Search - Lo'Jo :: Au Cabaret Sauvage

Au Cabaret Sauvage
Lo'Jo
Au Cabaret Sauvage
Genres: International Music, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #1

Lo'Jo are a band with a penchant for the music of wanderers, be they Gypsies, circus performers, or the Tuareg, the nomads that roam the deserts of northern Niger. On their third CD, Au Cabaret Sauvage, Lo'Jo take these pe...  more »

     
1

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Lo'Jo
Title: Au Cabaret Sauvage
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: World Village USA
Release Date: 9/10/2002
Album Type: Import
Genres: International Music, Pop
Styles: Europe, Continental Europe
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 713746800727, 3394570000018

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Lo'Jo are a band with a penchant for the music of wanderers, be they Gypsies, circus performers, or the Tuareg, the nomads that roam the deserts of northern Niger. On their third CD, Au Cabaret Sauvage, Lo'Jo take these peripatetic styles and skillfully blend them with French chanson, West African harmonies, and the occasional electronic rhythm track. Denis Péan, who sings in a dusty, road-weary growl, shares the vocals with Nadia and Yamina Nid El Mourid, a pair of French Algerian sisters who have a way bending notes in harmony that's absolutely thrilling. The instrumentation includes French café favorites, like the accordion and the violin, which is played with a Gypsy's élan by Richard Bourreau; West African instruments, like the kora and balafon; and Indian instruments, like the sarangi and harmonium. From the title track, with its haunting, slightly sinister circus ambience, to the moaning melodies of "Memoire d'Homme," Lo Jo have created a perfect soundtrack for those who wander the world's less-traveled byways. --Michael Simmons

Similar CDs


Similarly Requested CDs

 

CD Reviews

Gypsy-Arab fusion featuring B-52 sound-alikes, rasta rhythm
Frank Camm | Northern Virginia | 03/22/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"My introduction to the group. Great fun, a renewal of rock that honors the B-52s while swinging out to a gypsy-Arabic fusion with rasta rhythms. If you don't like a song, wait for the next-they're all different. More of a collage than a hybrid of different styles. French boulevardier crossed with North African. But a consistency emerges, recalling the LaFlammes of It's a Beautiful Day. Fluid gypsy-Arab violin, north African percussion, gruff baritone, pop girl chorus, wrapped around tasty songs with lots of add-ons. More pop than Peter Gabriel's north African excursions. Spoken lyrics that offer fairly serious, thoughtful material. In French; in English, this might be hard to take. [45:37]"
Everybody loves a cabaret
Amaranth | Northern California | 06/11/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"As usual,Lo'Jo albums are my impulse purchases.Not that I'd regret them.Strangely,I got this one when anti-Gallic feelings ran high.Should politics be a factor when the music is so good?



Highlights-

1)L'une de siens (track 2)A diversity of styles make this a perfect,spicy mix.

2)A l'arene des audicieux (track 4)Brilliantly rhythmic.It sounds almost like reggae.

3)Cinq causis (track 6)Unusual instrumentation,quite glorious.

4)Tangito-Lo'Jo is always good with the tango.



While this album does not have MANY highlights,it works as a whole.Even when it is put on shuffle."