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Bedouin Soundclash|Sounding A Mosaic (Bedouin Soundclash)

Sounding A Mosaic (Bedouin Soundclash)

Bedouin Soundclash

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Langue disponible : anglais

To call Bedouin Soundclash a reggae band would be a gross over-simplification. Their spare guitar-bass-drums lineup gives their music a dry texture that recalls the early Cure, while singer Jay Malinowski's raspy wail sounds, at times, like a cross between Bob Marley and Paul Simon. The band's name is probably intended as a tribute to reggae experimentalist Badawi, who released an album of the same name in 1996, but Bedouin Soundclash's music is actually quite straightforward: highlight tracks like the acoustic-based "When the Night Feels My Song" and the one-drop meta-reggae anthem "Music My Rock" deliver meat-and-potatoes reggae grooves with a minimum of fuss and a maximum of hooks; when they title a song "Living in Jungles" you can count on a jittery jungle beat from drummer Pat Pengelly; when they title a song "Immigrant Workforce" you can count on an expression of healthy economic skepticism. And when they cover the Maytones' rocksteady classic "Money Worries," they bring in Vernon Maytone (aka Vern Buckley) himself to sing lead in front of their dry, tensile groove. Sounding a Mosaic was produced by Bad Brains bassist Darryl Jenifer, who gives them plenty of space and muscle but knows enough to leave a good sound alone. Very highly recommended.
© Rick Anderson /TiVo

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Sounding A Mosaic (Bedouin Soundclash)

Bedouin Soundclash

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1
When The Night Feels My Song
00:03:07

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

2
Shelter
00:03:15

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

3
Living In Jungles
00:02:26

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

4
Money Worries
00:03:58

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

5
Gyasi Went Home
00:02:26

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

6
Shadow Of A Man
00:05:02

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

7
Jeb Rand
00:03:02

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

8
Criminal
00:04:21

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

9
Murder On The Midnight Wire
00:03:58

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

10
Music My Rock
00:03:24

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

11
Rude Boy Don't Cry
00:02:53

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

12
Immigrant Workforce
00:03:21

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

13
Nothing To Say
00:03:42

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

14
Money Worries (E-Clair remix)
00:04:08

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

15
Rude Boy Abroad (Lazare Breakdub)
00:03:01

Bedouin Soundclash, interprète

Chronique

To call Bedouin Soundclash a reggae band would be a gross over-simplification. Their spare guitar-bass-drums lineup gives their music a dry texture that recalls the early Cure, while singer Jay Malinowski's raspy wail sounds, at times, like a cross between Bob Marley and Paul Simon. The band's name is probably intended as a tribute to reggae experimentalist Badawi, who released an album of the same name in 1996, but Bedouin Soundclash's music is actually quite straightforward: highlight tracks like the acoustic-based "When the Night Feels My Song" and the one-drop meta-reggae anthem "Music My Rock" deliver meat-and-potatoes reggae grooves with a minimum of fuss and a maximum of hooks; when they title a song "Living in Jungles" you can count on a jittery jungle beat from drummer Pat Pengelly; when they title a song "Immigrant Workforce" you can count on an expression of healthy economic skepticism. And when they cover the Maytones' rocksteady classic "Money Worries," they bring in Vernon Maytone (aka Vern Buckley) himself to sing lead in front of their dry, tensile groove. Sounding a Mosaic was produced by Bad Brains bassist Darryl Jenifer, who gives them plenty of space and muscle but knows enough to leave a good sound alone. Very highly recommended.
© Rick Anderson /TiVo

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