Shoki Shoki is an album by the Nigerian musician Femi Kuti, released in 1998.[2][3] The album was released in the United States by MCA Records in 2000.[4] A remix album, Shoki Remixed, was released the same year.[5]
| Shoki Shoki | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by Femi Kuti | ||||
| Released | 1998 | |||
| Genre | Afrobeat | |||
| Label | Barclay[1] | |||
| Producer | Sodi | |||
| Femi Kuti chronology | ||||
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Nigeria's military government banned the album's second track, "Beng beng beng", due to its objections to the sexual subject matter.[6]
Kuti is backed by his band, Positive Force; the album was produced by Sodi and engineered by Mark Saunders.[7][8]
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| Robert Christgau | |
| Entertainment Weekly | A−[11] |
| NME | |
| Rolling Stone | |
NME thought that "as basslines, horns and sprightly riffs spiral in a million directions, he also proves keen to continue Fela‘s fight against a range of foes, particularly the Nigerian authorities."[12] Entertainment Weekly stated that Kuti "brilliantly forges a link between Afrobeat and James Brown, spicing his percussive stew with acid jazz, hip-hop, and soul flavor while remaining true to his roots, proving himself an able ambassador to all rhythm nations."[11]
Rolling Stone opined that "throughout the showy Shoki Shoki, he treats Afrobeat's basic rhythm formula as sacred, adding only slight embellishments and updates."[13] The Windsor Star concluded that "while Fela's music often flew off into extended groove workouts, Femi packages his songs into neat arrangements with carefully punctuated horns, call-response vocal dynamics and locked-in polyrhythms."[14]
AllMusic wrote that "like his father, he never lets the lyrically conscious material get in the way of pushing irresistible grooves."[9]
Fela Kuti
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