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HERE - Access All Areas
REVIEWS Cross-generational down-home steuj syy.'.»'<i;i:a; ':-s - ; Attk Krvi'iU jPP »ff * >» ' Ifel |#* quite like this revivalists-each a musical pioneer and highly respected bandleader in his own right -have come together to pay their mutual respects to a musical heritage that has now become their shared inheritance. It's an embarrassment of riches that is thoroughly Cajun and has 'instant classic'written all over it. Wayne Toups, the eldest of the three, takes centre stage with two series of tunes at the beginning and end of the CD, each track set apart by vocals now grown husky and gruff, with a sense of authenticity and authority that bears a distinct resemblance to the late Johnny Cash. Assuming more of a supportive role here, Steve Riley, the next eldest and an unfailingly innovative The Haifa Brothers Play Traditional Cajun Music Ace (71 mins) Classic doujnhome Cajun recordings The Balfa Brothers were born into a very poor Cajun farming family in southern Louisiana and grew up both speaking and singing in French as a first language. Encouraged to play music both to entertain the family and to earn some extra income, the brothers rose to local prominence due to the purity of their music and the skill of their fiddling. Dewey Balfa, aware they had something special, approached Floyd Soileau, a Louisiana record man who ran Swallow 78 Sonslines musician, performs primarily on guitar and as harmony vocalist. Wilson Savoy, leader of The Pine Leaf Boys, holds up his end admirably as the youngest member of the trio, with harmony vocals, silvery sharp fiddle solos, and a pair of lead vocals. While the song selection here displays a pronounced predilection for the dark side of Cajun songwriting, the overriding mood is emotionally stirring and deeply soulful. Two secret weapons help bring this fruitful collaboration to a state of near-perfection: the ubiquitous acoustic bass, frequently placed up-front in the mix, and the intimate setting of Joel Savoy's analogue-only studio, which appropriately reflects both the warmth that suffuses the musical collaboration at the heart of The Band Courtboullion and the humanity at the heart of Cajun music. RogerHahn Records {a maverick indie label, home to many a swamp-pop hit). Soileau was, initially, reluctant to record the Balfa Brothers as he believed their sound too archaic. Relenting, he cut the album The Balfa Brothers Play Traditional Cajun Music. The response to said album initially amongst locals and then amongst fans of roots music across the US and then Europe - was overwhelmingly positive and in 1967 The Balfa Brothers were booked to play Newport Folk Festival, where they were a sensation. In many ways that magnificent album kick-started the widespread revival of interest in Cajun music. In 1974, the Balfa Brothers returned to Swallow studios to record The Balfa Brothers Play More Traditional Cajun Music (how's that for an imaginative title?). By now the band had toured across the US and internationally, yet their sound remained that of the Louisiana plains. And, again, they delivered a majestic set of recordings. This is beautiful folk music and Ace gathered two very rare singles cut by the band in 1977 and 1980 to round out this effort. A superb introduction to Cajun music at its most intimate. Garth Cartwright Chico: The Definitive Collection 1970-1984 Wrasse Records (2 CDs; 80 mins) The smoothest, suavest protest singer ever to croon a critique? All electric-blue eyes and honeyed voice, even at 68 Chico Buarque remains the debonair renaissance man par excellence, a Brazilian Leonard Cohen without the angst. Back in the 1970s, he transformed the humble protest song into high art: his sidelong criticisms of the country's military overlords were dense with rhythm, harmony and literary flair. Unsurprisingly then, this compilation draws largely on that period, when Buarque recorded a series of landmark albums for Philips. Chief among these was 1971's Construcdo, even if the titletrack's sturm und drang string arrangement isn't for the fainthearted. Less Elmer Bernstein is the hypnotic 'Desalento' from the same record, accenting his warm, confidentialsounding wordplay with flute and cavaquinho, while the keening 'Minha Historia' resonates to the hollow 'thwock' of woodblock. From there, disc one goes on to survey the samba-dandy phrasing oiMeu CaroAmigo's title-track and its bittersweet, Beatlesy theatre piece, 'Mulheres De Atenas! Towering over all, though, is the still-stunning Milton Nascimento duet, 'O Cio Da Terra! A secular prayer in song, it's as elemental as the soil it celebrates, swelling with ecstatic falsetto and scoured by a discordant bass. Disc two inevitably pales in comparison, punctuated as it is with the occasional 80s synth. While the reissue of the original albums would've been much more welcome, as a Buarque overview this pretty much does what it says on the tin. Brendan Griffin C«u Caravana Sereia Bloom Six Degrees (35 mins) Dance-pop direction manages to avoid the cheese H Ceu's first two albums established her as one of Brazil's most important new artists. Both received Grammy nominations, topped all'kinds of charts and breathed new life into Brazilian music. Ceu's success, like her music, has seemed effortless. It's a pattern that will surely continue with new album Caravana Sereia Bloom. Whereas her last release, Vagarosa, was undoubtedly a product of Sao Paulo - urban, immersive. introspective - Caravana Sereia Bloom sees Ceu take to the road and head northwards, replacing samba and bossa nova with brega andguitarrada. Brega :? a much more poppy style (its name originally signified tackiness), while guitarrada is an instrumental form of lambada', both reflect northern Brazil s close relationship with Caribbean music and calypso in particular. It all starts with the tropicalia-esque