To accompany the release of this landmark 23-track compilation, PrĂncipe shared an excerpt from a 1973 interview with Cape Verdean political thinker and activist AmĂlcar Cabral. âAs to strategy,â said the anti-colonial radical just months before his assassination, âwe learned in the struggle; some people think that we adopted a foreign method, or something like this. But we bettered our struggle in the culture of our people⊠supported by our people which is the first and main condition: the support of the people.â
Cabralâs ideals of interdependent support and ground-up social change help to illustrate the PrĂncipe picture. For this, their debut compilation, founders of the scene like Marfox and Nervoso present work alongside newer figures like Safari and Dadifox. The tightly locked grooves, clipped Afrobeat syncopations and raw cut-and-paste sampling are all emblematic of âthe PrĂncipe soundâ, but the stylistic range on display here paints a more rounded picture â an ensemble cast of outsiders no longer defined by hallmark idiosyn- crasies, growing into their own ever-evolving method and dismantling influences to form a culture which is theirs.
Take the minimal stutterings of K30âs Hora do FL, the heavy tarraxinha shuffle of Babaz Fox and DJ Bebederaâs collaboration, the typically euphoric clomp of Marfoxâs Swaramgami â there is a diversity on show which represents an evolution in the ethos and a broadening of the PrĂncipe palette. Itâs calmer at times, and the sequencing plays out in a way which makes the upper limits of the sound far less jarring than it can sometimes be. Essentially though, the widening of the soundâs radius with such a continually high quality is a reflection of their main condition â the support and representation of the people.
Words by Duncan Harrison
PrĂncipe Discos