N'Wolof
Orchestre Baobab
Dakar Sound
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DVD Details:
- Starring:
- Director:
- Format: Live
- Rated:
- Studio: Dakar Sound
- Theatrical Release Date: Dec 31, 1969
- DVD Release Date: Nov 10, 1998
- Run Time:
- ASIN: B00000DDCP
- UPC: 740042401426
- Sales Rank: 309858
Tracks:
1: Yama Done Xol
2: Aida Baoury
3: Lat Dior
4: Cheri Takama - Orchestra Baobab, Dieng, N'Diouga
5: N'Diaye
6: Aduna Jarul Naawo - Orchestra Baobab, Dieng, N'Diouga
7: Senegal Sunugal
8: Yaraf
9: Core Couba Fall
10: Lamine Gueye
11: Aida Baoury
Editorial Review from Amazon.com:
These recordings from 1970 and 1971 are revealing. They were born in the early days of Africanisation in Dakar, Senegal, when French still ruled the language and the culture. This music is defiantly African, rooted in the ancient traditions of the Wolof language and the ancient kingdoms of the region, but also modern, urban, and somewhat revolutionary for its time. Led by singer Laye M'Boup, and featuring notables like Thione Seck and Medioune Diallo, the group has a heavily Latin sound featuring jazz- and blues-inspired horn charts, African vocal lines, and--for the time--some of the most outside guitar licks this side of Jimi Hendrix. Recorded in live sessions (without an audience) in the Baobab club in Dakar, the pieces run the gamut from rumba-driven dance tunes to some of the weirdest, underwater-sounding soul psychedelia ever to emerge from Africa. It may have taken these recordings almost three decades to reach a wider audience, but they are destined to be remembered as classics of African's golden age of pop. --ILouis Gibson/I
Amazon Customer Reviews:
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
    Early Senegalese grooves, played live in the old days..., 2001-12-14
These live recordings from 1970-71 capture Orchestre Baobab playing at the very venue in Senegal that they took their name from. The sound quality is slightly rougher than their later studio albums, but the songs are great nonetheless -- these guys were an impressive ensemble! The raggedy vocals, sung in the urban Wolof dialect, may be too shrill for some listeners, but the musical grooves are quite nice. On a couple of tracks, the guitars go wild, soaring into psychedelic heights; mostly, though, this is mellow, beautiful material. I'd recommend their studio work first, but this ain't bad.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
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