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Abdul Tee-Jay

perc, voc,
Musician of World and Folk
A.k.a. Abdul Tejan-Jalloh

Abdul Tee-Jay hails from Sierra Leone although his parents and hence his full name, Tejan-Jalloh, come from Guinea. At a very young age, somewhat secretly, Abdul learnt to play guitar. At that time there was music coming into the port of Freetown from many different regions such as soukous and high-life, traditional and popular as well as local musicians: Abdul was influenced by all of these sounds and joined local bands. His family were all very academic and he also went to study in Virginia, USA in 1974. While there he took the opportunities to learn more guitar, use better instruments, joined a band called Spice and learnt to play the dulcimer. In 1979 Abdul came to Britain to work in banking but met other musicians and decided to form a band. This was called African Connection but then in 1982 he felt the need to concentrate on more typical African music, and a pan-African band, African Culture, came into being. Even this was not quite satisfying and at a turning point Abdul resolved to base all his music on Sierra Leone street- and folk music. At this point, 1988, the name of the band changed to Rokoto, the nickname of part of Freetown. Abdul Tee-Jay and Rokoto, a seven-piece band, brought out 3 albums, Kanka Kuru, url=https://www.discogs.com/Abdul-Tee-Jays-Rokoto-Fire-Dombolo/release/4657905]Fire Dombolo and E'Go Lef Pan You (see below and CDs) and have toured extensively to many countries. The band entertained at the Hogmannay celebrations in Edinburgh to bring in the New Year of 1999. More recently Abdul's music is still evolving because he now includes beautiful acoustic palm wine music. For the group Palm Wine A-Go-Go he sings and plays acoustic guitar and has just one or two other musicians on stage with kongoma (bass thumb piano), kondi (thumb piano) and drums. In 2001 they were at London venues such as the Barbican Free Stage and Coin Street Festival. Whether with his full band or the smaller acoustic group, Tee-Jay's voice and music is truly distinctive. A new CD, Rokoto Make Me Dance-Dance has a selection of 12 dance tracks taken from each of Abdul's 3 albums. Currently he is recording both acoustic and electric sounds but is determined to play more palm wine music so that it may live on! Look out for Abdul's new acoustic album Palm Wine A- Go-Go available now! In 2004 Abdul performed at London's African Music Festival in May. If Abdul Tee-Jay had not been living in London in the 80s, when many western music fans first discovered African styles, then his career might have been different. As it was, he had left Sierra Leone to study economics in the US before moving to the UK, where he quit banking and formed his excellent band Rokoto. But he wasn’t taken as seriously as artists based back in Africa, and never received the recognition he deserved. Times and fashions have since changed and Abdul Tee-Jay is still here in the UK, still plugging away, and still in remarkably good form. His last album, released over a decade ago, was an acoustic set in which he revived and updated the “palm wine music” he heard as a young boy in Freetown. It’s an easy-going style, popular at parties where cheap drink is provided by the fermented sap of the oil palm tree, and has obvious links to Caribbean calypso. It can also be remarkably subtle and varied, as Tee-Jay proved. A cheerful, gangling figure in cap and glasses, he perched on a stool specially designed to include a pedal-operated foot drum, and launched into a set that showed off both his engagingly relaxed vocal style and excellent acoustic guitar work. Backed by his countryman Bunton Cole on congas, he started with his own songs, speeding up to a slinky dance style that showed how palm wine music influenced Highlife. He included songs by the early heroes of the style, , and S. E. Rogie, giving them scat-jazz embellishments, and followed with an unexpected switch to desert blues, and an impressive tribute to Ali Farka Touré. It’s surely not too late for Abdul Tee-Jay to be rediscovered.

     
Instruments
  • Percussion
  • Vocals
  • Keyboards
  • Bass
  • Guitar
Genres
  • World
  • Folk
  • R&B/Soul
  • Reggae
Popular Tracks   
Rokoto Jazz on Down by Avalon by Abdul Tee-Jay
Ro Manke on Down by Avalon by Abdul Tee-Jay
Man Go Bondo on Down by Avalon by Abdul Tee-Jay
Ka-bubu, No. 1 on Down by Avalon by Abdul Tee-Jay
Kamilay on Down by Avalon by Abdul Tee-Jay
Araba Jorlay on Down by Avalon by Abdul Tee-Jay
Salima Yako-yapo on Down by Avalon by Abdul Tee-Jay
Fire Dombolo on Down by Avalon by Abdul Tee-Jay
Kanka Kuru on Down by Avalon by Abdul Tee-Jay
Salimatu on Down by Avalon by Abdul Tee-Jay

Track list and 30sec audio provided by


Band Members
Discography
Title Artist Year Type
Palm Wine A Go-GoAbdul Tee-Jay2003Album
E'go Lef Pan YouAbdul Tee-Jay & Abdul Tee-Jay's Rokoto1997Album
SalimaAbdul Tee-JaySingle
Agooda MedleyAbdul Tee-JaySingle
External Links
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Acknowledgements
To all the music fans that are contributing on Discogs, MusicBrainz and Wikipedia. Thanks to Franz Flückiger for providing Storygram used to visualize band membership.
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Abdul Tee-Jay's Rokoto g World
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