Aparelhagem

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Aparelhagem album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 55:06

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Again!!!

DubDance

Yet another "We're sorry. This album is unavailable for download in your country (United Kingdom) at this time. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause." I'm almost at the point of leaving emusic because this has occured with +50 % of albums I've looked at on here today( I've been on here for hours).

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Stunning!

DizzyJ

I listen to this record more than anything else I've bought in the last few years. Even my friends who hate things not sung in English grudgingly adore it.

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Year in Electronic 2008

By philip sherburne, eMusic Contributor

Every year, it's the same. November rolls around, and so do the requests for end-of-year lists, which I leave all but unread in my inbox, hoping they'll go away. Panic: What was good this year? Mind: blank. I curse my fitful listening habits and the shoddy acoustics of the apartment in which I lived until a month ago — not to mention its lack of a living room, which left no space to listen to… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Just when you think you’ve heard all of the impossibly fun and infectiously funky music that Brazil can possibly be capable of producing, that country lets loose with another genius. In a perfect reflection of the cut-and-paste cultural and ethnic stew from which he emerged, DJ Dolores (yes, it’s a he) makes music that draws equally from the folk and urban sounds of his native Recife, the rhythms of Africa and Jamaica, and breakbeats and samples from all over the place. With a live and lively horn section, a brilliantly rough-and-ready vocalist named Isaar, and other bits and pieces of local talent picked up along the way, DJ Dolores has created a brilliantly colorful tapestry of beats, tunes, and textures that will make the most sedentary couch potato get up, kick off his shoes, and dance around the room with fruit on his or her head. You could write an essay about almost every track here: the New Orleans-flavored horns and chugging drums on “Salvo!”; the reggae bassline, melodica, jungle breaks, and sampled shreds of French on “Prece” (probably the strongest track on this consistently wonderful album); the lurchingly funky “Azougue” (which is reprised in remix form at the end of the program); the lightly fidgeting breakbeats and cool understated guitar and violin on “Rouen.” But why read (or write) about this album when you could be dancing to it? – Rick Anderson

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