A live Omar Sosa performance is always a revelation; he is an artist who exemplifies Monk's determination never to play the same thing twice. Case in point: Sosa's weeklong April 2009 run at the Blue Note NYC, timed with the release of Across the Divide: A Tale of Rhythm and Ancestry. Like every dramatic new work, this one has a back story, one that reveals something of Sosa's intuitive creative approach and boundless sense of musical freedom. In April 2008, Sosa did a weeklong artist's residency at Dartmouth College, where he sat in on 2–3 classes each day. One was singer Tim Eriksen's world music course. Eriksen is a major scholar and interpreter of nineteenth-century white Protestant devotional music, whose raw, visceral spirit informs his singular singing style... In an extended June 2008 Blue Note stint, Eriksen was integral to the live recordings that comprise this new CD, whose title encapsulates the work's uncompromising spirit, its rejection of stock categories.
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world music cd cover The Warsaw Village Band is a conservatory trained sextet that pulls the eastern European village string band conception in all directions, inspired by and provocatively mixing Chopin, Polish folk dances and rhythms, Indian ragas, the blues, disco funk, and then some. The musical direction comes from Wotjek Krzak (violins, nyckelharpa, drums) and singer-cellist Maja Kleszsc, the latter comprising a terrifyingly resonant vocal trio with Sylwia Swiatkowska (violin, fiddle) and Magdalena Sobczak-Kotnarowska (dulcimer)...
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world music Guinea's Kimintan Cissoko comes from a long line of griots, and while there can be no doubt that his mastery of the 21-stringed kora came about as the result of a musical education that was to some degree traditional, he's got more on his mind. He wields one of two koras in his band Ba Cissoko; the other is electric. Vocally, he goes for an understated approach that both serves the instrumental backing and gets the point across. It's evident from the opening flamenco/salsa title track that Seno is a disc that's going to mix and match with good results...
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world music cd cover In recent years, Moreno Veloso has taken some decisive steps out of the long shadow of his dad, Brazilian superstar Caetano Veloso. Hooking up with two friends, electronics wiz Kassin and drummer Domenico, the younger Veloso has gone for some avant-pop, even changing the name of the trio with each album, starting with Moreno+2. The trio and even more friends began playing on Monday nights in Rio in 2002 as Orquestra Imperial, coming up with a nostalgic mix of samba and Latin tunes, a throwback to the era of big-band samba, sometimes known as gafiera. The multi-generational band, though, also adds some modern touches to the vintage-style tunes, such as the occasional searing electric guitar solo. A bridge to the past is singer and drummer Wilson Das Neves, a veteran sambista. Also in the loose collective are actress and singer Thalma De Freitas, Rodrigo Amarante of the band Los Hermanos, and keyboard player and composer Nelson Jacobina...
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world music cd coverThe opening drumbeats sound like the heart of Africa, but soon an accordion, oud and qanun are adding an Arabic grace. Strings, a chorus of female voices and subtle shifts in rhythm emerge, hovering somewhere between Nubia and the Indian Ocean. Such is the beauty of taarab music, which originated on the spice island of Zanzibar, located just off the coast of Tanzania, and draws from every direction that such a cross-culturally opportune spot would suggest. Culture Musical Club isn't the oldest taarab outfit (they've been around a mere fifty years; the similarly venerated Ikhwani Safaa Musical Club was established a century ago), but they're the best known outside their homeland and, as their new release Shime! ("Keep it Up") shows, they cover the most ground stylistically.
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world music cd cover We often toss around words like classic and essential with abandon when talking about music, and then regret it when we see them in some archive years later. I have no trepidation about using the words here, for the band or for Dioba, the third and final edition of Stern's Rail Band retrospective. I have lived with many of these tracks for so long that I know them by heart, can hum a few guitar solos and remember where the scratches are in some of the old vinyl. So when I say these are classic tracks (recorded between 1970 and 1983) by an essential band from Mali, I say it with confidence. Just a list of the artists is enough to confirm it: Salif Keita, Mory Kanté, Makan Ganesy, Lanfia Diabaté, Sekou Kouyaté, Sekou Kanté and Djelimady Tounkara to name just some of the great musicians who graced this band...
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world music A release from Norwegian singer Ragnhild Furholt is a rare thing. This is only her third in twelve years. More's the pity. She has a rare talent for unearthing atmospheric old songs from her home district of Agder and arranging them to perfectly suit her flute-like voice. Here she collaborates with percussionist Birger Mistereggen and guitarist Leiv Solberg to create something that is comforting and familiar at one moment, mysterious and arcane the next...
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Newest reviews
* Mulatu Astatke/The Heliocentrics, Ethiopia/UK
* Enzo Favata Tentetto and Tenores di Bitti, Italy
* Fula Flute - Abdoulaye "Djoss" Diabate, US/West Africa
* Omar Sosa, US
* Rione Junno & Mimmo Epifani, Italy
* Warsaw Village Band, Poland
* Ba Cissoko, Guinea
* Culture Music Club, Zanzibar
* Niwel Tsumbu, Congo/Ireland
* Rail Band, Mali
* Ry-co Jazz, Congo/Antilles
* Esprit Follet, France
* Asha Bhosle, India
* Ragnhild Furholt, Norway
* Brownout, US
* Joe Zawinul & the Zawinul Syndicate
* Caribbean Jazz Project
* Amparanoia, Spain
* Nigeria 70: Lagos Jump
* Edmar Castaneda, Colombia/US
* Oumou Sangare, Mali
* Malavergne, Vaillant and Théron. France
* Gyuto Monks Tantric Choir , Tibet
* Novalima- Coba Coba. Peru
* Lafayette Afro Rock Band, US/France
* Margot Leverett & the Klezmer Mountain Boys, US
* Cobla Sant Jordi Ciutat de Barcelona, Spain
* Toubab Krewe, US
* Nicola Conte, Brazil
* Gabi Luncă / Princes Among Men, Romania/Gypsy
* Mother of All Morris, UK
* Angel Parra, Chile
* Harmonious Wail, US
* Hamilton De Holanda & Andre Mehmari, Brazil
* Tango, or something like it, various countries
* Ivo Papasov, Bulgaria
* L'Attirail, France
* Hamilton De Holanda & André Mehmari, Brazil
* Uxia, Spain
* Savina Yannatou, Greece
* Tinariwen, Tuareg/Mali
* Seckou Keita Quintet, US/Senegal
* ...plus many, many more.
world music cd coverThe pizzica (also known as pizzica pizzica and pizzica taranta) originally was the music of tarantismo, a cultural phenomenon that emerged in the southern Salento peninsula of the Puglia region. Music and dance were employed in a symbolic ritual to cure peasants, mainly women, from illnesses purportedly caused by the poisonous bite of the tarantula... The spider's bite, however, was a metaphor for other conditions, such as grief, depression, and sexual frustration. Dancing the pizzica was a culturally-sanctioned and co