Radio Salone

Travel Through Music

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Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Kali. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Kali. Mostrar todas las entradas
julio 21, 2020

Caribbean Playground - 2004

CaribbeanPlayground is one of the best compilations of the “Putumayo Kids” collection, constituting an extraordinary journey through the rich interculturality of the Caribbean.

Caribbean music comes from the mix of native, European, African and other cultures that have lived in the region. Like food, music is full of flavors that combine local ingredients with influences from other places. French, Spanish and English are some of the languages ​​spoken in the Caribbean, as well as Creole and Patois, which combine European and African languages.

The "journey" begins in Jamaica, home to reggae and other styles such as mento and ska. It stops in Martinique and Guadalupe, the birthplace of zouk music, a danceable, rhythmic and fun style, very popular throughout the Caribbean. Haiti, with a great cultural wealth, is another country to visit. There, the African influence is very strong and, among its different types of music, we can highlight some such as compas, rare and twoudabadou.

Puerto Rico, one of the three Spanish-speaking islands of the Caribbean along with Cuba and the Dominican Republic, is also the nerve center of salsa. Their traditional music includes styles of African influence like the bomba and the Plena. On the other hand, Trinidad is the birthplace of the calypso, the soca and of an Indian-influenced dance genre called chutney. The calypso is a kind of musical newspaper dealing with the lyrics of the songs, about daily life, current affairs and politics, generally in a fun way. The steel drum (steeldrum) is a musical instrument invented in Trinidad and made from barrels of oil.

In short, a very well selected and documented material (as Putumayo is accustomed), ideal to enter and enjoy the music of this wonderful land.

Tracks list:
01. Taj Mahal & The Hula Blues - Great Big Boat (blues-folk USA)
02. Desmond Dekker - Jamaica Farewell (ska Jamaica)
03. Kali - Tambou Dan TcheNou (tradicional Martinica)
04. Keith Frank and the Soileau Zydeco Band - Three Little Birds (zydeco USA)
05. Karl Zero & the Wailers - Coconut Woman (calypso Jamaica)
06. Marlene Dorcena - Panama (tradicional Haití)
07. Asheba - Little Anancy (calypso Trinidad)
08. José González y Banda Criolla - Bomba Te Traigo Yo (bomba Puerto Rico)
09. Lole-Lolay - Pa ´PiyeSou Do M´ (twoubadouHaití)
10. MissionIriez - Reggae Dancin´ (reggae Tonga/Jamaica)



octubre 10, 2019

Sierra Leone´s Refugee All Stars - Radio Salone - 2012



Sierra Leone's Refugee All Stars are one of the best and most creative African bands of what we have been of the century. Radio Salone is nothing more than the confirmation that this group, formed as a result of the drama, has become a true band that represents that light, that optimism and that vital philosophy inherent to the African people that Western people lack.


Formed in 1997 in the Kalia refugee camp in Guinea-Conakri, with guitars donated by a Canadian association, Sierra Leone's Refugee All Stars is a moving story from the beginning. The band began, under the baton of Reuben M. Koroma and Francis John Langba (to whom they dedicate this last album) as a way of delivering a small hope to the people fleeing the ruthless civil war of their country. So the group means hope, but also fun and musical freshness.


His previous work, Rise & Shine (Cumbancha, 2010) was already a work that knew how to combine, as few, the sounds of West Africa with reggae. With this third album, they mature, strengthen and explore that musical proposal as never before. Their casual encounter as refugees, initially, led to the sound suitcases carried by each member were very different, which makes the sound of the band so be. Hence, soukous (African rumba), soul, maringa and the typical African polyrhythmia, are naturally, fluid and prodigious with dub or classic reggae.



On Radio Salone they sing in krio (Salone refers to Sierra Leone in their mother tongue) among other languages ​​and, to finish seducing us, they pay homage to the radio, which they say was their connection to the musical world in the pre-era Internet. Thanks to all that, a concoction that tastes like soukous, dub or reggae destined for dancing has emerged, just as the sounds of the Sierra Leone waves were in the 1970s.


If the strictly musical assumes that we are facing one of the albums of the year 2012, exactly the same happens at the production level. Radio Salone was recorded in Brooklyn under the production of Victor Axelrod, also known as Ticklah (responsible for the sound of artists such as Amy Winehouse or Easy Star All Stars), with a 16-track analog equipment and special microphones from the 70's, which they did not close during the recording sessions, thus inviting listeners to join the creative journey that those days involved.

So ... close the internet, turn on the radio ... and enjoy these wonderful people.

Tracks list:
01. Chant it Down
02. Gbara Case
03. Mother In Law
04. Goombay Interlude: Rain Come Sun Come
05. Reggae Sounds The Message
06. Mampama
07. Kali
08. Goombay Interlude: Papa Franco
09. Man Muyu
10. Toman Teti M´Ba Akala
11. Big Fat Dog
12. Goombay Interlude: Shake Your Body
13. Yesu Gorbu
14. Work It Brighter
15. Remake The World Again
16. Goombay Interlude: A´Salamaleichem