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NOVEMBER REVIEWS

Worldbeat Chart Toppers
 
Los Amigos Invisibles The Venezuelan Zinga Son Vol.1 (Luaka Bop) -   Los Amigos Invisibles are six friends who in 1991, set out to conquer the club scene in Caracas, Venezuela. Their mission was to add some fun to mix along with disco, funk and a sprinkling of Latin spice, adding their mix to the mobile party scene in Caracas. ‘Party’ is the operative word for their mix of Latin, modern beats and cheesy disco. They describe themselves as "a journey deep into the pants of rhythm." Indeed, The Amigos have earned a reputation for their raging hormones and good-natured goofiness but they back it up with some seriously groovy playing. The new album may be called the Venezuelan Zinga Son Vol.1 but it's more like another sortie in their continuing mission.Longtime fans can comfortably pick up where they last left it with their invisible friends.
 
Tanya Stephens - Gangsta Blues (VP Records)   Tanya Stephens is motivated to make her mark in the male-dominated world of dancehall reggae. In her words, “Sean Paul might have unlocked the door for dancehall but each artist still has to knock for themselves.” Tanya did a lot of knocking since returning to Jamaica after a three year sojourn in Sweden. The 31 year old, mother of one admits that once back in her island homeland she, “pestered everybody for new riddims” until she found a willing collaborator in producer Andrew Henton.The resulting new album is called Gangsta Blues, but Tanya’s quick to emphasize she’s no gangsta. She chose that title because in her songs she talks about “the same kind of everyday struggles often sung about in the blues”.  And, it's gangsta because she “isn’t sitting around whining and crying about her problems either.” Tanya is empowering dancehall’s femmes with Gangsta Blues as a killer role model. She got her hands on some great riddims that run from old school roots to pulsing electronic-driven dancehall beats. She's also got a way with the words too ... insightful lyrics instead of booty rhymes and a distinctive delivery that enunciates clearly so her message is heard.
 
 

Ely Guerra - Sweet & Sour, Hot y Spicy (Higher Octave) -  When divas Latinas like Jennifer Lopez, Shakira and Paulina Rubio are dotting the charts with their sugary pop, it’s refreshing to hear someone like Ely Guerra El-ee GARE-ah making some noise. She left her home in Mexico City at 15 to pursue music full-time, inheriting a love for the seductive sounds of Bossa Nova from her mother.After taking a break to study English at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington, Ely decided to turn up the heat on her career and her sound.True to the title of her new release, Sweet & Sour, Hot Y Spicy, Ely’s adds an alternative rock edge to the Latin pulse. Combined with a bold and brassy persona, she’s taking her music from sensuous to sizzling. The disc is divided like an old LP with a Sweet & Sour side and a Hot y Spicy side. My taste leans toward to the crunchy guitars on the Sweet & Sour side. I might just go elsewhere to get something Hot y Spicy. But, it's kinda nice to have them both on the same menu. 

 
K-Os - Joyful Rebellion (EMI) -  When you throw out the old rules of hip hop; chaos rules supreme. Canada’s Kevin Brereton, aka K-Os is helping rap mature beyond juvenile indulgence into the awareness of adulthood. He’s even expanding its musical boundaries, infusing the spoken word with new flavors of Latin, Jazz and Gospel.His folks are devout Jehovah’s Witnesses who emigrated to Canada from Trinidad. Kevin himself studied world religion at Ottawa’s Carleton University. He remembers, “When I would borrow the family car, if I left any music with swearing in it, my dad would throw it out the window.” He lost half his CD collection that way. The new album, Joyful Rebellion charts new horizons for urban music, smashing  major stereotypes along the way. It really is breathtaking to hear his conscious rhymes set to everything from string orchestra to jazz quartet to flamenco guitar. But while he reconstructs the beast he never gives up on it. Old school tracks like B-Boy Stance show that despite his new vision for the future of hip hop, K-Os is still just a B-Boy at heart.
 
Daby Toure - Diam (Real World)Peter  Gabriel is blessed with the gift of introduction and global music fans are all the richer for it. The latest discovery by his Real World label is a singer/songwriter named Daby Toure. His roots extend back to Mali but his family has spread to Senegal and Mauritania where Daby was raised soaking up the sounds of a vibrant, cultural hub. Through pirated cassettes he was seduced by the western influences of The Police, Bob Marley, Stevie Wonder and Michael Jackson. Like so many West African musicians before him,  Daby fled the instability of the region to pursue his career in Paris.  Diam is a very delicate and personal album, like a photo in your wallet. The image is small but the impact to the owner is life-shaping. You can just tell by listening. What's astonishing about Diam are the dubby atmospheres Daby sneaks into the soft and simple acoustic-based tracks. And, his voice? It may remind you of someone else Peter Gabriel introduced you to many years a go, Youssou N' Dour.
 
Watch this space for fresh global reviews next month!

OCTOBER REVIEWS

Daara J Boomerang (Wrasse Records) - As a music genre, hip hop is a juvenile, more accurately, it's still in its infancy. But Senegalese rappers, Daara J offer a tantalizing glimpse of what a sophisticated and credible musical force hip hop may soon become.The trio of N'Django D, Aladji Man and Faada Freddy part company with ordinary North American urban fare right from the get-go. "In our music," they say, "the melody is always the starting point". And, Daara J's melodies spring from the rich traditions of Zulu music and Mandingo tradition. On Boomerang they add to their own formidable talents with the incredible voices of Rokia Traore and China.The trio writes in several different languages giving their raps a refreshing cadence that sounds more like poetry and less like a quarterback barking signals before a play (as is the case with the majority of North American urban artists). And before any wannabe bangers from the 'burbs diss Daara J for taking the tough talk out of hip hop, nothing could be farther from the truth!. This is music from the hard streets of Dakar.On Boomerang, they deal with real issues of greed and development, exploitation and abandonment. Back at cha like a boomerang, Daara J!

 
Fito Blanko - Higher Level (MRP)  Like  Dancehall before it, Reggaeton (pronounced: reggae-tone) is a growing wave of global flavored influence permeating urban music. This is a potent blend with all of hip hop's street 'tude, all of salsa's spice and all of reggae's heavy drop beat. Fito Blanko is a young Panamanian from Montreal who is taking reggaeton to a 'Higher Level' as the name of his new album would suggest. What makes this collection of songs so great is Fito's keen awareness of where all the musical elements come from. And there's a lot of them. The liner notes are worth the price of admission to this disc alone. He takes the time to explain the wild mash of styles each track delivers from Cuban Timba with Reggaeton, to Son/Hip Hop to Vultron (Panamanian lyricism) over Jamaican riddims.Credit must also be given to Fito's producer and collaborator on the project, Peruvian-born Keith Kanashiro (aka Sensei) who wrote much of the music, but regardless of who gets the props, Higher Level is highly recommended. 
 
Twelve Girls Band - Eastern  Energy (EMI) - There are concerts and then there are 'shows'. When I saw the Twelve Girls Band perform at the Moore Theatre in Seattle, it was a real 'show' like Riverdance, Barrage or  Stomp or any other off-Broadway musical production. It's what should be expected though when you start with a novel concept: 12 beautiful girls from mainland China playing traditional instruments (erhu in front - a two string Chinese violin, pipa in the centre - a finger-picked Chinese banjo and a battery of gu zheng - a plucked horizontal harp in back with various exotic flutes and dulcimers thrown in) playing very untraditional western music for the most part.  For the uninitiated to Chinese music, the girls offer their renditions of Coldplay's 'Clocks', Riverdance composer Bill Whelan's 'Reel Around The Sun' and even a surreal reworking of Beethoven's 5th. Not all of it translates well but the Far Eastern flavored material is engaging when its powered by such a large (but petite) ensemble. And, it all goes over big in America where their tour was gobbled up like dim sum. Wisely, the disc 'Eastern Energy' gives consumers a CD and companion DVD for the full effect. The Twelve Girls would do boffo box office in Vegas. It's the kind of 'show' that would go well with happy hour and one buck shrimp cocktails.After all, Celine has to take a break one of these days ...
 
Wyclef Jean - Welcome To Haiti Creole 101 (BMG) - I am constantly amazed by the resilience of the Haitian people. Haiti has been plagued by political violence for much of its history and recently Hurricane Jeanne visited a new wave of death and destruction on the beleaguered island nation. It all should make Haiti's celebration of 200 years of independence from slavery (the first Black Republic to do so) bitter sweet at best. But there's no more joyous and pride-filled music on the planet than the Creole beats of Konpa, Zouk and Rara, the sounds that buoy the hearts of the Haitian people. Haitian son and Fugee founder, Wyclef Jean came home with a celebration in hand and on disc, "Welcome To Haiti Creole 101". It's an important release, bringing the weight of a globally recognized performer to bear on a woefully overlooked Caribbean tradition. And Creole 101 is just what it suggests, an introductory course and the first of many to come hopefully. Wyclef has commited to starting a label called Sak Pase (Creole for "What's Up") which will expose Haiti's message of jubilation to all who want to share its indominatable spirit.
 

Fernanda Cunha - Dois Coracoes (Independent) The wonderfully wacky worldwide web is really amazing. It allows you to make the most remarkable connections with people from around the world by virtue of simply hanging your shingle in the windows for Microsoft. Fernanda Cunha is a brilliant singer from Rio de Janeiro who found us at www.worldbeatcanada.com and sent along a couple of her albums. Dois Coracoes (Two Hearts) is a gorgeous realization of Brazilian elegance.Fernanda has a classic samba and bossa delivery that's soft but with trained strength and foundation. Hers is a substantial and versatile voice reminiscent of the late, great Elis Regina and Joyce (two singers who first caught my ear during my introduction to Brazilian rhythms). Fernanda finds herself in distinguished company on Dois Coracoes, performing with composers Johnny Alf and Sueli Costa.The string and piano-based jazz arrangements are irresistible and worthy of repeated late night listens. I don't know if you'll find this disc in North America but I'm sure Fernanda wouldn't mind an unexpected connection from abroad asking for more information. Visit www.fernandacunha.com.br.

 

Issa Bagayogo - Tassoumakan (Six Degrees) - A remarkable thing happened recently while conducting an interview at the Commodore Ballroom in Vancouver. As my guest and I conversed while seated on the edge of the stage, the opening act came out to sound check. He positioned his kora (an exquisite and ancient African harp) near the microphone and plucked a few notes only to stop suddenly and take an incoming call. The image is something that could only materialize in the 21st century, a person holding a kora in one hand and a cell phone in the other. That performer could have well been Issa Bagayogo or 'Techno Issa' as he's known to his Malian musical friends. His instrument is the 6 string n'goni similar in form and timbre to the kora with far fewer strings. Many global artists have attempted to broach the traditional and the technological but few as seamlessly as Issa. As a follow up to 'Timbuktu', his ear opening debut release on Six Degrees, Issa presents "Tassoumakan' which means 'Voice Of Fire'. It's a wonderful study in contrasts: organic and electronic, chilled and engaging, blues and beats. No one element of Issa's music appears imposed upon the other. All the compelling sounds symmetrically orbit in harmony around timeless melodies and chants.

 

email:calkoat@telus.net
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