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Fool's Gold

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (88 ratings)

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Fool's Gold album cover
01
Surprise Hotel
6:48
02
Nadine
5:50
03
Ha Dvash
5:04
04
The World Is All There Is
4:42
05
Poseidon
6:38
06
Yam Lo Moshech
4:39
07
Night Dancing
4:48
08
Momentary Shelter
4:39
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 43:08

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Write a Review 5 Member Reviews

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Enjoyable Album... Lackluster Live

FatAirRush

I bought this album, prior to seeing Fool's Gold perform at the Hackney Empire in July 2011. It's an enjoyable listen, however seeing them live was a real turn-off. I saw them play after Ghana born, Afrobeat/Highlife maestro, Ebo Taylor who's 75, and they killed the atmosphere with a lacklustre performance. I whole-heartly agree with RHYMESKEEMA; Avoid this faux-ethnicity and head for the source. Fool's Gold are like a bad Hollywood remake of a classic film.

user avatar

Faux-ethnicity

rhymeskeema

It's much better to go to the source for music than to cool kids reinterpreting. I'd first recommend Tony Allen and Africa70 and King Sunny Ade. Then watch the white kids do it.

user avatar

Fool's Gold is a good time!

FieryVixen06

I saw them open for Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros twice and what a treat! They got the crowd going well before the highly anticipated main act. Their album stays true to the energy of their live performance. I put this album on my best of '09 list because it has an infectiously happy sound. Well worth your time and money!

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Genuine Surprise

ashleycwoods

Not a huge world music person, but I like dipping a toe in the more accessible rhythms I find. "Surprise Hotel" was a shock in the best way. I also like the horns and energy of "Night Dancing." Found it on a Pitchfork 2009 list. Thank goodness for music snobs!

user avatar

Album of the Year!

HipB.O.T.

I've heard a lot of records this year, but this one is my favorite -- definitely flying below the radar but, "Wow!" Genuine soweto/rock marriage here that works on so many levels.

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They Say All Music Guide

In a similar spirit to artists like Extra Golden and NOMO, the music of L.A.’s Fool’s Gold is fundamentally rooted in — not merely inspired by — international (and more specifically, African) sounds and styles, even if they essentially emerged within the context of American indie rock (for one thing, three of the band’s members overlap with the more straight-ahead indie outfit Foreign Born.) This self-titled debut finds the group — a 12-strong cohort led by bassist/vocalist Luke Top and lead guitarist Lewis Pesacov, featuring a pair of saxophonists and a full four members devoted to percussion and chant-like auxiliary vocals — delving energetically into eight spicy, polyrhythmic, highly danceable compositions whose emphasis is firmly on groove and riff, as opposed to songs, per se. Top’s curiously resonant, commanding vocals do provide a focal point (he sings primarily in Hebrew, a significant personal distinction for the Israeli-born vocalist, but one which non-Hebrew-speaking listeners will find merely adds another subtle layer to the general ethnic ambiguity at play here), but they are interspersed throughout to give equal weight to the rest of the ensemble, and especially to Pesacov’s deliciously nimble fretwork, which is central to the album’s idiomatic credibility (cementing, in particular, the buoyant opener/lead single/instant standout “Surprise Hotel.”) To some listeners, the stylistic accuracy and pan-ethnic eclecticism of the group’s highly informed cross-cultural homages/borrowings (an Ethiopiques-styled number here, a Tuareg blues-informed one there) may come off as somewhat glib and generic, and indeed, the album has a bit of the faceless feel of, say, a Putomayo: Africa compilation. But that in itself is, all things considered, an impressive feat for a motley crew of Angelenos; the fact that, far from dry mimicry, Fool’s Gold, Rovi – K. Ross Hoffman

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