Tag Archive: World music


TRANSMISSIONSVII_poster70x100_aggiornatoIn 1999, David Byrne wrote an article for the New York Times provocatively entitled I Hate World Music . It isn’t the music itself that the ex-Talking Head hates but the media label that lumps everything which is not English-language pop/rock into the same category.

He wrote that “the use of the term world music is a way of dismissing artists or their music as irrelevant to one’s own life. It’s a way of relegating this “thing” into the realm of something exotic and therefore cute, weird but safe, because exotica is beautiful but irrelevant; they are, by definition, not like us”.

Byrne noted that by virtue of record sales alone some artists escaped such lazy pigeon-holing. No one refers to Ricky Martin or Sigur Ròs as world music artists even though most of their best known songs are sung in Spanish or Icelandic (or Hopelandic!) respectively.

Instead, this genre name is reserved  for the kind of artists who festival curators Jeremy Barnes and Heather Trost (aka A Hawk And A Hacksaw) assembled for a unique concert at Ravenna last night. The performers flown in from Balkan countries are the kind that have most western listeners (myself included) automatically reaching for glib adjectives like ‘authentic’, ‘traditional’ and ‘exotic’. Continue reading

GOAT’S WORLD MUSIC

Goat play Voodoo Funk!

Short post today just to plug an amazing new album from Goat called World Music out on Rocket Recordings.

Who’d have thought that one one of the best freak/psych albums of the year would come from Sweden!  They’re from a village  with the unlikely name of Korpilombolo with no prior history of voodoo funk as far as I’m aware.

I’m intrigued to learn more of their background but at the same time it’s a nice change when an album seems to come out the blue and hits the bulls eye.

This is the trailer with some of the great press quotes they’ve inspired so far.

Related link:

Goat interview  (The Quietus)

YES GLOBAL

An English friend and his wife told me that on a recent  holiday in Italy, they were sitting on the Spanish Steps in Rome where they were approached by a couple of Japanese girls who sought their assistance as they were being harassed by a pair of young Polish men. A global potpourri if ever there was one!

These days national divisions are becoming increasingly blurred and while Poles pestering Japs may represent a non harmonious aspect of this phenomenon, there are other more positive possibilities.

Take for example the case of  The Orchestra di Piazza Vittorio who I saw on Saturday night at the ornate and slightly snooty Teatro Bonci in Cesena. Continue reading