VA - Rough Guide To Undiscovered World (2012)
BAND/ARTIST: VA
- Title: Rough Guide To Undiscovered World
- Year Of Release: 2012
- Label: Rough Guides/World Music Network
- Genre: World
- Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 01:05:27
- Total Size: 153 mb | 377 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Various Artists - Sundanese in Bali
2. Various Artists - Thirty Years
3. Various Artists - Guragigna
4. Various Artists - Jerzy
5. Various Artists - Pijin Jalen
6. Various Artists - Sigh Of The Moor
7. Various Artists - Geamparale From Daieni
8. Various Artists - Druhny
9. Various Artists - Hondo
10. Various Artists - Akory Anao Aminahy
11. Pax Nindi - Marakatu Mbira
12. Various Artists - Inda
13. Various Artists - Putri Mandalika
14. Amadou Diagne - Senegal
15. Various Artists - Sithi Shwele
1. Various Artists - Sundanese in Bali
2. Various Artists - Thirty Years
3. Various Artists - Guragigna
4. Various Artists - Jerzy
5. Various Artists - Pijin Jalen
6. Various Artists - Sigh Of The Moor
7. Various Artists - Geamparale From Daieni
8. Various Artists - Druhny
9. Various Artists - Hondo
10. Various Artists - Akory Anao Aminahy
11. Pax Nindi - Marakatu Mbira
12. Various Artists - Inda
13. Various Artists - Putri Mandalika
14. Amadou Diagne - Senegal
15. Various Artists - Sithi Shwele
This excellently eccentric Rough Guide is a whistle-stop tour of wild world music. The majority of music here is previously un-released, so you won't hear this anywhere else, and it's not worth missing! Enjoy everything from a trio of Romanian harmonica enthusiasts to a Zimbabwean-Brazilian jazz project, and more. There is a whole world of great music out there that is just waiting to be discovered. Whether it's a trio of Romanian harmonica enthusiasts, a London-based neo-rebetiko band, a Polish-Oriental fusion outfit or a Mozambican-Norwegian-Swedish-Zimbabwean collaborative collective, there are thousands of musicians out there with the talent to amaze and the sounds to get us up and dancing! This Rough Guide is a celebration of all the fantastically eccentric music out there right now, but which is previously unreleased. This is current world music straight from the source.
Not only is the music on this compilation ‘undiscovered’, it’s also largely unusual in terms of its nature. The tracks were all uploaded in response to the World Music Network’s invitation to take part in its Battle of the Bands competition.
Despite stating that most of the contents are previously unreleased, many of the tracks appear to be lifted from existing albums, some of them on WMN’s own Introducing series, as part of its Riverboat imprint. Perhaps these albums exist only in the bedrooms of the artists, or maybe they received a very limited circulation.
Two of the wildest tracks come from Indonesian combos. The opening explosion of Sudanese in Bali from Saratuspersen is a manic multi-part shunt, jacking from madcap yelping to a relatively calm gamelan metallophone interlude, complete with slurping electric bass. Then there’s an outbreak of Balinese hip hop, cutting into New Orleans horn-bouncing, lunatic vocal tangles contorting up to the climax. All this in five minutes of extremely compelling freakiness.
Later, Suaramantra offer a comparable mash-up with Putri Mandalika. It moves towards a flute/drum workout, then returns to a floating drift, and concludes with an evocative female vocal which phases into a guitar solo.
There’s nimble Chinese funk from Shanren (Thirty Years), Ethiopian pop by the Krar Collective (Guragigna) and Polish drum’n’bass-goes-folk with Chlopcy Konta Basia (Jerzy). The Gambian ritti player Juldeh Camara is the most established act here, and his one-stringed fiddle is paired with the conventional violin of Griselda Sanderson in their Julaba Kunda project.
Greek combo Trio Tekke have also made a splash, appearing at the 2012 Latitude Festival, their set subsequently aired by Late Junction. Further wily slanting is provided by Zmei Trei, delivering Romanian folk music with two chromatic harmonicas, while Zimbawean mbira thumb piano sounds meet Scandinavian jazz saxophone-and-voice sensibilities on Monoswezi’s Hondo.
The only sonic confrontation that almost goes too far is that of Pax Nindi’s Marakatu Mbira. It sounds like two different bands in two different rooms, with nervous percussion cavorting around the perimeter.
But the standards are mostly high throughout this set, the fusions ridiculously labyrinthine and the artists tantalisingly unfamiliar.
Not only is the music on this compilation ‘undiscovered’, it’s also largely unusual in terms of its nature. The tracks were all uploaded in response to the World Music Network’s invitation to take part in its Battle of the Bands competition.
Despite stating that most of the contents are previously unreleased, many of the tracks appear to be lifted from existing albums, some of them on WMN’s own Introducing series, as part of its Riverboat imprint. Perhaps these albums exist only in the bedrooms of the artists, or maybe they received a very limited circulation.
Two of the wildest tracks come from Indonesian combos. The opening explosion of Sudanese in Bali from Saratuspersen is a manic multi-part shunt, jacking from madcap yelping to a relatively calm gamelan metallophone interlude, complete with slurping electric bass. Then there’s an outbreak of Balinese hip hop, cutting into New Orleans horn-bouncing, lunatic vocal tangles contorting up to the climax. All this in five minutes of extremely compelling freakiness.
Later, Suaramantra offer a comparable mash-up with Putri Mandalika. It moves towards a flute/drum workout, then returns to a floating drift, and concludes with an evocative female vocal which phases into a guitar solo.
There’s nimble Chinese funk from Shanren (Thirty Years), Ethiopian pop by the Krar Collective (Guragigna) and Polish drum’n’bass-goes-folk with Chlopcy Konta Basia (Jerzy). The Gambian ritti player Juldeh Camara is the most established act here, and his one-stringed fiddle is paired with the conventional violin of Griselda Sanderson in their Julaba Kunda project.
Greek combo Trio Tekke have also made a splash, appearing at the 2012 Latitude Festival, their set subsequently aired by Late Junction. Further wily slanting is provided by Zmei Trei, delivering Romanian folk music with two chromatic harmonicas, while Zimbawean mbira thumb piano sounds meet Scandinavian jazz saxophone-and-voice sensibilities on Monoswezi’s Hondo.
The only sonic confrontation that almost goes too far is that of Pax Nindi’s Marakatu Mbira. It sounds like two different bands in two different rooms, with nervous percussion cavorting around the perimeter.
But the standards are mostly high throughout this set, the fusions ridiculously labyrinthine and the artists tantalisingly unfamiliar.
World | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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