Welcome to World Music Central 05/18/2008 11:41AM  
  Home  |  Submissions  |  World Music Forum |  Links |  Calendar |  F.A.Q.  |  Directory of Articles  |  Contact Us  |
User Functions
:

:

Don't have an account yet? Sign up as a New User
Lost your password?

World Music News
CD Reviews
Articles
World Music sound loops and samples
General News
Interviews
Video Reviews
Book Reviews
Editorials
Tour Announcements
Concert reviews
Events »
New Releases »
Awards
Obituaries

World Music Resources
Artist biographies
Booking agents
Distributors
Travel Guides
Record labels
Mailing Lists
World Music Media
Organizations
Trade shows
Music Contests and Competitions

Live music:
Venues

Education:
Dance schools
Ethnomusicology
Museums
Music schools

Glossaries:
World dances
Musical genres
World Instruments

Shopping:
- World Music Central Store
- Gift ideas



Sweet!   
01/07/2005 08:00PM
Contributed by: TOrr

CD ReviewsVarious Artists

Music from the Chocolate Lands (Putumayo PUT 230-2, 2004)

Following the success of their collections Music from the Coffee Lands (2 volumes) and Music from the Tea Lands, Putumayo now offers something to eat along with them. The title handily spells out the concept- the music (rooted in five continents and at least one ocean) isn't linked by any real geographic or cultural continuity. Regardless, this is an array of selections that do indeed melt tastily in your mouth.

It's predominantly acoustic stuff, kicking off sharply with the Gerard Toto (Martinique)/Richard Bona (Cameroon)/Lokua Kanza (Congo) piece "Lisanga" locking in rhythmic bounce, intricate scats and a softly wailing vocal hook. Much as I'd love to carry any chocolate analogies further, better I should just say that the songs represent some of the artists' choicest work. Susheela Raman's "Sarasa" is her trademark blend of sensuality and Tamil Indian musical substance, Los Angeles-based fusion band Ozomatli set aside their often hard-edged Latin funk for a stately Mexican tango, Switzerland and West Africa come together without a snag via the trio called Taffetas and additional treats by Haiti's Beethova Obas, Peru's Susana Baca and the Euro/Brazilian match of Think of One sweeten the deal. And to keep things thematically suited, the album ends with Cuban great Chocolate Armenteros blazing his trumpet through the self-touting "Chocolate Sabroso."

Next time you hanker for a Cadbury, try this disc instead. You'll be just as satisfied and maybe able to put off a visit to the gym or your dentist a while longer. [Buy Music from the Chocolate Lands].

  [ Views: 1,668 ]  

What's Related

Story Options

Submissions  |  World Music Forum |  Links |  Calendar |  Directory of Articles  |  F.A.Q.  |  Contact Us
World Music Central News RSS Feed

Powered By Geeklog
Created this page in 0.27 seconds

Hosted By Ibiblio.org .