mixtapes for weathers and moods / music for good days and bad days


For nonstop listening of players' tracks you must login to DEEZER music site! / A lejátszók számainak zavartalan hallgatásához be kell lépned a DEEZER zeneoldalra.

A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Oliver Mtukudzi. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Oliver Mtukudzi. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2022. február 23., szerda

NEKEMTENEMMUTOGATOL! / CAN'T MAKE ME! • WORLD:MUSiC:MiX # 33 selected GLOBAL MUSiC tracks 2002-1992


g l o b a l  m u s i c a l   v i l l a g e
NEKEMTENEMMUTOGATOL! / CAN'T MAKE ME! • WORLD:MUSiC:MiX # 33 selected GLOBAL MUSiC tracks 2002-1992 # WmW 2h 34m: Besh o Drom, Oliver Mtukudzi, Cristina Branco, Ibrahim Ferrer, Dónal Lunny, The Klezmatics, Johnny Clegg & Juluka, Andy Palacio, Sheila Chandra, Transglobal Underground, Ofra Haza

M  U  S  I  C / WmW 2h 34m

if you want excitement PRESS SHUFFLE!



LISTEN THE PLAYLIST ON DEEZER.COM

http://www.deezer.com/playlist/1681171971


2002-1992



Besh o DroM was formed in 1999 in Budapest, Hungary. This Hungarian band combines Hungarian folk elements with Balkan music. The band does not confine itself to the Balkan category, but draws its musical inspiration from Jewish, Afghan, Albanian, Egyptian, Lebanese, Armenian, Bulgarian, Romanian, and Greek tunes, using folk and electronic instrumentals.
Nekemtenemmutogatol Oro (Besh O Drom / Traditional) 5:30
Csángó Menyhárt (Traditional) 2:38
Manócsávó (Besh O Drom / Traditional) 4:41
Hungary's Besh o Drom is, to put it mildly, all over the map. They're a gypsy band who breaks through many of the normal barriers associated with that style, while still rooted in their heritage... For anyone just coming to gypsy music, this probably isn't the place to start. But if you've already investigated it and you want to hear what a new generation is doing, you won't find better than this.


A musical and cultural icon in his native Zimbabwe, Oliver "Tuku" Mtukudzi's songs reflected the daily life and struggles of his homeland by blending together a number of South African music traditions including mbira, mbaqanga, jit, and the traditional drumming styles of the Korekore to create a distinctive style that his fans affectionately dubbed "Tuku music."
Wasakara (Oliver Mtukudzi) 7:28
Pahukama (Oliver Mtukudzi) 4:47
Wenge Mambo (Oliver Mtukudzi) 5:07
An inventive guitarist and passionate singer, Mtukudzi was also an astonishingly prolific recording artist, releasing 67 albums during his four-decade career. Having established himself in the late '70s, his popularity soared after Zimbabwe won its independence in 1980 and in the years that followed, he released a string of successful albums and branched out into acting as well, starring in his country's first two nationally made films, Jit (1990) and Neria (1992)...



By rights, Cristina Branco shouldn't sing the urban Portuguese song form called fado. The genre, whose name translates as 'fate,' has its history in Lisbon, a enigmatic, poetic, working-class style about accepting the lot life and love has dealt. But Branco, who grew up in rural Almeirim, Portugal, has established herself as one of the country's foremost fadistas, with a growing international reputation. Born in 1972, she grew up listening to blues, jazz, and music from around the globe...
Fado Perdicao 2:46
Magoa (Fernando Pessoa) 3:56
Abandono 3:14
from Murmúrios 2000
Cristina Branco is at the modern forefront of the Portuguese fado genre, a kind of national variation on the blues, although it has more in common with Greek rembetika. The lyrics are poetry, the music soft. But it's all about the signing, putting across the image, and emtion of the song, which is why Branco stands out so much. Her voice has a tenderness that could move easily from the intimate to the sweeping over a single phrase, all the while making the listener she's singing only to him. The scaled-down accompaniment helps that feeling. By its very nature, the form is quite sensual, and Branco accentuates that with her slightly breathy singing. But there's also a clarity to her, almost a translucence, which illuminates the words. By choice she uses modern lyricists, poets really, with the melodies coming from guitarist Custodio Castelo... Beautiful, sometimes almost erotic, this is music for the heart.



With the release of the Grammy-winning album Buena Vista Social Club and an acclaimed documentary of the same name, Cuban singer Ibrahim Ferrer vaulted from obscurity and poverty to international fame in the twilight of his life. He was born February 20, 1927, when his mother went into labor during a dance in the Cuban village of San Luis...
Bruca Maniguá (Arsenio Rodríguez) 4:44
Marieta (Faustino Oramas (5:55)
Mami Me Gustó (Arsenio Rodríguez) 5:04
When the Buena Vista Social Club album was released to great acclaim in 1997, it revived the careers of quite a few incredibly talented aging Cuban musicians. Like Ibrahim Ferrer, most of those musicians (who had been legendary in the '40s through the '70s) hadn't been performing professionally in decades. With the success of the Buena Vista Social Club, everything changed; they toured the globe, and plans for follow-up albums followed. Ibrahim Ferrer's was the second of what became a line of Buena Vista releases, all hoping to cash in on the success of the first. Ferrer's album is pleasant, the kind of album you could put on during brunch on a sunny morning. The album features many classic Cuban compositions. Original arrangers, musicians, and bandleaders were involved whenever possible. One standout is "Mami Me Gusto," a rolling upbeat tune by the legendary Cuban composer/bandleader Arsenio Rodriguez. On that tune Ferrer is lively and loose, and he is joined by Rodriguez's original pianist, the masterful Ruben Gonzales...


Guitar and bouzouki player Dónal Lunny is one of the pioneers of the Irish folk music revival. His first group, he told me, "was a very close imitation of The Clancy Brothers, [who] used to go to sessions every weekend in a pub called Pat Downing's in Prosperous... I'm sure I was dreadful at the beginning. It improved as time went on, and I got involved in different groups in Dublin." One of those groups, Emmet Spiceland, also included Mick Moloney, now a champion of American-Irish music... 
Spanish Point (Dónal Lunny / Declan Masterson) 4:08
Glentown: Miss Monaghans/The Man of the House/The Green Fields of Glentown/The Mountain Lark (Tommy Peoples / Traditional) 5:07
The Mouseskin Shoe and Dancing in Allihies (Nollaig Casey) 3:51
from Coolfin 1998
Dónal Lunny isn't a legendary figure in Irish music for nothing. He helped revolutionize it with the Bothy Band, in addition to his own work and guesting on other peoples' albums. So when he put a band together, it was bound to be interesting. With people like Nollaig Casey and John McSherry he had the cream of the crop, and a subtle electric rhythm section. Add in guests like Sharon Shannon, Eddi Reader, and the Ní Dhomnaill sisters, and you have a wealth of talent...  but there's little doubt that the quality of the musicianship and arrangements marks a standard everyone else now has to measure up to, especially after "The Mouseskin Shoe and Dancing in Allihies."



The Klezmatics take one of the wildest approaches to klezmer, the traditional dance music of the Eastern European Jews. Although their music is heavily influenced by the recordings of Abe Ellstein and Dave Tarras in the 1940s and 1950s, their lyrics comment on a wide variety of political and social issues and have led the group to be labeled "the planet's radical Jewish roots band."...
The Klezmatics 
Shprayz Ikh Mir (Traditional) 3:04
Moroccan Game (Frank London) 2:47
Shavarts un Vays (Black and White)
Frank London / Traditional) 4:54
from Possessed 1997
...The Klezmatics' ethos is at once deeply traditional and deeply progressive. Their music is a lively engagement with Jewishness itself, inflecting Eastern European klezmer music with other genres so seamlessly that it seems misleading even to name the other influences (classical, Dixieland, bebop, Middle Eastern folk, modern rock... Their song catalog includes religious traditionals, but it also includes original Hebraic odes to marijuana and homosexuality... While there is plenty of their familiar frenzied spiritual party music, there is also some goregeously evocative minor-key mysticism... 




Together with Sipho Mchunu, a Zulu musician who came to Johannesburg in search of work, Johnny Clegg formed South Africa's first multiracial band, Juluka. In the seven years that they were initially together, the band recorded two platinum and five gold albums and became an international success... 
Putumayo Presents 
Johnny Clegg & Juluka Collection
Kwela Man (Johnny Clegg) 3:47
Work for All 3:58
Two Humans on the Run (Johnny Clegg) 4:42
How wonderful to finally be able to refer to apartheid, South Africa's former policy of brutally enforced racial exclusion and oppression, in the past tense! However, it is important to never forget how it was back then, and this album provides a virtual time capsule of an audacious period during the long, bitter battle for equality. In the '70s, a white, English-born, South Africa-based singer named Johnny Clegg spent several months living among the Zulus, learning their music and dances. When he returned to urban pursuits, he and Sipho Mchuno, a local black musician, had the guts, or inspired insanity, to start an interracial band. They called themselves Juluka (Zulu for "sweat"), and eventually achieved widespread popularity among South African blacks and whites alike. But, even so, their existence was a threat to the status quo and they lived in constant danger of arrest or worse. As their fame grew, they reached audiences throughout the world with their incongruously joyous blend of conscious lyrics, mbaqanga (township jive), traditional Zulu folklore, and hook-laden Western pop. The present compilation of ten infectious tunes gathered from six albums makes it very obvious how this gentle insurrection gained so many adherents. Mchuno eventually left in search of a more traditional sound while Clegg went on to found a later group called Savuka, but together they had fired a well-aimed shot straight into the evil heart of apartheid when it was very dangerous to do so, and lived to tell the tale.



To understand Andy Palacio and his place in the world music community, one must first understand the precarious position of his oft-forgotten Garifuna people. Two slave ships loaded to the gills with captive West Africans sank off the coast of St. Vincent Island in 1635, and when the survivors swam to shore, they were taken in and given refuge by the indigenous Carib peoples who lived there. The displaced Africans and hospitable Caribs lived and worked together, intermarried, and ultimately created a hybrid culture -- the Garifuna...
Jammin' 3:35
Nabi 4:33
Roots 4:22
Through work in a Nicaraguan literacy program in the '80s, Palacio became aware of the threat his people's culture faced. As his artistic career developed, Palacio became part of a community of young Garifuna artists and intellectuals, producing modern artistic works that honored their native past. Palacio became the leading voice of the punta rock genre, a style based on Garifuna rhythms that intermingled with other Caribbean dance styles. Over the course of several years Palacio became Belize's most famous living artist, gaining recognition throughout the Caribbean and Europe...


One of the most unusual and successful singers of the '80s and '90s that has attempted to fuse the music of non-Western cultures with Western pop, Sheila Chandra began recording as a teenager in Monsoon. Of Indian ancestry but born and raised in Britain, Chandra took lead vocals in the band, which pursued a sort of new wave-tinged raga rock along the lines of George Harrison's explorations on Beatles tracks like "Love You To."...
La Sagesse (Woman, I'm Calling You) (Sheila Chandra / Steve Coe) 4:29
Love, It Is a Killing Thing (Sheila Chandra / Steve Coe) 4:48
Kafi Noir (Sheila Chandra / Steve Coe) 6:45
from Zen Kiss 1994
This is pretty much of a piece with her previous album (Weaving My Ancestors' Voices), continuing her eclectic forays into the forms and feelings of various Western and non-Western genres, and resuming her most avant-garde projects with the a cappella clucking/chanting of "Speaking in Tongues" (parts three and four). It's not a redundant repetition of the territory laid out on Weaving My Ancestor's Voices. It's more an extension of the mood, Chandra delving more deeply into June Tabor-styled British folk vocals in particular.




TransGlobal Underground is a U.K.-based collective fusing as many different kinds of world music as its members can get their hands on. The group's core is composed of vocalist Natacha Atlas (who has recorded with Jah Wobble, Apache Indian, and her own band, Atlas Project), keyboardist Alex Kasiek, drum programmer Man Tu, and founder, bassist, and sampler Count Dubulah. The project grew out of a mutual love for dance, avant-garde, Arabic, and world music and draws on each member's listening tastes and cultural backgrounds...
Slowfinger 5:17
La Voix du Sang 6:13
El Hedudd (Alex Kasiek) 7:17
In the aftermath of Transglobal Underground's pioneering blend of electronic dance music and worldbeat, seemingly hundreds of imitators have bled this fusion dry. This doesn't take away from the brilliance of their debut, Dream of 100 Nations, a sometimes dizzying and often exciting melding of hot-footed dance beats, trippy dub, block-rocking hip-hop, and, most importantly, an intelligent and nuanced integration of this Western pop with various Asian and African musical forms. The exotic instrumentation is incorporated carefully into the beats; as often as not, the tablas, ouds, and other unique instruments are used strictly as rhythm...  The focus throughout is on Natacha Atlas' muscular vocals; Atlas has one of the most powerful voices in '90s dance rock, making Dream of 100 Nations a compelling listen even without the worldbeat influences.


Long one of Israel's most popular singers, Ofra Haza broke through to international recognition during the mid-'80s when her traditional music found favor on the U.K. club circuit, its success leading to a series of unlikely pop projects...
Kirya (Bezalel Aloni / Ofra Haza / Traditional) 6:11
Innocent (Bezalel Aloni / Ofra Haza) 4:43
Daw da Hiya (Bezalel Aloni / Ofra Haza) 4:55
from Kirya 1992
Kirya heralds a return to the style of her 50 Gates of Wisdom album (and her return to the Shanachie label). Guided by producer Don Was (the B-52's, Bonnie Raitt, Bob Dylan), the album offers a unique contemporary groove and Haza's striking vocals (here in Aramaic, Hebrew, and English). Guests include Lou Reed....
...For 1992's Grammy-nominated Kirya, she teamed with producer Don Was and welcomed guests Iggy Pop and Lou Reed; that same year, Haza also recorded the single "Temple of Love" with British goth rockers the Sisters of Mercy. Despite her success, however, she was silent throughout the middle of the decade, finally resurfacing in 1997 with a self-titled LP issued on her new label, BMG Ariola. Haza died unexpectedly of AIDS-related complications on February 23, 2000.




2022. január 25., kedd

02-01-2022 • WORLD:MUSiC:MiX # 33 selected GLOBAL MUSiC tracks 2011-2000 # WmW 2h 48m


g l o b a l  m u s i c a l   v i l l a g e
02-01-2022 • • WORLD:MUSiC:MiX # 33 selected GLOBAL MUSiC tracks 2011-2000 # WmW 2h 48m: Terakaft, Los Destellos, Los Wemblers De Iquitos, Los Walkers, Le TPOK Jazz, Franco, Watcha Clan, Vinicio Capossela, Omar Bashir, Axel Krygier, Boris Kovac, Ladaaba Orchest, Besh o Drom, Oliver Mtukudzi, Cristina Branco

M  U  S  I  C / WmW 2h 48m

if you want excitement PRESS SHUFFLE!



LISTEN THE PLAYLIST ON DEEZER.COM

http://www.deezer.com/playlist/1681171971


2011-2000




Terakaft (meaning “caravan” in Tamasheq) is a genuine desert rock band, sculpted by the pure searing air and the endless rolling sands of the Sahara. The stark, harsh conditions of the desert have permeated their wild riffs, and as a result they are the perfect embodiment of all that is wild and free in desert blues today. Terakaft was formed in 2001 with a line-up that included two former members of Tinariwen, and they have since made the electric guitar their own...
Alghalem (Abdallah Ag Ahmed) 3:41
Aman Wi Kawalnen (Liya Ag Ablil / Sanou Ag Ahmed) 3:45
Ahabib (Liya Ag Ablil) 5:01
from Aratan N Azawad 2011
The new album from Terakaft presents the Tamasheq band in live performance, with a lean tightness to the sound that leaves the group positioned between the desert blues genre and rock. A song like "Aman Wi Kawalnen" has the suppleness of the best Sahara bands, but the flow of lead guitar work that characterizes rock. Even where acoustic guitar dominates, as with "Aratan N Azawad," that same feel is there. In part that's because the band is only a three-piece (two guitars, bass, and vocals, supplemented for the recording with percussion and some additional guitar), offering a sparer, cleaner sound. There's a liquid beauty to the music with its easy, rolling rhythms, but the intensity always simmers, occasionally firing into flame, as with the biting, incisive guitar breaks in "Ahabib." It's no longer fair to call Terakaft an up-and-coming band. On this basis of this, they've arrived, with their sound fully developed.



Los Destellos
- Constelación (Enrique Delgado) 3:19
Los RibereñosSilbando (Juan Benigno) 3:06
Los Wemblers De Iquitos (Lamento Del Yacuruna (Emerson Sanchez) 2:47
Los Walkers - Siboney (Ernesto Lecuona) 2:34
Chicha started in the '60s when the Indian population of the Peruvian Amazon discovered the Columbian pop music known as cumbia and American rock & roll. With cheap electric instruments, Peru's Amazon Indians started dance bands that blended the cumbia, with a beat that sounds a bit like ska, Andean folk tunes, and their own indigenous music. When the Indians moved to Lima, they brought chicha with them. Like Afro-Peruvian music, chicha was shunned by "polite" society and it didn't gain an international profile until Olivier Conan, owner of Barbés Records, discovered the music on a trip to Peru in 2006. He found bootleg chicha cassettes on the streets and finally tracked down the master tapes of several chicha labels that had gone bankrupt. He put out a compilation of tunes called Roots of Chicha: Psychedelic Cumbias from Peru and started his own chicha band, Chicha Libre. Chicha isn't going to rule the world anytime soon, but the music caused a sensation in world music circles and Psychedelic Cumbias from Peru was praised by The New York Times, BBC, and other international publications. The Roots of Chicha, Vol. 2 continues to explore this hitherto unknown genre with 16 more mind-bending rave-ups cut between 1968 and 1981... 


There's no doubt that Franco was, in every sense of the word, a big man in African music. Sometimes weighing in at 300 pounds, he also earned his nickname as "The Sorcerer of the Guitar," making it sing like no one before, with effortless, fluid lines. Also an accomplished composer and vocalist, Francois Luambo Makiadi remains a towering figure even in death, probably the greatest the Congo (later Zaire) has ever produced, and as the leader of the long-running O.K. Jazz group, he was one of the fathers of the modern Congolese sound. ..
Tokoma Ba Camarade Pamba (Franco Luambo) 11:25
Nostalgie (Josky Kiambukuta) 10:00


2020. február 19., szerda

19-02-2020 > WORLD:MUSiC:MiX # 33 selected ETHNiC FUSiON tracks 1996-1984

AFRICANDO

19-02-2020 > WORLD:MUSiC:MiX # 33 selected ETHNiC FUSiON tracks 1996-1984 # WmW:   Africando, The Klezmatics, Danyel Waro, Mahotella Queens, Strunz & Farah, Oliver Mtukudzi, Rabih Abou-Khalil, Astor Piazzolla, Los Lobos, Pata Negra, Issa Juma And Super Wanyika Stars, Dead Can Dance, Lizzy Mercier Descloux

M  U  S  I  C / WmW

if you want excitement PRESS SHUFFLE!


LISTEN THE PLAYLIST ON DEEZER.COM
http://www.deezer.com/playlist/1681171971

1996-1984




Africando represents a cross-cultural collaboration between top-ranked, New York-based, Latin musicians and African vocalists. 
Africando
Gombo (Boncana Maïga / Nicholas Menheim) 5:10
Diaraf 5:37
from Gombo Salsa 1996
On Gombo Salsa, Africando moves into even higher and hotter musical territory. The band continues to polish its radiant mixture of classic mambos, sones, boleros, and cha-chas. However, on this album listeners do not hear the voice of Pape Seck. He died unexpectedly in 1995 before the release of their second album. His raspy, gritty voice will never be forgotten by all music lovers the world over. His phrasing and timing, combined with an earthy, sensual feel, place him among the immortals. With his irreplaceable loss, Africando decided to employ other great soneros from Africa and Cuba. The result is the strong vocal front line of Medoune Diallo, Nicholas Menheim, and Ronnie Baro. Bolstering this lineup is the venerable veteran Gnonnas Pedro from Benin, who assures listeners that in the music lies the truth...

Inimitable N.Y.C. band blends klezmer music and socially conscious lyrics with contemporary rock, funk, and avant-garde jazz.
The Klezmatics
Man in a Hat (The Klezmatics / David Lindsay / Traditional) 3:03
Khsidim Tants (Traditional) 4:17
from Jews with Horns 1995
Picture the Reverend Horton Heat with a yarmulke, if you like. Or "Fiddler on the Roof" with Coltraneian complexity. Just don't expect somber religious music. The Klezmatics' brand of Jewish klezmer is as spirited as it is spiritual. The fast numbers, which dominate their third album, are frenzied celebratory drinking songs -- a true revival of the community spirit which spawned this eastern European brand of folk music. All that happiness poses a sequencing challenge: Where do you put the few downbeat stylistic diversions (a Yiddish labor song from 1889; a thunderously moving, jazzy clarinet improvisation; an eerie poem with a classical arrangement)? Jews With Horns suffers a little for hiding most of its variety at the end of the album. But that's a quibble in the face of such top-notch musicianship...


Danyel Waro was born and raised at the Ile de la Réunion, a French territory in the Indian Ocean east of Madagascar. A descendant of French colonists, he is the most renowned proponent of the Maloya, a compound rhythm which had its origin in chants of enslaved workers on the sugar cane plantations, a sort of "blues à la Réunion." Maloya is seen as a strong force of Réunion identity and was at times even banned by the French authorities governing the island. Whereas the archaic Maloya consisted first of all chants sung over traditional percussion instruments, Waro must be credited with having expanded the Maloya style to transport a message and through his performances, music, and lyrics, live up to a new unity. 
Danyel Waro ‎
Batarsité 8:05
Tikok 7:15
from Batarsité 1994
...WARO was born in Le Tampon on the southern slopes of the volcano that forms the island of Réunion and exemplifies the island’s heritage as someone who is of mixed race having been descended from both colonists and slaves. Having grown up in the most primitive conditions with no running water, no electricity and subjected to a hard life of eking out a living from the land, the lack of luxuries left its toll on WARO’s psyche which has forever connected him to the land and the plight of a colonized island that still suffers from the ramifications of the historical injustices. These traditional musical forms have been used as a political weapon to sharpen the psyche and instill a sense of pride amongst the people who have suffered from the fervent,  even militant dominion of France’s iron fist throughout the centuries....


The Queens, often heard in concert and on record with deep-voiced "groaner" Simon Mahlathini, represent the South African township style with absolute perfection. Established in 1964 as a session harmony group, they came to prominence in the '70s with their tough vocal style and rock-solid mbaqanga backing band.
Mahotella Queens
Women of the World (Eileen Butler / Mike Pilot) 3:01
Africa (Allan Schlosberg) 4:28
from Women of the World 1993
Although usually heard backing the groans and surging vocals of Mahlathini, the Mahotella Queens can certainly perform on their own. A working unit since 1964, they show on this new release that their harmonies and leads deserve attention on their own. There are celebratory praise songs such as "Africa" and the title track...

2020. január 11., szombat

11-01-2020 WORLD:MUSiC:MiX # 33 selected ETHNiC FUSiON tracks 2005-1991

Caetano Veloso

11-01-2020 WORLD:MUSiC:MiX # 33 selected ETHNiC FUSiON tracks 2005-1991 # WmW:   Caetano Veloso and José Miguel Wisnik, Gipsy Kings, Värttinä, Liz Carroll, Radio Tarifa, Vinicio Capossela, Djivan Gasparyan, Boris Kovac, Thierry Titi Robin, Africando, The Klezmatics, Danyel Waro, Mahotella Queens, Strunz & Farah, Oliver Mtukudzi

M  U  S  I  C / WmW

if you want excitement PRESS SHUFFLE!


LISTEN THE PLAYLIST ON DEEZER.COM
http://www.deezer.com/playlist/1681171971

2011-2001



A true heavyweight, Caetano Veloso is a pop musician, poet, filmmaker, author, activist, and statesman. Since the 1960s, he has been a cultural shapeshifter whose songs and recordings are filled with musical and literary invention, a deliberate androgyny, and an effortless genre meld of samba, MPB, tropicalia, rock, funk, jazz, and more.
Caetano Veloso and José Miguel Wisnik
Madre Deus 3:37
Onqotô 5:26
from Onqotô 2005
Onqotô is a rhythmic score for "Grupo Corpo", a Brazilian modern dance company, by Caetano Veloso and José Miguel Wisnik. This may be a reason why Onqotô has been overlooked. A pity, for the music here is among the best Caetano has released in recent years. It reveals yet another musical facet of Caetano Veloso.
Onqotô reminds me of Caetano's experimental music of the early seventies. There are long percussive grooves.  Madre Deus and especially Pesar do mundo are beautiful lyrical islands.

Family act from southern France whose Afro-Spanish take on flamenco launched them to worldwide fame in the 1980s. The Gipsy Kings are largely responsible for bringing the joyful sounds of progressive pop-oriented flamenco to the world. The band started out in Arles, a village in southern France, during the '70s when brothers Nicolas and Andre Reyes, the sons of renowned flamenco artist Jose Reyes, teamed up with their cousins Jacques, Maurice, and Tonino Baliardo, whose father is Manitas de Plata. 
Aven, Aven (Gipsy Kings) 4:37
Legende (Gipsy Kings) 4:12
from Roots 2004
Fans of flamenco icons the Gipsy Kings have been waiting a long time for a record like Roots. The group spent much of the last ten years churning out a sleek and heady mix of often disposable worldbeat that, while perfectly executed, never lived up to the promise of their hugely successful 1988 American/English debut. The aptly named Roots finds the brothers Andre and Nicolás Reyes leading the veteran octet through 16 blistering tracks, bereft of the percussion and electronic trickery that has plagued so many of their previous outings. The family collective rented a farmhouse in the south of France for the recording, and the results are nothing short of a revelation...



A compelling Kaarelian roots-inspired Finish folk group that has featured as many as 21 members. One of the most internationally successful acts to emerge from the contemporary Finland music scene, Värttinä revitalized the nation's folk traditions with an aggressive and ultra-modern style that eschewed not only the costumes of their ancestors but also the long-accepted cultural notion that women should sing unaccompanied.
Sepän Poika/The Blacksmith's Son (Antto Varilo) 3:20
Maahinen Neito (Earth-Maiden) 4:23
Vihi (Wind) (Antto Varilo) 3:33
from iki 2003
Twenty years after Värttinä began, there's still plenty of energy in the band, although they've come a long, long way. More mature, they've learned to use finesse over speed, and the themes they tackle here are certainly more adult... The keening voices, once a band trademark, have all but vanished, replaced by more delicate harmonies that suit the material, and the six instrumentalists give them plenty of room -- although they're quite capable of making a storm of noise, too... After their live disc, they seem to be embarking on a new musical chapter, in search of new pastures, and the journey here proves very satisfying indeed. The frantic edge that characterized them for so long has vanished, although their joy in music-making very obviously remains.