Search - Gonjasufi :: A Sufi & A Killer

A Sufi & A Killer
Gonjasufi
A Sufi & A Killer
Genres: Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (19) - Disc #1

In these recent heady days, hype spreads like digital swine-flu and new artists are subjected to the sea change of an entire career before ever developing their sound. So to exist outside of the spotlight and develop a sou...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Gonjasufi
Title: A Sufi & A Killer
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: Warp Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2010
Re-Release Date: 3/9/2010
Genres: Pop, Rock
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 801061017224

Synopsis

Product Description
In these recent heady days, hype spreads like digital swine-flu and new artists are subjected to the sea change of an entire career before ever developing their sound. So to exist outside of the spotlight and develop a sound at once ready for the masses online, yet rooted in the fierce individualism of artists past may seem somewhat of a quaint notion until you hear Gonjasufi.
At the moment, he stands just outside the spotlight cast on his friends and collaborators Flying Lotus and The Gaslamp Killer, but the sonic brotherhood that exists is implicit rather than as similarities in sound. Drawing from unearthed strains of global psychedelia and merging it with a rejuvenated sense of hip-hop clarity currently distinct to the West Coast, Gonjasufi is more than just a songwriter, MC or performer.
His debut album "A Sufi And A Killer" recalls moments in love as well as trading sinister threats with enemies, sometimes within the same song. Trading in both the murk of lo-fidelity vintage samples and the concentrated crispness of current West Coast production, "A Sufi And A Killer" is both a roadmap to the riches of the distant past and a signpost to the future.
 

CD Reviews

A subtly spectacular, bizarre surprise
Charlie Quaker | Normal, IL. | 03/20/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Debut from San Diego yoga instructor who has performed with Masters Of the Universe,

Killowattz, Gaslamp Killer & Flying Lotus. This is haunting, dreamlike, psychedelic trip-hop

filtered through a mystic & gritty haze. You'll hear bits of deconstructed tropical island ballad pop,

lo-fi garage/noise psych rock, Middle Eastern/Indian ethnic strains, smooth funk, electro-

experimental cabaret minimalism, & more. This global, beat-driven psychedelia is both strangely

demented and surprisingly brilliant. Shades of Portishead, Sun Araw, MF Doom, Tom Waits,

Ariel Pink, Sunset, Gary War.

"
The first great album of the tens
mr. flux | Boston, MA | 04/16/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"So much music recorded in the so-called zeroes or aughts seems to have been about genre bending, juggling and all other manner of genre manipulation. Not that it has never been done before. Discussions are ongoing, and I suppose we will not know for some time how the zeroes changed popular music. Music rating sites like [...] do not give five stars to recent albums. This is either because I am not finding them, they don't appreciate the genius of new music, there is no more great new music anymore, or it takes time to know whether a particular album is worth the accolade. Not that allmusic is the arbiter of music, but the writers or those and other sites like Pitchfork spend time listening, thinking and writing about music. They deserve, and get, at least some attention.



allmusic gave A Sufi and a Killer four stars, but I imagine that rating will be upgraded to five (as it should with the Flaming Lips' Embryonic, just to name one) with time. This is simply an innovative, fresh-sounding piece of music. It's world music and it sounds as fresh now as Manu Chao's Clandestino sounded upon its release. It is Portishead and Tom Waits. There are parts that Quentin Tarrantino would use for something. It is a beautiful and sad and trippy piece of work. But in all of this, given all those influences, the album does not sound derivative. There is a timeless quality here and that is why I believe this album will last. It's been produced by, among others, Flying Lotus. Los Angeles, Flying Lotus' album of last year, was terrific, but it never sounded timeless. It was an exercise in awesome grooves. So was Endtroducing when I bought it upon its release. The former seems to have fallen into obscurity; the latter is a classic.



Is Sufi and a Killer a future classic or a minor infatuation? I don't know. But it's the kind of album that is worth having now because it has all the making of a classic. On top of that, it's a lot of fun."
DOPE!
Nicolas | San Diego, CA | 03/18/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I heard a track from this LP on some Italian radio online and loved it. It was the song "Sheep" and had a great mix of old sixties psychdelia and then some Indian music. All in all the tracks are really sweet and they have mixed up 60's rock, middle eastern scales, funk and whatever else.



Production on the disc was pretty intensive you can tell. Many tracks have that old scratchy record sound, which adds to the texture I think. Gonjasufi is a yogi/rapper from San Diego and he had a bit of help from some great DJs (like Flying Lotus and Gaslamp Killer) for this album.



Definitely a nice addition to the scene and it is an interesting listen that is all over the place - in a good way - think Beck or Gnarls Barkley. You'll love it!"