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Noir et Blanc

Noir et Blanc in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $18.99
Get it at Barnes and Noble
Noir et Blanc

Noir et Blanc in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $18.99
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Size: CD

Get it at Barnes and Noble
Noir et Blanc
is a supremely enjoyable collaboration between Algerian-born (France-residing) composer
Hector Zazou
and Zairean singer
Bony Bikaye
, an early and inspired marriage between Central African music and
post-punk
funk
.
Zazou
, who would go on to flirt with fame at the fringes of
rock
(working with singers like
Bjoerk
and
Susanne Vega
), here assembled a tight little band that included
Fred Frith
Marc Hollander
, all swarmed over by his own
electronics
manipulation and, presumably, a good bit of post-production. The band lays a creamy and seductive ground for
Bikaye
, a singer possessed of a marvelously rich and deep voice with a tinge of sardonic humor. The music is convoluted and irresistibly funky, avoiding the cliches befalling many somewhat similar ventures from around this period (1983); even the drum machine usage works well.
Hollander
's clarinet and bass clarinet work adds a lush element not normally associated with this genre, giving an oddly European exoticism to what is essentially African music. Each song has its attractions, from the relentless drive of the opening
"M'Pasi Ya M'Pamba"
to the heartfelt longing of
"Munipe Wa Kati"
to the fractured mechanics of
"Keba."
Some of
's later work would get excessively
new age-y
; here it's dirty grooves all the way. Any fan of Afro-
should want this fine exemplar of the field. ~ Brian Olewnick
Noir et Blanc
is a supremely enjoyable collaboration between Algerian-born (France-residing) composer
Hector Zazou
and Zairean singer
Bony Bikaye
, an early and inspired marriage between Central African music and
post-punk
funk
.
Zazou
, who would go on to flirt with fame at the fringes of
rock
(working with singers like
Bjoerk
and
Susanne Vega
), here assembled a tight little band that included
Fred Frith
Marc Hollander
, all swarmed over by his own
electronics
manipulation and, presumably, a good bit of post-production. The band lays a creamy and seductive ground for
Bikaye
, a singer possessed of a marvelously rich and deep voice with a tinge of sardonic humor. The music is convoluted and irresistibly funky, avoiding the cliches befalling many somewhat similar ventures from around this period (1983); even the drum machine usage works well.
Hollander
's clarinet and bass clarinet work adds a lush element not normally associated with this genre, giving an oddly European exoticism to what is essentially African music. Each song has its attractions, from the relentless drive of the opening
"M'Pasi Ya M'Pamba"
to the heartfelt longing of
"Munipe Wa Kati"
to the fractured mechanics of
"Keba."
Some of
's later work would get excessively
new age-y
; here it's dirty grooves all the way. Any fan of Afro-
should want this fine exemplar of the field. ~ Brian Olewnick

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