Spirit Of The Sun

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (49 ratings)
Spirit Of The Sun album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 61:17

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Fantastic

texxeen

this album is timeless, a musical form of japanese advancement. Thievery is the kitsch equivalent to this. KJM, avant garde.

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good stuff

MonteCristo

Not sure what roundHeel's talking about, as there isn't anything particularly 80's about this album. Good stuff that runs squarely in the vein of St. Germaine and the Cinematic Orchestra, if not quite as inspired as the work of those two groups.

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turgid

roundheel

If your musical tastes run to Thievery Corporation, Nuspirit Helsinki, A Forest Mighy Black like mine does, then this is possibly the worst, turgid, Eighties style bollocks you'll have the misfortune to hear. I can't find one redeeming feature in this over-long group musical masturbation. It is rubbish.

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Where is track 9?

jromy

Great album but unfortunately they are missing track 9 which is "substream" and it's one of my favorites.

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They Say All Music Guide

Taking their moniker from a Gilles Peterson quote, brothers Yoshihiro and Shuya Okino first caught the ear of the downtempo glitterati through a series of releases for Compost which successfully blended ’70s fusion with broken beats and bossa cool. Their debut album continues from where these singles left off, with shimmering keywork playing amongst fatback bass and a set of talented vocalists. Despite the occasional falter on to the wrong side of the faux-jazz tracks — Victor Davies sounding more Alexander O’Neil than nu soul sensation with the excruciating lyrics of “Deep in Your Mind,” while the brass of “Between the Lights” elegantly captures the spirit of thankfully long-lost ’80s jazz romantic Kenny G. — on the whole this is a well-rounded first full-length outing. Vanessa Freeman proves a fantastic talent, her vocal plunged into a sensuous mix of Rhodes in “The Brightness of These Days,” while the brothers’ broken beat instrumentals swirl convincingly behind complex arrangements and softly spoken keys. A highlight comes in Guida de Palma’s delicious bossa shuffler “Shine.” – Kingsley Marshall

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