Selolwane

Hugh Masekela - Sixty (1999) {Columbia}  Music

Posted by tiburon at April 12, 2021
Hugh Masekela - Sixty (1999) {Columbia}

Hugh Masekela - Sixty (1999) {Columbia}
EAC 1.1 | FLAC tracks level 8 | Cue+Log+M3U | Full Scans 300dpi | 511MB + 5% Recovery
MP3 CBR 320 Kbps | 162MB + 5% Recovery
Genre: Jazz, World, Afrobeat

Presumably to commemorate his 60th birthday, Hugh Masekela released an album of primarily African works. The album starts with a tribute to Fela, a kindred spirit in African horn playing and a friend of Masekela. After that, it moves on through a number of traditional songs and trips down memory lane. The liner notes give a good deal of background information on each of the songs (always a plus). From time to time, the music seems to slip into something of a contemporary Harry Belafonte-esque sound (which perhaps might not be completely surprising, given the repeated collaborations between Belafonte and Miriam Makeba, coupled with Masekela's marriage to Makeba). Despite (or due to) any such similarities that may arise, this is international pop at its best. Also, the backing vocals of the Family Factory group are exceptional, at the very least.
Laurie Anderson - Strange Angels (1989) {Warner Bros. 925 900-2}

Laurie Anderson - Strange Angels (1989) {Warner Bros. 925 900-2}
XLD rip (secure mode) | FLAC (tracks)+CUE+LOG -> 274 Mb | MP3 @320 -> 110 Mb
Full Artwork @ 300 dpi (jpg) -> 54 Mb | 5% repair rar
© 1989 Warner Bros. | 925 900-2
Rock / Avant-Garde / Experimental / Alternative

Laurie Anderson's third proper studio album, coming over five years after 1984's Mister Heartbreak (1986's Home of the Brave was a film soundtrack), is a near-total departure from anything she had done before or, indeed, anything she did after. The most purely musical of Anderson's albums and the one on which she does the most actual singing (though her trademark deadpan spoken-word passages are still present and accounted for), Strange Angels seems to be Anderson's idea of a straightforward pop album.