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A-side B-side is a recurring segment on The World that compares the sounds and ideas of two songs, albums or artists. On the A-side: a folk or traditional selection; on the B-side: a contemporary selection.

There’s a repetitive ringing, smacking, clunking and zinging when you use a typewriter. It turns a a writer’s thought process into a percussive rhythm. That familiar, vintage sound has been repurposed now — by the Congolese musical collective, KOKOKO!

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KOKOKO! makes afropop-infused experimental music that folds in the sounds of found objects from their home city of Kinshasa, in the Democratic Republic of Congo. In a self-released documentary, the band explores why their music exposes such an experimental side of the genre.

“We dig electronic music. But as we have no machines to produce that sound — we create electronic music of our own,” they explain.

The collective makes instruments out of found objects, like glass bottles, coffee cans, CPUs, scrap metal and typewriters. "Tokoliana," a single on the group's latest EP, is a bass-driven track that is broken up by the tinkering and buzzing sounds emitted by metals, plastic and glass.

In some instances, a guitar (actually a metal can, pipe and string) imitates a cross between a muted electric guitar and a fiddle. There is a very distinct approach and sound being cultivated by the group.

There are a variety of found and natural sounds in the Smithsonian archives — cataloguing noises as diverse as cities and tropical forests (and even a few typewriters). People interacting with natural sounds connects the water drum used in West Africa to contemporary music made by collectives like KOKOKO!. 

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In western Africa, the water drum is often made from a gourd that floats in water and drummer plays it with sticks. However, in this piece from The Arthur S. Alberts Collection: More Tribal, Folk, and Café Music of West Africa, the performers in "Bindendela: Water Drums" hit the water with their hands.

The sound of the water drum without a floating gourd is still resonant. The percussion in this song adds its own unique elements to the song.

Both "Tokoliana" and the "Bindendela: Water Drums" are two interpretations of using found sounds and objects to make a distinctive sound.

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Future Folk shares the stories of communities through the music that they make. It is a co-production of PRI’s The World and the Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

From PRI's The World ©2017 PRI