Somewhere in Afrika

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Somewhere in Afrika
Somewhere In Afrika.jpg
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 1982 (Germany)
18 February 1983 (UK)
Recorded1981-1982
StudioMastersounds
Underhill Studios, London
GenreRock
Hard rock
Progressive rock
Length37:22
LabelBronze (UK original release)
Cohesion (UK 1999 reissue)
Arista (U.S.)
ProducerManfred Mann
Manfred Mann's Earth Band chronology
Chance
(1980)
Somewhere in Afrika
(1982)
Budapest Live
(1984)
Singles from Somewhere in Afrika
  1. "Eyes Of Nostradamus"
    Released: March 12, 1982
  2. "Redemption Song (No Kwazulu)"
    Released: June, 1982
  3. "Tribal Statistics"
    Released: November, 1982
  4. "Demolition Man"
    Released: January, 1983
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic3.0/5 stars[1]

Somewhere in Afrika is the eleventh album by Manfred Mann's Earth Band, released in 1982.[2] It is their last studio album recorded for their long time record label Bronze Records. They would record their next studio album, Criminal Tango for Virgin Records. Bassist Matt Irving joined the band, replacing Pat King for this album.

Track listing[]

UK version[]

Side one[]

  1. "Tribal Statistics" (Andy Qunta) – 4:16
  2. "Eyes of Nostradamus" (Al Stewart) – 3:28
  3. "Third World Service" (Anthony Moore) – 5:18
  4. "Demolition Man" (Sting) – 3:45
  5. "Brothers and Sisters of Azania" (Manfred Mann) – 2:46

Side two[]

  1. "Africa Suite" (Mann, Matt Irving, John Lingwood) – 8:36
    a) "Brothers and Sisters of Africa" (Mann) – 3:06
    b) "To Bantustan?" (Mann) – 2:36
    c) "Koze Kobenini? (How Long Must We Wait?)" (Mann, Irving) – 1:26
    d) "Lalela" (Mann, Lingwood) – 1:31
  2. "Redemption Song (No Kwazulu)" (Bob Marley) – 7:35
  3. "Somewhere in Africa" (Traditional; arranged by Mann and Lingwood) – 1:38

Bonus Tracks (1999 CD re-issue)[]

  1. "War Dream" (Mann, Lingwood, Steve Waller, Irving, Shona Laing) – 3:08
  2. "Holiday's Dream" (Mann, Irving, Lingwood, Waller) – 2:40
  3. "Redemption Song" (single version) (Bob Marley) – 4:14
  4. "Eyes of Nostradamus" (12" single version) (Stewart) – 4:42
  5. "Demolition Man" (single version/alternate mix) (Sumner) – 3:44

US version[]

The North American version of Somewhere in Afrika was reordered, and was substantially different from the European version. Several tracks were added, while others were altered or edited.

Added to the line-up were the songs "Runner" (the band's final Top 40 hit in the US to date) and "Rebel". "Runner" was included in the soundtracks of the films, The Philadelphia Experiment (1984) and Firstborn (1984). "Africa Suite" was altered to feature a completely different final section called "Brothers and Sisters of Azania" (which had appeared as a separate track on the European LP); the original final section of the suite (known as "Lalela") now appeared as a separate track earlier in the album's running order. Finally, the track "Redemption Song" was cut by over 3 minutes.

The label One Way Records added the original UK LP versions of "Third World Service" and "Redemption Song" to a CD reissue. [3]

In the later program of MMEB remasters, "Runner and "Rebel" were included on the 1999 reissue of "Criminal Tango".

Side one[]

  1. "Demolition Man" (Sting) – 3:40
  2. "Runner" (Ian Thomas) – 4:40
  3. "Rebel" (Reg Laws) – 3:52
  4. "Eyes of Nostradamus" (Stewart) – 3:28
  5. "Third World Service" (Moore) – 3:24

Side two[]

  1. "Somewhere in Africa" (Trad arr Mann, Lingwood) – 1:38
  2. "Tribal Statistics" (Qunta) – 4:16
  3. "Lalela" (Mann, Lingwood) – 1:31
  4. "Redemption Song (No Kwazulu)" (Bob Marley) – 4:11
  5. "Africa Suite" (Mann, Irving, Lingwood) – 9:54
    a) "Brothers and Sisters of Africa" (Mann) – 3:06
    b) "To Bantustan?" (Mann) – 2:36
    c) "Koze Kobenini? (How Long Must We Wait?)" (Mann, Irving) – 1:26
    d) "Brothers and Sisters of Azania" (Mann) – 2:46

Bonus Tracks (One Way Records CD re-issue)[]

  1. "Third World Service" (long version) (Moore) – 5:17
  2. "Redemption Song" (long version) (Bob Marley) – 7:35

Original CD version[]

The first CD release includes the tracks from the original UK LP, but in a very different sequence. [4] Later reissues reverted to the original UK LP tracklisting. On the 1999 re-issue, "Africa Suite" is one track, whereas on the later remaster (from the 40th Anniversary Box Set and released as a standalone CD in 2016), all the sections have separate index tracks. The tracks "Runner" and "Rebel" were appended to the 1999 remaster of Criminal Tango with the explanation "Although recorded for the U.S. 'Somewhere in Afrika' album, these two songs feature the return of Mick Rogers and fit more into the 'Tango' period than the Afrika one."

  1. "Redemption Song (No Kwazulu)" (Bob Marley) – 7:35
  2. "Somewhere in Africa" (Traditional; arranged by Mann and Lingwood) – 1:38
  3. "Tribal Statistics" (Andy Qunta) – 4:16
  4. "Africa Suite" (Mann, Matt Irving, John Lingwood) – 8:36
    a) "Brothers and Sisters of Africa" (Mann) – 3:06
    b) "To Bantustan?" (Mann) – 2:36
    c) "Koze Kobenini? (How Long Must We Wait?)" (Mann, Irving) – 1:26
    d) "Lalela" (Mann, Lingwood) – 1:31
  5. "Eyes of Nostradamus" (Al Stewart) – 3:28
  6. "Demolition Man" (Sting) – 3:45
  7. "Third World Service" (Anthony Moore) – 5:18
  8. "Brothers and Sisters of Azania" (Manfred Mann) – 2:46

Personnel[]

Musicians[]

  • Manfred Mannkeyboards, synthesisers, vocals ("Brothers and Sisters of Azania" and its reprise in the 7 minute version of "Redemption Song")
  • John Lingwood – drums, percussion
  • Steve Wallervocals, guitar ("Eyes of Nostradamus", "Third World Service", "Demolition Man", "To Bantustan?")
  • Chris Thompson – vocals ("Tribal Statistics", "Brothers and Sisters of Africa", "Redemption Song")
  • Matt Irvingbass, programming (MC4)
  • Shona Laing – vocals
  • Trevor Rabin – lead guitar on "Redemption Song", guitar solo on "Runner"
  • Mick Rogers – guitar, backing vocals on "Runner"

African vocals recorded in London[]

Chief Dawethi, Fats Mothya, Jabu Mbalu, Rufus Sefothuma, Zanty Lekau

Technical[]

  • Manfred Mann – producer
  • Lars Finnstrom – engineer
  • Terry Medhurst – engineer
  • Martin Poole – cover art

References[]

  1. ^ DeGagne, Mike. Somewhere in Afrika at AllMusic
  2. ^ Russo, Greg (2011), Mannerisms – The five phases of Manfred Mann, New York: Crossfire Publications, ISBN 978-0-9791845-2-9
  3. ^ "Manfred Mann's Earth Band – Somewhere In Afrika (CD)". Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  4. ^ "Manfred Mann's Earth Band – Somewhere In Afrika (1987, CD)". Retrieved 13 May 2021.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""