Soul/Club/Rap
CDアルバム

Qui Seme Le Vent Recolte Le Tempo

0.0

販売価格

¥
2,690
税込
還元ポイント

販売中

在庫わずか
発送目安
当日~翌日

在庫状況 について

・各種前払い決済は、お支払い確認後の発送となります(Q&A)

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2021年08月27日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルUniversal Music France
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 3599027
SKU 602435990279

構成数 : 1枚

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Intro 1:00
    2. 2.
      Who Sows The Wind Harvests The Tempo 4:13
    3. 3.
      Fat vs. Gray Matter 3:24
    4. 4.
      Fashion victim 3:10
    5. 5.
      History Of Art 3:25
    6. 6.
      Armand Is Dead 3:07
    7. 7.
      North Quarter 3:08
    8. 8.
      Interlude 0:30
    9. 9.
      Part time 3:47
    10. 10.
      Caroline 4:43
    11. 11.
      Music soothes the soul 5:02
    12. 12.
      Move From There (Part 1) 3:10
    13. 13.
      Move From There (Part 2) 3:04
    14. 14.
      Ragga jam 5:06
    15. 15.
      Currency 3:39
    16. 16.
      Funky dreamer 1:13

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: MC Solaar

商品の紹介

The debut disc from MC Solaar is a clear signal that quality hip-hop can exist outside the U.S. and the English language barriers. Most of his lyrics read as "I'm the man" MC boasts and shout-outs to the Paris hip-hop crew, but the French rapper has superb flow and a masterful producer in Jimmy Jay, an absolute natural when it comes to creating sonic pastiches/collages to fit the lyrics. It's French hip-hop and therefore a softer, gentler sound with the music more on the acid jazz tip to match the rhythm and flavor of Solaar's native tongue. The title track immediately alerts you to the difference -- the rapid but never rushed delivery works off the rhythms of active, chopping drums anchoring a full arrangement topped by organ fills and flavored by sax near the end. Solaar is far from one-dimensional, adeptly adopting a conversational tone ("Victime de la Mode" on a fashion victim theme), changing up vocal tempos (the low-key "A Temps Partiel," a slick segue from the brief, jazzy-with-acoustic-bass "Interlude"), and leaving more open spaces in the forceful "Quartier Nord." He whispers the lost-love tale "Caroline" while Jimmy Jay enhances the melancholy mood with mournful strings and his customary attention to detail and dynamics (listen for the near-subliminal organ). The producer's like that, very smoooove but also deceptive in that there's always a lot going on in the arrangements underneath. "Armand Est Mort" gets a laid-back feel from the sax solo, and a single, mood-creating piano chord echoes "Inner City Blues" enough to make you wonder if that's a fragmentary sample of Marvin Gaye's voice popping up there in the background. But the funk front isn't neglected -- "L'Histoire de l'Art" has clavinet licks and horns over turntable scratches, "Matiere Grasse Contre Matiere Grise" sports an early-'70s, JB-ish funk backing with wah-wah guitar and upfront drums (and a lyrical day-in-the-life reflection on Paris and the world). And the '70s funk groove for "La Musique Adoucit les Mouers" works from a bass/drums spine with scratching and keyboard sounds while "Bouge de La" goes off from direct drum drive and bass funk before part two injects skank organ and dubbed-out toasting. It makes for a good transition to the quasi-duel of motormouths on "Ragga Jam," probably good for lighting up audiences live, but just lightweight here, and it brings the momentum to Qui Seme le Vent Recolte le Tempo a halt. But it's an impressive debut and important historically -- by pairing a rapper and producer in perfect sync with one another, it gave early French hip-hop a sound and tone of its own from the beginning. ~ Don Snowden
Rovi

メンバーズレビュー

レビューを書いてみませんか?

読み込み中にエラーが発生しました。

画面をリロードして、再読み込みしてください。