Omar Sosa

Afreecanos

Omar Sosa - Afreecanos

02/12/2008 | Ota Records 

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All Music Guide Review

With every passing year, pianist Omar Sosa continues to define what contemporary world music can be. Each effort is quite different than the previous one, while the bright colors, timbres, and elements of his Cuban-based music are elevated higher and higher. In his restlessness to find further truth and beauty, there's a calm serenity and unabashed confidence in his vision and personal musicianship. For Afreecanos, Sosa uses artists from every portion of the globe except Australia and Canada, though some have lived there, too. They include fellow Cubans Orestes Vilató on timbales and flutist/saxophonist Leandro Saint-Hill; trumpeters Bill Ortiz (U.S.A.) and Stephane Belmondo (France); Africans Mola Sylla, Fanta and Baba Sissoko, and (from Morocco) violinist Mohamed Soulimane -- as well as Brazilian vocalists and the American-based bata player Michael Spiro. As you can imagine, this melting pot of rhythmic, vocal, and instrumental sound blends into a potpourri that makes refreshingly new music within ritual and traditional frameworks. There are many highlights: the heavy staccato-laden worldbeat groove blues of "Ollú," the jazz-oriented horn charts and singsong or harder-edged but lighthearted "D'Son" and "Tres Negroes," the effortless and funky African-derived "Tumborum," the flute-fronted oceanic-cum-Yoruban "Light in the Sky," and the sorrowful, more question than answer-oriented "Why Anga?," for the late conga player Miguel "Angá" Diaz, who played with Sosa up until his untimely passing. You'll hear straight African chants, spirit songs, and a ballad or two, the 21-stringed kora featured on the entirely beautiful "Iyade," and an occasional piano interlude from Sosa. As time goes by, with his music featuring fully developed progress-oriented themes, you notice less of Sosa as an individual voice and more in an image as a team player or village chieftain. In fact, the group singing is more prevalent than his individual playing. Omar Sosa continues to make brilliant music where the natural and spiritual meet the contemporary. He continues to set the bar further up into the stratosphere, and one can only imagine how far he's going to reach. This is a major artist on the international scene who all should be paying close attention to. ~ Michael G. Nastos, All Music Guide

Afreecanos Track Listing

  • Track#
  • Title
  • time
  • lyrics
  • 1
  • Prologo
  • 1:50
  • Sound Clip for Prologo from Afreecanos


  • 2
  • Ollú
  • 4:18
  • Sound Clip for Ollú from Afreecanos


  • 3
  • Nene La Kanou
  • 5:01
  • Sound Clip for Nene La Kanou from Afreecanos


  • 4
  • Yeye Moro
  • 5:59
  • Sound Clip for Yeye Moro from Afreecanos


  • 5
  • Babalada
  • 7:43
  • Sound Clip for Babalada from Afreecanos


  • 7
  • D'Son
  • 5:14
  • Sound Clip for D'Son from Afreecanos


  • 8
  • Tres Negros
  • 4:30
  • Sound Clip for Tres Negros from Afreecanos


  • 9
  • Mon Yalala
  • 4:03
  • Sound Clip for Mon Yalala from Afreecanos


  • 10
  • Tumborum
  • 5:13
  • Sound Clip for Tumborum from Afreecanos


  • 11
  • Why Angá?
  • 6:44
  • Sound Clip for Why Angá? from Afreecanos


  • Afreecanos Notes

    from OTA Records: Afreecanos. Rooted in Africa. Omar Sosas new studio album brings together musicians from Africa, Cuba, Brazil, and France to celebrate the rich heritage of African music in jazz and Latin music. Mr. Sosas approach takes folkloric elements from Africa and the Americas, combines them with his Afro-Cuban roots, and brings them all forward into a contemporary jazz expression. For the first time since his arrangements on Spirit Of The Roots and Prietos, Mr. Sosa uses a horn section, and Afreecanos features a variety of traditional and modern flute sounds. The recording also features kora, ngoni, guitar-sitar, and a variety of folkloric percussion instruments, including bat, timbal, kongoman, mbira, and talking drum.

    Featured on the recording are Cuban drummer Julio Barreto, Mozambican electric bassist Childo Tomas, Senegalese vocalist Mola Sylla, Cuban folkloric master Lzaro Galarraga, Cuban woodwind player Leandro Saint-Hill, French trumpet player Stphane Belmondo, and French multi-instrumentalist Christophe Disco Minck. Also featured are Cuban timbal master Orestes Vilato, Malian percussionist Baba Sissoko, Malian flute player Ali Wague, and Senegalese kora player Ali Boulo Santo, et al.

    Mr. Sosa has taken Afro-Cuban musical forms, like the rumba, and arranged them for African musicians and African instruments releasing these forms from the traditional Afro-Cuban clave and opening them to innovative interpretations combining the fokloric with the contemporary, the ancestral with the urban. Throughout the album we hear folkloric elements infusing a modern jazz idiom, including spirit vocals and percussion from Africa, Cuba, and Brazil. The sound is lush and dream-like.

    Afreecanos is produced by Paris-based drummer Steve Argelles, who also produced Mr. Sosas 2004 GRAMMY-nominated recording, Mulatos. Afreecanos was recorded at Fattoria Musica in Osnabrck, Germany, with additional recording in Paris and San Francisco.

    Credits of Afreecanos

    • Omar Sosa
    • Percussion, Piano, Fender Rhodes, Marimba, Arranger, Vibraphone
    • Mola Sylla
    • ?, Vocals, Calebasse, Kongoma, Bamboo Flute


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