Joined : July 15, 2006
feet dont' fail me now!
nice electric piano, groovin' horns, pure funk all the way.
excellent production quality, balanced tracks, good compositions.
piano is king in 'spring waltz'
also, in line with one other reviewer, i question the value of the political lyrics on 'latin cover' as they detract from the real point here - and that's groovin' funk
but still...
definitely a recommended album for purveyors of groove & funk music.
very smooth french trip-hop
vocals blend well with the rhythms
reggae influence definitely evident in this one
down-tempo, veeery chill & jazzy
tracks with vocals adds a different dimension over 'indeledebile' & because of this i like this one much better.
the instruments are smooth & consistent.
this one is definitely one of my favorites
very interesting & original, almost experimental.
mellow, smooth beats.
definitely worth having in a trip-hop collection just based on the originality
each track is very smooth & consistent... the track evolution tends to be slow, sometimes a bit too slow. otherwise, very nice background chill music
each time i listen to this i can't believe this is a free album.
the musicians are capable, competent & tight. the music is intense. each track is well made with great energy. the hybrid of break-beat electronic with fusion jazz is superb.
excellent production quality is just icing on the cake.
highly recommended
very listenable, guitar-rhythm based indie-pop, some piano
female vocalist, smooth & mostly controlled
personally, not my style of music, but well made album
most of the tracks are a mish-mash of meandering random notes played on the instruments, always sounding as if the musicians may be getting ready to do something but they never quite do. one track has what sounds like scat-vocals, but the music is grating & undisciplined. overall it sounds like a very amateurish, self-indulgent jam session where each musician is overwhelmed by the sounds made by their own instrument.
don't waste your time with this one.
if you're looking for jazz, i'd suggest "revolution void"