Achados E Perdidos

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (26 ratings)
Achados E Perdidos album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 50:21

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The JOINT!!

rubiconvict

Just buy it, go see the guy. He's amazing, surrounds himself with even more amazing, and you and I should be so lucky as to be a part of the onlookers of that amazing......ness.

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don't hate it

EMUSIC-01D566F9

i don't have a lot to say here...but, it's a bit too pop-y for my taste. there are a few keepers, but just a few!

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Just discovered

Paulexander

I know my review is late, but whateva. this is so much better than downtempo, is funky and grooves my moves.

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uneven, but some great stuff

puzzolente

Track #1 is amazingly catchy, #3 also worthwhile. Much of the rest is OK-to-forgettable international downtempo like you'd expect to find on many mediocre chillout collections.

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uneven, but some great stuff

puzzolente

Track #1 is amazingly catchy, #3 also worthwhile. Much of the rest is OK-to-forgettable international downtempo like you'd expect to find on many mediocre chillout collections.

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Achados E Perdidos

Bermudagirl

What a pity, not available for download in my country (Austria). But I heard "Tudo Bem Malandu" before, it´s a really great funky tune.

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Curumin is the stage name of Brazilian musician Luciano Nakata Albuquerque, who began his musical journey very early in life and had absorbed a wide variety of influences by the time he was a teenager, at which point he formed and played in a series of funk bands while learning about popular Brazilian music in school. His years of listening and gigging finally resulted in this very impressive album, which brings together elements of samba, funk, hip-hop, reggae, and 1970s synthesizer kitsch to often brilliant effect. That’s “often,” not “always,” and there are one or two moments here (such as a pedestrian version of the Stevie Wonder protest song “You Haven’t Done Nothing”) that fall flat. But those are greatly outnumbered by such transcendent achievements as the gutbucket Latin funk and frantic turntablism of “Cade o Mocoto? (Essa Coisa)” and the faintly glitchy and reggae-tinged “Vem Menina,” which features spectacular Portuguese rapping by Lino Crizz. Also worth noting are the dubwise trip-hop of “Acorda, Simpatico” and a strange but cool funk workout titled “Tudo Bem Malandro.” Highly recommended. – Rick Anderson

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