que The Beatles.Sólo la música clásica es más bella al oído........

9 years ago

WeAre138

Richard kills it. "Gonna take alot to take me away from you.......".

9 years ago

luuke furtado

To all you youngsters.....This was the music we listened to back then and now....What do you'll listen to ???

9 years ago

Tony Marinelli

When I watch Lukather play sometimes I just want to quit. I told him that when I met him and he was so encouraging. humble and cool. He went on and on about never quit playing, I am sure you play great, blah blah. My favorite and a great guy.

9 years ago

Ahmed Hernandez Zahuna

AAAH !! que buena está la canción y el video.!!

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