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V.A. - Putumayo Presents Mali To Memphis: An African-American Odyssey (1999) [Repost]

Posted By: Speedyclick
V.A. - Putumayo Presents Mali To Memphis: An African-American Odyssey (1999) [Repost]

V.A. - Putumayo Presents Mali To Memphis: An African-American Odyssey (1999)
EAC Rip | FLAC (ape & cue & log) & mp3 @ 320 kbps | tracks: 12 | Front, back covers & CD | 56:58 | ~ 355 Mb & 135 Mb
Label: Putumayo World Music | 5% recovery record | World, folk, blues

In this delightful album putumayo unveils the connection between African and American music by exploring the african roots of the blues. The music collected whether from Mali or Memphis, always maintains a uniquely blues feel to it. Excellent selections from great artists such as John Lee Hooker, Habib Koite, Muddy Waters, Taj Mahal, Rokia Traore and Boubacar Traore, serve to show the similarities between the two musical traditions. Enjoy one of putumayo's gems in lossless.

Mali to Memphis: An African-American Odyssey purports to show the cultural connection of West African music and American blues by example. In this, the compilation is fairly successful. On listening to the opening track, "Mon Amour, Mon Cherie," by Amadou & Mariam, you immediately make a mental connection to the CD's last track, Taj Mahal's "Queen Bee." Both songs are of similar timbre and are constituted of a bright vocal melody accompanied by equally bright guitar harmony and occasional leads. The sounds do seem to represent "parallel musical universes," as this African-American Odyssey purports. It becomes easy to see that there is a kinship, that these sounds must be born of a common ancestor. The Delta blues tracks from John Lee Hooker and Jessie Mae Hemphill seem to evidence the tribal rhythms of the Malian tracks, albeit at a more relaxed tempo. Two other African tracks, from Habib Koité (an excellent album of his traditionally based Afro-pop is available on the Putumayo label) and Rokia Traoré (honey-voiced, she won accolades in an international competition), bear the sounds of the ngoni, a native lute and predecessor of the banjo. This instrument's strident sound, when plucked, does seem to prefigure the picking style on the guitar used by such an American example as Guy Davis (&"You Don't Know My Mind,"). Muddy Waters and Eric Bibb are also included in this informative and entertaining comparative sampling.
Tom Schulte, All Music.
TRACKLIST
01. Amadou and Mariam - Mon Amour, Ma Cherie
02. John Lee Hooker - I'm in the Mood
03. Habib Koite - Sirata
04. Rokia Traore - Sabali
05. Guy Davis - You Don't Know My Mind
06. Boubacar Traore - Kar Kar Madison
07. Eric Bibb - Don't Ever Let Nobody Drag Your Spirit Down
08. Lobi Traore - Dounouya
09. Muddy Waters - My Home is in the Delta
10. Jessie Mae Hemphill - Standing in My Doorway Crying
11. Baba Djan - Sabari
12. Taj Mahal - Queen Bee

EAC extraction logfile from 17. June 2007, 17:26 for CD
Putumayo - Mali to Mepmphis / MALI TO MEMPHIS

Used drive : PLEXTOR DVDR PX-750A Adapter: 2 ID: 1
Read mode : Secure with NO C2, accurate stream, disable cache
Read offset correction : 102
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No

Used output format : Monkey's Audio Lossless Encoder v3.99 DLL
Normal Lossless Compression

Other options :
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000


Range status and errors
Selected range
Filename C:\Putumayo - Mali to Mepmphis - MALI TO MEMPHIS.ape

Peak level 100.0 %
Range quality 100.0 %
CRC A67D7099
Copy OK

No errors occured

End of status report

Credits to the original uploader