Queens and Kings

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Album Information
EXPLICIT

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 48:38

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Uplifting and Ecstatic

Moogdude

A collaboration of talent that mixes the vibrance and sheer joy of european festive gypsy music, that crosses all borders; Jazz, Reggae, Flamenco... See these guy's live, it's an incredible show...or is it just one big party?.. I couldn't tell but it was one hell of an experience I'll treasure.

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They just get better and better

sammy4soul

This is my favorite Fanfare Ciocarlia album of my favorite Roma brass band! They constantly expand their horizon and the collaboration with Kaloome brings in the Flamenco flavor while they also pay hommage to the respective queen and king of gypsy music, Esma Redzepova and Saban Bajramovic (R.I.P.). This is as good as gypsy brass music gets!

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Total Ripper!

virginmutha

I've been bumpin to Que Dolor on the subway all week long, the Ciocarlia collective have crafted an excellent follow up to the last album featuring some of the finest roma talent recording today. Play it loud and get your drink on.

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eMusic Features

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Gas, Grass Or Balkan Brass

By Richard Gehr, eMusic Contributor

The best dancers in the house when the Boban i Marko Markovic Orkestar played Lincoln Center's Midsummer Night Swing series in Manhattan this summer were a handsome couple, probably in their 60s, who whirled and dipped with the intuitive ease of longtime lovers immersed in their favorite music. I stood nearby and imagined them reveling in the sound of their Serbian homeland, lost in an ecstatic sea of nostalgia as they danced away the decades… more »

They Say All Music Guide

On their most ambitious outing yet, the band find a common Balkan Gypsy language, bringing in a host of guests from around the Balkan Gypsy diaspora, mostly singers, but also musicians. There are some big names here, such as the Queen of the Gypsies, Esma Redzepova, whose trademark wail is very much in evidence on “Nakelavishe,” and veterans like Lilijana Butler and Saban Bajramovic. But there’s also rising new talent, such as Jony Iliev, Mitsou, and Kal, who keep the energy level high. In forging a ground everyone can understand, the music’s relatively basic, but the brass blares beautifully, the drum adds wonderful, perfect accents, and the clarinet can spiral to the stratosphere at times. It’s all blood-pumping stuff, a pleasure to hear, and the singers all give ecstatic performances. The biggest surprise, though, is the title cut, a version of “Born to Be Wild” that’s all but unrecognizable except for the chorus. As border crossings go, this is a big one, every second a joyful, loving adventure. – Chris Nickson

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