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| Compartir en: [Ofrecido]Brazilian Girls - Talk To La Bomb (2006) Artista: Brazilian Girls Album: Talk To La Bomb Genero: Electronic/Downtempo CDs: 1 Fecha de Salida: 12.09.2006 Bitrate: VBR Tamaño de Archivo: 80,23 MB Metodo de Descarga: EMU Disponibilidad: Buena Link: >>>>Descargar<<<< Temas:
01. Jique
02. All About Us
03. Last Call
04. Never Met A German
05. Sweatshop
06. Le Territoire
07. Rules Of The Game
08. Talk To The Bomb
09. Nicotine
10. Tourist Trap
11. Sexy Asshole
12. Problem Código: Building upon tremendous critical acclaim and consistently sold-out performances, Brazilian Girls return with the eagerly anticipated Talk To La Bomb.
Late last fall, the band entered Jimi Hendrix’s famed Electric Lady Studios in New York City with producer Mark Plati (David Bowie, The Cure, Dee Lite). Ric Ocasek of The Cars produced the song “Last Call.” The band was inspired by their surroundings and quickly began composing material. With the resulting 12 new tracks, they push their innovative fusion of electro, dub, pop, punk and dance music to more elaborate and edgy arrangements.
Building and expanding upon their signature polyglot sound, front-woman Sabina Sciubba alternates between five different languages on the album—English, German, French, Italian, and Spanish—often delivering this melting pot of languages in one sentence. In keeping with the band’s combination of glamour and humor, Sciubba declares, “The future of this planet as we know it, the human and animal kingdom, and the plants, depends solely on this record. You’re welcome.”
Talk To La Bomb is co-produced by the band and Plati and Ocasek. It was mixed by Tchad Blake and Rich Costey. Brazilian Girls are joined on the album by Clark Gayton (trombone, baritone, saxophone), Peck Almond (woodwinds), Ric Ocasek (guitar), Jorge Continentino (flutes, saxophone), James Zollar (flugelhorn, trumpet) and Mauro Refosco (percussion).
Their eponymous debut earned tremendous critical acclaim. The New York Times described the band as “catchy, musically ambitious and proudly theatrical…irresistible,” Entertainment Weekly praised the album as “...unceasingly irresistible,” while the Associated Press called it one of the “top 10 albums of 2005.” Rolling Stone wrote of the band “...so finessed that they leave their scent on every musical landscape they visit…” and The Miami Herald said “...the best debut in a decade, since Missy Elliott, PJ Harvey, Massive Attack and Sleater-Kinney first blew people’s minds.”
Brazilian Girls are Sabina Sciubba (vocals), Didi Gutman (keyboards), Jesse Murphy (bass) and Aaron Johnston (drums). Based in New York City, yet comprised of four globetrotting members (none of whom are Brazilian and only one of whom is female). The band boasts an equally strong visual image, led by front-woman Sciubba’s innovative sense of style.
It's not a bright and sunny day in the land of Brazilian Girls anymore. That's the message one might take from "Jique," the opening track of this, their second album. In concert, they've performed "Jique" more playfully, but on Talk to La Bomb, a snarling bass-line and juggernaut drum riff drive this piece of post-industrial squall as singer Sabina Sciubba maintains her sophisticated cool against the electronic storm surge. There are no more cute songs with choruses that go "Pussy pussy pussy marijuana" like those that appeared on their first blast of joyful noise. This is a darker album full of Babel language, post-war rage, and techno-hysteria. "I always have an orgasm when the tanks are rolling, crashing through the borders," Sciubba declares on "Never Met a German." Brazilian Girls maintain the same kinetic thrust and hook-laden melodies as before, but they've turned up the rhythmic aggression and electronic squelch to 11. Attitudes that were bemused in "Lazy Lover" are now pissed off in "Sexy Asshole." Even when they start off sultry, like in "Rules of the Game," it turns into sardonic, synth-fuzzed anger. There is a stridency to some of the tracks, including the title piece, which starts out echoing Miles Davis's "Bitches Brew" before launching into a militaristic rhythm and sloganeering chorus. Only "Nicotine" has that seductive, late-night rendezvous mood of their first album, and even that has a bit of the Residents' zombie groove happening. On Talk to La Bomb, Brazilian Girls move from seducers to provocateurs. --John Diliberto
Banda en la linea de: M.I.A., LCD Soundsystem, Thievery Corporation, Lupin, The Controls, Beck, Zero 7, Duquende, United States Of Electronica, Esthero, The Dining Rooms, Phoenix, etc.. Brazilian Girls
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| Graciasssssssssssssss | -
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| Luis Tedesco | -
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| GRACIASSSSSSSSSSSS veremos que onda! | -
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Nuevo
| Gracias.
El año pasado descubrí a este gente y no puedo dejar de escucharlos, veremos este laburo nuevo qué nos depara. | Temas Similares -
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