Music / salsa - afrocubansk musik

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Reviews (4)


Ban Ban Ton Ton

d. 28. Nov. 2022

By

By

Cal Gibson

d. 28. Nov. 2022

"Recorded over 17 days in Dakar, with a cast of thirty-four singers and players, producer/DJ Guts has masterminded this sprawling 17-track love letter to Afro-Cuban music. The end result is a wide-eyed masterpiece of global soul - all-encompassing, all live, all coated in magnificent musicianship. It's one hell of an accomplishment".


Ban Ban Ton Ton

d. 28. Nov. 2022

By

By

Cal Gibson

d. 28. Nov. 2022

"Recorded over 17 days in Dakar, with a cast of thirty-four singers and players, producer/DJ Guts has masterminded this sprawling 17-track love letter to Afro-Cuban music. The end result is a wide-eyed masterpiece of global soul - all-encompassing, all live, all coated in magnificent musicianship. It's one hell of an accomplishment".


Songlines

2023 March

By

By

Robin Denselow

2023 March

"Top of the world" - "This is a glorious album that was never supposed to happen. Fabrice Henri, the French hip-hop producer better known as Guts, had planned to record in Cuba. But COVID restrictions made that impossible so he flew the Cuban musicians to Dakar, and invited Senegalese stars to join the sessions, along with his own musicians from Europe ... The result is like a more funky, updated version of the original Buena Vista concept, and it works because the great cast were clearly enjoying themselves. The Cubans include Cucurucho Valdés, nephew of Chucho, whose piano work switches from jazz to salsa and ballads ... There's Havana rapper El Tipo Este, joined by a brass section for the slinky 'Dakar de Noche'. And from Senegal itself there's Assane Mboup, Alpha Dieng and guitarist René Sowatche, who provide a gently intense revival of 'Adduna Jarul Naawo', the Orchestra Baobab song from 1975".


Songlines

2023 March

By

By

Robin Denselow

2023 March

"Top of the world" - "This is a glorious album that was never supposed to happen. Fabrice Henri, the French hip-hop producer better known as Guts, had planned to record in Cuba. But COVID restrictions made that impossible so he flew the Cuban musicians to Dakar, and invited Senegalese stars to join the sessions, along with his own musicians from Europe ... The result is like a more funky, updated version of the original Buena Vista concept, and it works because the great cast were clearly enjoying themselves. The Cubans include Cucurucho Valdés, nephew of Chucho, whose piano work switches from jazz to salsa and ballads ... There's Havana rapper El Tipo Este, joined by a brass section for the slinky 'Dakar de Noche'. And from Senegal itself there's Assane Mboup, Alpha Dieng and guitarist René Sowatche, who provide a gently intense revival of 'Adduna Jarul Naawo', the Orchestra Baobab song from 1975".