Soul/Club/Rap
LPレコード

Qui Seme le Vent Recolte le Tempo<Colored Vinyl>

0.0

販売価格

¥
5,090
税込
還元ポイント

在庫状況 について

フォーマット LPレコード
発売日 2021年12月10日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルUniversal
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 3871351
SKU 602438713516

構成数 : 1枚

  1. 1.[LPレコード]
    1. 1.
      Intro
    2. 2.
      Qui Seme le Vent Recolte le Tempo
    3. 3.
      Matiere Grasse Contre Matiere Grise
    4. 4.
      Victime de la Mode
    5. 5.
      L'Histoire de l'Art
    6. 6.
      Armand Est Mort
    7. 7.
      Quartier Nord
    8. 8.
      Interlude

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

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