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| フォーマット | CDアルバム |
| 発売日 | 2010年07月22日 |
| 国内/輸入 | 輸入 |
| レーベル | Tru Thoughts |
| 構成数 | 1 |
| パッケージ仕様 | - |
| 規格品番 | TRUCD215 |
| SKU | 5060205150790 |
構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:52:43
Personnel: Otto Nascarella (vocals); Kiris Houston (guitar, background vocals); Marcelo Andrade (tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone, background vocals); Graeme Flowers (trumpet); Chris Webster (trombone); Eduardo Marques (drums); Jack Yglesias (congas, cuica, pandeiro, surdo, triangle, wood block, caxixi, gong, background vocals); Matheus Nova, Indioney Rodrigues, Alba Cabral, Luzmira Zerpa, Paola Faoro (background vocals).
Audio Mixer: Antonio Feola.
Recording information: Fishmarket Studios, London (07/2009-09/2009); Heliocentrics Studio (07/2009-09/2009); Fishmarket Studios, London (10/2008); Heliocentrics Studio (10/2008).
Released in 2008, Saravah Soul's self-titled debut combined samba, vintage MPB, greasy American funk, and Afro-beat and took the club underground by storm. The half-Brazilian, half British collective led by frenetic dancer and frontman/founder Otto Nascarella gave listeners a taste of this new chapter in May with the digitally released single "Alforia," and it didn't disappoint. Cultura Impura ("Impure Culture") is simply more; both in terms of what the band revealed, and in the truly amazing extensions they've added to their fiery mix. In addition to the aforementioned meld of sounds, SS have added stylistic elements of African highlife and cojo choir music, a few more rhythms such as jongo and coco, and an array of Brazilian folk instruments -- berimbau, surdo, alfaia, and pifano (bamboo) flutes -- to the drums, electric basses, horns, guitars, and myriad chanted, sung, and spoken vocals. Check the opener, "Janaina," with its call-and-response verse underscored by a authoritative refrain from Nascarella. The rhythms walk a tightrope between Afro-beat, highlife, and frevo. "Funk de Umbirgada" follows it with a feverish backbeat thanks to guest drummer Kofi Adu. Horns share the foreground with knotty, hypnotically grooving lead guitar (courtesy of Kiris Houston) and an enormous array of singing in cojo choir style. There is a startling cover of Jimi Hendrix's "Fire" with horns and furious breakbeats leading the way. Nascarella swaggers and spits the lyric streetwise as the chorus answers like a female JB's singing in Portuguese! The album version of "Alforia" is longer, with a different set of rhythmic interpolations, shoving a jarring, hyperactive samba into an Afro-beat groove as highlife-styled guitars play counterpoint solos to the layers of rhythms provided by percussionist Jack Yglesias. The samba vibe on the track is more like pagode; primitive, raw, insistent. This is party music, but it's played with ferocious intensity.Even slower tunes such as "Da Ne Mim," with its gorgeous, seductive, folk melody, add something new and irresistible -- in this case Northern soul lyricism to Brazilo-Indian chants, accompanied by fretless bass and a hypnotic berimbau. Other standouts include the psychedelic, funkified samba of "Se Da Do," (with lead vocals by bassist Matheus Nova) and the lunatic, carnivalesque "Cachorro Da Ingrejinha" that feels like a capoeira battle between Afro-beat, bamboo flutes, and drums (hand and kit) in four different but simultaneous polyrhythms. There isn't a weak link here: Cultura Impura is a triumph through and through. ~ Thom Jurek
録音 : ステレオ (Studio)
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