Ojos de Brujo - Barí (CD)

Barí
$11.98 - $19.98
5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (0 Reviews)

Album Details: Barí

Release Date:09/01/2002
Label:World Village Usa
UPC:713746802424

Pro Reviews: Barí

  • All Music Guide

    Blame our postmodern fascination with sampling, or the hubris of generations who have grown up more familiar with copies than with the originals, but at this point we've pretty near wrung all meaning out of the word fusion. And when it comes to describing the kinds of exciting developments in world music exemplified by Nuevo Flamenco artists Ojos de Brujo, perhaps a new metaphor is necessary. Something more organic, even geological. Yes, that's it: When listening to Bari, the Barcelonabased group's second release, the image that fits is not of hiphop, funk, rap, or rumba newly melded with traditional flamenco music, but of rock layers that an ancient and moving river lays bare. The oldest strata date to the migration from India of the Roma people, called gypsies in Spain, where they mixed with North African Moors. Layered upon their oral culture, their folksongs and sinuous dancing, a bluesy lament about the hard life of the fulag menguthe Arabic phrase for “fugitive peasant" and likel...y origin of the word “flamenco"after Ferdinand and Isabella made Christianity the law of the land. Next, the rural accents of those who hid in the southern hills of Andalusia, and the AfroCaribbean rhythms learned by those who fled to the colonies. Some of these rhythms were carried back to Ojos de Brujo vocalist Marina ‘la Canillas' Abad and drummer Xavi Turull by Cuban musicians they've played with along the way, while others already existed in the elemental flamenco grooves, the rumbas and tanguillos and bulerías, laid down by guitarist Ramón Giménez. On top is a contemporary urban landscape of stray bullets and bill collectors, precisely rendered by Abad's socially conscious staccato rapping.If all of this seems like a bit of a stretch, note the traditional handclapping that punctuates the opening guitar riff, and its relation to the percussively rapped syllables that chatter like water over rocks at the album's close. Listen to the eroded consonants of “Naita", (“Nothing"), to the fossil of a flamenco lyric with which it begins, and how seamlessly it progresses to an outcropping of hiphop near its finale. Consider that the classic songs of gypsy legend 'El Camarón', set to rumba and offered as consolation to modern day fulag mengu in “Ventilaor Rumba 80" invite them to dance to ancient rhythms. Or that today's dangerous streets can necessitate the ancient Moorish melodies and sorrowful mode of “Tiempo de Soleá", while an email from a fetchingly greeneyed boy inspires the invention of the funkfueled “Bulería del Ay". You just can't pull the elements or eras apart. All of this is music is firmly grounded in flamenco, with fusion occurring not just at a superficial level, but deep below its surface, as its oldest and most enduring process. Listeners who are as interested in where flamenco has been as they are in where it is going will love exploring the sonorous depths of Ojos de Brujo's Bari. - Jenny Gage, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Ojos de Brujo

Originally more of a collective than a band, the Barcelonabased flamenco fusion group Ojos de Brujo, which translates to Eyes of the Wizard, came together in the mid'90s when guitarist Ramon Giménez began playing with likeminded experimental musicians like singer Marina "La Canillas" Abad and percussionist Xavi Turull, trying to find out what kind of sound they could c... Read more