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Flamenco Chill

歌手:Chambao歌曲

发行公司:索尼音乐

歌曲数量:16

发行时间:2002-01-01 00:00:00

Flamenco Chill

专辑简介:

Flamenco Chill is the musical equivalent of a three-in-one Certs breath mint. The two-CD set int更多>

Flamenco Chill is the musical equivalent of a three-in-one Certs breath mint. The two-CD set introduces and provides context for Chambao, the group featured on roughly half the tracks and who also helped produce and compile the other ones. It introduces flamenco chill as a genre, which, by blending flamenco melodic touches and colors (acoustic guitar, female vocals, etc.) with electronica rhythms, basically pits emotional fire against musical ice and sidesteps the virtuosity requirements of traditional flamenco to boot. And it enables Sony Spain to re-market several '90s tracks from flamenco guitarist Vicente Amigo to a new audience, alongside tracks leased from minor labels. That may scan as a spot of cold-blooded music biz trend fabrication and calculation, but Flamenco Chill doesn't turn out that way. For the most part, the music sounds like an organic creation by artists who heard this synthesis in their heads and worked to make it real, initially an escape from classic flamenco limits by people who love it rather than a blatant cash-in attempt. Flamenco guitars with keyboard washes and synth strings set against programmed percussion on Doc K!'s "Media Luna" set the tone. Jose Luis Encinas' "Luna de Fiesta" features guitar and is quite nice in a mellow way that can play unobtrusively in the background without being total wallpaper music. María del Mar Rodríguez's vocals voice sets Chambao apart, but it does sound thin over the loping handclaps and guitar of "Playas de Barbarete." She sounds much better double-tracked, losing the thin, reedy flavor on "No Te Pierdas," after it opens as a haunting, atmospheric throb with a ghostly vocal loop. Vicente Amigo is pure flamenco, fine because it's a different flavor to work into the mix, but while his extended "Querido Metheny" with Paco de Lucía has its virtuoso moments along with handclaps and a lonely trumpet, it's ultimately sorta inconsequential. Much better and far more indicative of the flamenco chill sound i