Magnification

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Magnification album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 53:48

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A "best of" Magnifico

sammy4soul

This is the first worldwide release of Slovenia's super-star Magnifico and as such a compilation of his best songs of the last 10 years. Songs from his his great 2007 album "Grande Finale" feature prominently here, such as iThink, Emily, and the sarcastically nostalgic "The land of champions". His biggest hit "Ubicu Te" is also included and the only brand new songs are tracks 1 and 15. However, this is worth a download for Magnifico newbies, who can appreciate an eccentric Ex-Yugo who spiritedly mixes Balkan brass, Pop, Rock and Country music, and delves in outrageous lyrics with an over-exaggerated Eastern European English accent and also sings in his native Slovenian and Serbo-Kroatian. This album just debuted at no. 3 at the European World Music charts; go Magnifico!

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They Say All Music Guide

Slovenian star Magnifico (not one to hide his light under a bushel) makes music that is indisputably Balkan — there’s plenty of brass — but mixed up with hip-hop, disco, and even on “Pismu Komo” a touch of country; weirdly, the pedal steel guitar works very well with it all (as it does on the greasy, dubby “Amore”). Because it’s such a whirled-together mélange, both musically and linguistically, it has the feeling of a guilty pleasure, and he can switch from dance music to a more traditional sound in the middle of a song. “Did You” alters moods several times, for instance. It’s disorienting at first but soon feel strangely natural. The musical magpie syndrome gives it a feel that runs beyond borders, and can be quite epic, as on “Ljuba,” where an orchestra enters, accompanied by spaghetti Western guitar. Ultimately, it’s all modern pop with cultures put in a blender. It’s smart, sly, and decidedly catchy. “The Land of Champions” takes “House of the Rising Sun” to a place few had ever previously imagined, and it works wonderfully well, while the closer, “Modern,” quotes from “Spanish Flea” quite cheekily. Thoroughly enjoyable. – Chris Nickson

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