mardi 28 mai 2013
mardi 2 avril 2013
DONSO EN CONCERT LE 5 AVRIL AU TAMANOIR
BILLET EN VENTE ICI
DONSO
NOUVEL ALBUM "Denfila"
produit par PAG aka Krazybaldhead (Ed Banger)
Futur sound of Bamako "la transe malienne en version rock saturé"
Conçu dans la chaleur des maquis de Bamako entre N'goni et bass synthe , percussions explosives et guitares psychédéliques,
Donso poursuit l'aventure plus Afro rock, plus saturé, entre transe d'hier et sons du futur.
SORTIE LE 2 AVRIL 2013
Comet Rds / Dist. L'autre Distribution
EN CONCERT
LE 5 AVRIL AU TAMANOIR
LE 11 AVRIL AU STUDIO DE L'ERMITAGE
__________________________
Donso new album Denfila out today on Comet !
Donso
The future of African Beat orchestrated by Krazy Baldhead
Order it on ITUNES
Second album ‘Denfila’ is out today on Comet Records.
Donso are a French/Malian band of five, who skilfully bring together traditional Malian music and electronica rock to create a new music. And pull it off.
Donso are Pierre-Antoine Grison, aka KrazyBaldhead (producer for the influential dance music label Ed Banger) on Keyboards & programming, Moh Kouyate on guitar and Djele N'Goni, Thomas Guillaume on percussion & Donso N'Goni and vocalist Gedeon Papa Diarra and Seyba Sissoko on Djeli Goni
jeudi 14 mars 2013
Tony Allen & Abayomy Afrobeat Orquestra feat bnegao Ep 10" out now on Comet
Last May 2012, Tony Allen and his band was touring in Brazil. After their concert
in Rio at Circo Voador, Tony Allen, his musicians and the Abayomy crew ended
up in a studio in Santa Teresa for a stellar recording session. After two hours of
music jam, they recorded live the famous Jorge Ben Jorʼs song Meus Filhos to
celebrate the meeting between Africa and Brazil.
“I felt like I was a tree replanted and able to flourish” – Gilberto Gil after
meeting Fela Kuti in Lagos, Nigeria
Afrobeat rhythms have been a percolating influence in Brazilian music for
decades, The last few years have found afrobeat becoming an integral
component in the sound of a new generation of Brazilian musicians, working its
way into the grooves of hip-hop artists Curumin and Criolo and afrobeat
orchestras like Abayomy, Saravah Soul and Bixiga 70. Perhaps this shouldnʼt
comes as a surprise, as the roots of the current Afrobeat movement were planted
in Brazil long ago. Brazil is home to the largest population of African diaspora in
the world and the musical traditions of Brazilʼs African descendants have been
surprisingly well preserved through the rituals of the Afro-Brazilian religion
Inscription à :
Articles (Atom)