World music
World music opens us up to a sonic mosaic that spans continents and cultures. It carries us from the enchanting rhythms of Africa to the poignant melodies of Portuguese fado, from Balkan polyphonies to Andean flutes, from Afro-Cuban percussion to traditional Asian chants.
Each record is an invitation to travel, an encounter with living traditions that tell the story of peoples and their deep connection to dance, celebration, spirituality, or nature.
Listened to on our turntable, these albums are not just recordings: they fill the room with colors, distant scents, and universal emotions, offering us a listening experience that combines discovery, immersion, and authentic pleasure.
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KWI BAMBA & L'ORCHESTRE DE GAMA BEREMA
Released: January 3, 2020 Genres: World Music and World Label: Ouch! Records Format: Vinyl -
RIGHT OF PASSAGE
Released: May 29, 2020 Genres: World Music and World Label: Captain Pouch Records Format: Vinyl -
KARISHINA
Released: September 30, 2022 Genres: World Music and World Label: FINCASUD PRODUCTIONS Format: Vinyl -
LIVE
Released: February 16, 2024 Genres: World Music and World Label: MIRUBA Format: Vinyl -
MAMES BABEGENUSH WITH STRINGS (180 GRAMM VINYL)
Released: September 14, 2018 Genres: World Music and World Label: Galileo Music Communication GmbH Format: Vinyl -
Die Demokratie
Released: July 25, 2025 Genres: World Music and World Label: Fun In The Church Format: Vinyl -
People of the Wind Original Music Soundtrack
Released: June 13, 2025 Genres: World music and World Label: All Records Format: Vinyl -
Parioca
Released: April 12, 2025 Genres: World Music and World Label: Diggers Factory Format: Vinyl -
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A Bossa Muito Moderna
Released: May 30, 2025 Genres: World Music and World Label: Intermusic Format: Vinyl
World music on vinyl: tapping into a universal sonic heritage
A label born in London, millennia-old traditions
The term 'world music' was officially coined in 1987 around a table at the Empress Pub in London, when producers, journalists and record shop owners decided to create a unifying banner to promote non-Western music in record store bins. If the label is reductive, what common thread links Indian ragas, Portuguese fado and Nigerian Afrobeat?, it nonetheless had the merit of opening Western ears to entire sonic continents. On vinyl, these traditions take on a physical, warm dimension that streaming simply cannot replicate: the wide dynamic range of records magnifies percussion, acoustic timbres and voices captured live. From ethnographic field recordings to sophisticated studio productions, vinyl remains the ultimate format to savour the authentic texture of world music.
Landmark artists and albums: the records that redrew the map
No discussion of world music can overlook Fela Kuti, the architect of Afrobeat, whose albums Zombie (1977) and Expensive Shit (1975) remain monuments of groove and defiance, original Nigerian pressings on Kalakuta are highly sought after, but Knitting Factory Records reissues offer a solid alternative. Desert blues owes much to Ali Farka Touré, whose dialogue with Ry Cooder on Talking Timbuktu (1994, World Circuit) built a lasting bridge between Mali and Mississippi. From Cape Verde, the heart-wrenching morna of Cesária Évora on Miss Perfumado (1992) retains its full emotional depth on vinyl. Also essential: the groundbreaking Buena Vista Social Club (1997), the transcendent qawwali of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan (Mustt Mustt, Real World), and the Tuareg trance of Tinariwen (Amassakoul, 2004). Each of these records exists in vinyl editions, and the price gaps between them more than justify careful comparison before buying.
Essential labels and smart collecting tips
A handful of labels dominate the landscape with catalogues that are pure gold for collectors: Real World (Peter Gabriel), World Circuit with its Afro-Cuban and Malian roster, Luaka Bop (David Byrne) for Brazilian and psychedelic gems, and Buda Musique in France for traditional music. Contemporary reissue imprints like Analog Africa, Mr Bongo and Awesome Tapes From Africa deliver outstanding audio restoration and offer flawless pressings at still-accessible prices. An original African or South American pressing from the 70s or 80s can command steep prices and demand patience; a well-crafted reissue often provides excellent value. In all cases, using a price comparator like Vinyles.com allows you to weigh offers across multiple sellers and find the edition that matches both your budget and your collecting standards.
