[FA Worldmusic] Rachid Taha
Sarah Bardeen
sbardeen at rhapsody.com
Tue Jul 15 20:08:41 ADT 2008
On Dengue Fever - I'm a big fan, but I've noticed that they fare much
better in nightclubs than in open-air venues. I saw them at the
Independent in San Francisco a few months ago and they were fantastic. I
think Nimol -- whom I've always thought was a little ambivalent about
traveling around with these indie rock guys -- was really embracing the
abandon of rock'n'roll.
Now that they're getting beyond mere imitation and doing so many live
dates, I suspect their next release will take a big leap forward.
-----Original Message-----
From: fa-worldmusic-bounces+sbardeen=real.com at folk.org
[mailto:fa-worldmusic-bounces+sbardeen=real.com at folk.org] On Behalf Of
Rob Weisberg
Sent: Tuesday, July 15, 2008 11:58 AM
To: fa-worldmusic at folk.org
Subject: Re: [FA Worldmusic] Rachid Taha
Don't want to get too list-y, but I feel a connection coming on...
I happened to see Dengue Fever + Rachid Taha on a Saturday at Central
Park, followed by Goran Bregovic on a Tuesday eve at Lincoln Center.
The vibe / crowd response / old-fashioned rock and roll energy of the
Rachid Taha and Bregovic sets was somewhat similar. But for Rachid and
band, on a MUCH smaller scale and probably a little less intensity.
Bregovic is a superstar, and his show which was mainly with his brass
band
and singers (not full orchestra) was total pandemonium from start to
finish. A good portion of the attendees were E. and W. European, which
helps. But he also hits folkdance people, world music people, etc. So
Rachid has the same TYPE of impact, just on a smaller scale at least in
NYC. (I wondered if his Paris and Marseille shows, at the heart of his
fan base, are a little more like Bregovic shows - ?)
Whereas Dengue Fever for example, another on the short list of high
energy
world-roots hybridists (drawing on old Khmer rock), who I really like,
who
played a fine set, and who have one absolutely fantastic song (see it
perfectly deployed on the cable show Weeds, Season 2, final episode,
final
music cue), didn't have quite that same connection with the audience.
Kind of a different thing there...
Rob W (WFMU)
> Too many to mention! I'm not starting one of those 'women singers'
lists
> that was run recently !
>
> And sadly Rachid isn't a superstar, much as we might like him to be. I
> always thought he could be a 'breakthrough artist'. Probably doesn't
even
> want to be...too much of a maverick?
>
> David
>
>
>
>> names, please! people at Taha's superstar level in particular...
>>
>>
>> Around the World
>> http://www.spinner.com/category/around-the-world/
>>
>>
>> On Jul 15, 2008, at 11:07 AM, Sasa Music wrote:
>>
>>> In answer to your question, yes, loads!
>>>
>>> David Flower
>>>
>>>> Is there any artist in America or Europe who has covered the scope
of
>>>> his or her culture's music to the extent that Rachid Taha has with
>>>> the
>>>> wide range of sounds from Algeria/North Africa and its diaspora?
>>>>
>>>>
http://www.spinner.com/2008/07/15/rachid-tahas-music-is-a-world-in-itsel
f/
>>>>
>>>> His L.A. show was typically spectacular....
>>>>
>>>> share and enjoy!
>>>>
>>>> Steve
>>>> Around the World
>>>> http://www.spinner.com/category/around-the-world/
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> FA-Worldmusic mailing list
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