From Senegal to Senatobia

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (31 ratings)
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Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 50:02

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easy on the ears?

utsusemia

The AllMusicGuide review is weird, to say the least. This is some of the most beautiful, hypnotic, genuine music I've downloaded for a while, and plenty of it is "easy on the ears." Try the title track and both "Shimmy She Wobble"s. And, in general, open your mind (and maybe listen to some other West African music). What strikes me most about this collaboration is how well these two musical traditions, separated by a few hundred years, mesh together.

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Mississippi Meets Africa

TabascoKid

I'm a big fan of Otha Turner and the fife and drum style of music. My suggestion for first time listeners is to start with Otha's other recordings. The introduction of African musicians and instrumentation on this set does little but distract. The experiment was a good idea, but it just doesn't work very well here.

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Unique

Snitter

A novel idea, to throw together deep south blues and traditional musicians straight out of Africa. While occasionally repetitive, I enjoy hearing the two groups almost, but never quite fit. It's a unique sound and it's unfortunate we'll never hear more from this rough edged diamond.

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They Say All Media Guide

Mississippi fife legend Turner is joined on this outing by a loose union of players billed as the Afrosippi All Stars. This makeshift band is comprised of members of Turner’s family, visiting Senegalese musicians, a university percussion student/organizer, and slide guitarist/producer/North Mississippi All Star Luther Dickinson. Their sympathetic accompaniment on African percussion, kora, and bottleneck guitar give “Shimmy She Wobble,” “Station Blues,” and Bounce Ball — reprised from his recording debut, Everybody Hollerin’ Goat — a depth lacking on his earlier versions. Traditional African drums exchange rhythms with marching-band snares and bass drums. Staccato kora melodies complement whining slide guitar riffs. And Turner’s shrill, archaic fife floats freely over it all. The title track is the album’s most distinctly African number, and probably the only track here easy on the listener’s ears. The closing “Sunu” is five minutes of nothing but drums. This is hardly good-time music for casual blues listeners or weekend world music fans, but it’s important music all the same, bridging, as it does, great distances between continents and traditions. – Brian Beatty

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