Home
Aux Armes et C¿¿tera

Aux Armes et C¿¿tera in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $20.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
This is one messed up set. Dig the fact that this is
Serge Gainsbourg
in dread beat and booze.
Aux Armes et Caetera
is literally
Gainsbourg
on the
rocksteady
tip with
Sly
and
Robbie
,
Flabba Holt
Michael "Mao" Chung
Ansel Collins
I-Threes
Rita Marley
Marcia Griffiths
, and
Judy Mowatt
Sticky Thompson
Leroy "Horsemouth" Wallace
, and a bunch of French folks playing puff-the-ganja and help the white man in Kingston.
knew what he wanted -- a
Lee Perry
-styled dubber and dread outing -- and he knew the cats to hire to get it. It contains 15 cuts; some, such as
"Javanise,"
are remakes, while others, (
"Des Laids, Des Laids"
) were written for the session. The Jamaican studio musicians are solid, rocking it down the pipe dark, smoky, and deadly in their grooves. While
Serge
would seemingly be at a creative impasse, having been one of the whitest men ever to record a side, his tunes work here because he's allowed them to be completely transformed by the Rastas, and his vocals work because they are chanted rather than sung. This is weird, dangerous, and campy music, but it works like a charm. In its day this album was reviled: now it's the work of a visionary. Go figure, but if you dig
, this is for you. ~ Thom Jurek
Serge Gainsbourg
in dread beat and booze.
Aux Armes et Caetera
is literally
Gainsbourg
on the
rocksteady
tip with
Sly
and
Robbie
,
Flabba Holt
Michael "Mao" Chung
Ansel Collins
I-Threes
Rita Marley
Marcia Griffiths
, and
Judy Mowatt
Sticky Thompson
Leroy "Horsemouth" Wallace
, and a bunch of French folks playing puff-the-ganja and help the white man in Kingston.
knew what he wanted -- a
Lee Perry
-styled dubber and dread outing -- and he knew the cats to hire to get it. It contains 15 cuts; some, such as
"Javanise,"
are remakes, while others, (
"Des Laids, Des Laids"
) were written for the session. The Jamaican studio musicians are solid, rocking it down the pipe dark, smoky, and deadly in their grooves. While
Serge
would seemingly be at a creative impasse, having been one of the whitest men ever to record a side, his tunes work here because he's allowed them to be completely transformed by the Rastas, and his vocals work because they are chanted rather than sung. This is weird, dangerous, and campy music, but it works like a charm. In its day this album was reviled: now it's the work of a visionary. Go figure, but if you dig
, this is for you. ~ Thom Jurek