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"My other passion ~ MUSIC (2) www.gotanproject.com" by jenniferchin

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"My other passion ~ MUSIC (2) www.gotanproject.com" by jenniferchin
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jenniferchin   
Travel travel .. always travel :-)) Change is indeed GOOD !


Real Name: Lara Cosmic Girl
Lives In: Kuala Lumpur, MY
Member Since: Jul 10, 2001
VT Rank: 598

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jenniferchin's Albums
Title [Click to view]Travel YearPictures
My other passion ~ MUSIC (1)- 
My other passion ~ MUSIC (2) www.gotanproject.com- 
My other passion ~ MUSIC (3) Bebel Gilberto- 1
My other passion ~ MUSIC (4) Jobim- 2
MY DREAMS- 

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My other passion ~ MUSIC (2) www.gotanproject.com

by jenniferchin - last update: Sep 1, 2006

Beginnings

Some reasons why I am intrigued by South America :

1) Tintin comics I read when I was young was largely responsible for my current fascination with South America.
2) My dad's massive vinyl records put me in the right direction ~ I remember listening so much to Anton Jobim then (and now).
3) My mum bought the entire set of Encyclopedia Britannica when she came back from England in the 60s. I spent alot of time reading and exploring it in my childhood.
4) Short wave radio ~ I took over my dad's short wave radio and fell under its spell. I listened to news, music, talk shows ... and everything from everywhere around the world.


LUNATICO


After the global smash that was La Revancha del Tango, issued in 2001, expectations for Gotan Project's Philippe Cohen Solal, Christoph H. Muller, and Eduardo Makaroff were high. After all, they created a new kind of electronic fusion in taking the tango, street, and folk music forms from Latin America (played by studio musicians) and melding them with dub, downtempo, other more subtle forms of electronica. On Lunatico (named for tango master Carlos Gardel's racehorse), the band took a step back into the music that inspired them in the first place. They engaged a full tango quartet, with returning vocalist Cristina Villalonga, pianist and musical director Gustavo Beytelmann, and a small host of others (including desert moodscape rockers Calexico on Amor Porteño), a rap performed by Xoxmo, and a spoken word performance by Jimi Santos. The album was recorded alternately in Paris and Buenos Aires. Musically, Lunatico is adventurous, it engages the tango directly, both musically and in spirit. It mixes beats to be sure, but it's so much more musical than its predecessor by allowing strings, Nini Flores' bandoneon, and the standup bass of Patrice Caratini to hold sway over the top of most tunes. Check the rap tune here Mi Confesión, with Santos gliding over a swath of strings and a pulsing bandoneon. The vanguard tango of the title track, performed in 3/4 time, creates a dance rhythm that slips and swirls over sampled voices and the sound of Gardel's horse galloping. A breakbeat drum kit is layered in the choruses, and the voice of the racemaster. Then there's the nocturnal Notas, with its loops, and over the top of a subtle layer of acoustic guitar, a narrator is speaking of the direct passion of the tango itself. Flores' bandoneon carves out a melody only to be joined by a gentle yet edgy bath of strings. Amor Porteño, (with Villalonga and Calexico) is a strange and anxious way to open a recording. The electric guitars, piano, and spare, hypnotic drum kit begin to turn darkly as Villalonga sings her tale of passion and torment. Criminal is a compelling track; not because it is accessible, but because it isn't. What begins as a traditional milonga is quickly turned inside out over the course of its nearly seven minutes. It's paranoid and aesthetically moving, dramatic and seductive, as well as disorienting. Acoustic instruments begin an uptempo tango only to be driven underneath by an electric bass, samples of nearly imperceptible spoken voices, and an electronic pulse that plays a mid-tempo disco vamp. As bandoneon and strings climb atop one another, the drama in the track becomes almost unbearable, aching for release. When Beytelmann's piano reasserts the melody, both strings and synthetic elements reflect a journey which has moved away from its theme into absence, though the theme remains. Paris, Texas (named after the Wim Wenders film, one is to presume), reflects a journey across the desert into the el corazon sangrante of the jungle. Percussion by Facundo Guevara, on deep-tuned hand drums, hypnotize as acoustic guitar meanders through the skeletal melody and maracas and bandoneon decorate the sparse soundscape that seems to get added to with every chorus, yet remains nearly devoid of movement. Piano enters, then disappears, only to return to eventually take the cut out alone.

Lunatico is a brave and exotic experiment.


It breaks ground even as it re-seals the old-world tango in time and space. What remains, however, is something unspeakable, some whisper of what the past offers the future and how the future tentatively embraces it. It is a poetic, moving, and disorienting recording that comes from the shadowy worlds of history to into the cloudy pre-dawn with only memories and ideas wrapped in each others clothes. Messrs. Cohen Solal, Makaroff, and Muller are to be commended for their musical bravery; it would have been so easy to repeat the formula; instead they've ventured into unknown territory.

Review by Thom Jurek @ http://www.allmusic.com


LA REVANCHA DEL TANGO


iTango was, arguably, the first Latin American dance form to make an impression on the European public, arriving as it did in Paris from Buenos Aires at the start of the 20th Century and sparking a craze for the dance that has never died. Yet across the last century the popularity of tango as a musical form has waxed and waned ? Rudolph Valentino briefly turned it into an international phenomenon, Astor Piazolla transformed tango into an art music comparable to jazz or contemporary classical ? yet it has taken the Parisian outfit Gotan Project to shift tango out of the dancehalls and into Western Europe's clubs and cafes.

Gotan Project ? Gotan being a play upon "tango" ? consists of a core nucleus of three French musicians: Phillippe Cohen Solal, Eduardo Makaroff and Christoph H. Muller. They are joined by several exceptional Argentinian musicians: vocalist Cristina Vilallonga, pianist Gustavo Beytelmann and bandoneon (the tango accordion) player Nini Flores. Their album La Revancha Del Tango (XL) was released in 2001 and quickly became a favourite with discerning DJs and listeners across Europe and Latin America.

What makes Gotan Project's take on tango so attractive? It wasn?t simply that they brought a fresh approach and wit to tango. What Gotan pioneered was a way to build bridges between tango and Jamaican dub music. Dub music has arguably been the most radical music form of the last quarter century ? spawning everything from hip-hop to ambient drift ? and Gotan Project realised by employing dub's ability to distort and colour sound they could reshape tango while retaining its weary, soulful beauty.

Initially they released three ten-inch singles on their own Ya Basta label. Almost immediately the likes of Radio 1 DJ Giles Peterson were championing the band and they became the hottest flavour in France. A deal with XL followed and the La Revancha Del Tango album was immediately recognised as a contemporary classic.

'The thing we wanted for the album is to make something with one sound, one mood,' says Phillipe. 'And I think that the tango music is quite melancholic. We wanted a very raw sound for the drums, something very organic. We wanted to make a short album with just essential tracks.'

Garth Cartwright 2002
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/world/awards2003/profile_projectnewcomer.shtml


jenniferchin's Albums
Title [Click to view]Travel YearPictures
My other passion ~ MUSIC (1)- 
My other passion ~ MUSIC (2) www.gotanproject.com- 
My other passion ~ MUSIC (3) Bebel Gilberto- 1
My other passion ~ MUSIC (4) Jobim- 2
MY DREAMS- 

Comments for jenniferchin about World
city_guy Wed Aug 20, 2008 10:30 UTC
 Wow, it's been soooo long! How goes? See you've been around alot, best wishes and let me know when the next meet up is :) I'm on Facebook mostly.
chibouqui Mon Aug 18, 2008 15:18 UTC
 Hello, how you doing back in malaysia...
kenyneo Fri Aug 15, 2008 15:37 UTC
 Thanks Jen..hope you have many good holidays ahead ..apa jadi to KL Vters all ?
Geisha_Girl Fri Aug 15, 2008 08:07 UTC
 Thanks Gorgeous! ;-) (Now sit back and relax awhile!!) Will be thinking of you...
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