Voz di Sanicolau – Fundo De Marê Palinha (Limited Dance Edition)

In 1976, seven Cabo Verdean musicians going by the name Voz di Sanicolau gathered in a small recording studio in Rotterdam where they laid down an album of fearsome coladeira songs inspired by the music of their home island of São Nicolau.

24,00

Esaurito

Unisciti alla lista d'attesa per ricevere un'email quando questo prodotto sarà disponibile o se si libereranno posti per il corso.

Spedizioni

Spedizioni a Milano città, con pony a 3€
Spedizioni in Italia, in tutta Italia con corriere a 6€ o 7.50€, in base al peso
Spedizione gratuita, sopra i 120€ di acquisto, alla spedizione pensiamo noi!
Spedizioni internazionali, con corriere, in base al paese del destinatario e al peso dell’ordine.
Per maggiori informazioni visita la pagina dedicata.

Resi

Se realizzi acquisti sul sito hai diritto di recesso entro 14 giorni dal momento della consegna della merce.
Per maggiori informazioni visita la pagina dedicata.

The album took only a few days to record, which may explain the unexpected urgency that fires each track. Treble-soaked electric guitar lines snake back and forth through percussion-and-cavaquinho driven rhythms rooted in the sound of the islands established by the previous generation of Cabo Verdean émigrés; subtle keyboards wash through the background, and the vocals, traded between Joana do Rosario and Tô-Zé, alternately push the music forward and soar above it. The resulting album is both deeply felt and fiercely executed, and in its grooves one hears the sound of some of the finest Cabo Verdean musicians of their era locked in complete unity of purpose.

It should have been the beginning of something extraordinary; but the pressures of making ends meet forced the musicians back to their day jobs, and Voz di Sanicolau vanished as quickly as they had appeared, leaving their lone album, Fundo de Marê Palinha, as sole proof of their existence. Forty-four years later the album sounds as fresh as it did the day it was recorded. It is unknown if dutch sound engineer Frans Rolland, who oversaw the recordings, knew he was helping to make history: during these sessions, Joana do Rosario, whose majestic vocals were crucial to the sound of Voz di Sanicolau, became the first Cabo Verdean woman ever to appear on a long playing record.

Uno tiral'altro

iscriviti alla newsletter
iscriviti alla newsletter