| | Wyclef Jean Welcome To Haiti Creole 101 CD - Import Wyclef Jean Discography of CDs
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Our Price: $25.59 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days (Only 1 available)
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2004 solo album from the Fugees frontman celebrates the 200th anniversary of his homeland Haiti's independence. Features guest appearances from Passi, Muzion, & Foxy Brown. 18 tracks. BMG/VIK Recordings.
Canadian edition. Stepping aside from the major-label playing field for a moment, the ever-unpredictable Wyclef Jean indulges in his Caribbean heritage on Welcome to Haiti: Creole 101, an essentially noncommercial album released on the down-low by Sak Pasé Records in late 2004. The full-length effort is a whirlwind musical journey through Caribbean music styles, as written and produced by Wyclef and right-hand man Jerry "Wonder" Duplessis. Sure, Wyclef has always shown an affinity for Caribbean music, but he's always fused it with his other affinities, namely hip-hop and pop/rock. Not so here: this a full-fledged Caribbean album that careens from style to style -- within the course of a single song, more often than not! -- showcasing glints of everything from reggaeton to cumbia without ever succumbing on the confines of a single style. It's really an amazing listen, especially if you're at all attracted to Caribbean music. Rarely if ever does the music feel by-the-numbers, and Wyclef maneuvers through his musical tapestry with astonishing ease, even switching from English language to Creole whenever he so feels the need. In fact, you could argue that this is the most natural-sounding Wyclef album to date since nothing is forced (i.e., no forceful fusions of, say, hip-hop and pop à la Wyclef's notorious pop-rap interpolations). Then again, anyone who favors the hip-hop side of Wyclef -- or, more broadly speaking, his commercial side -- is going to find little to grasp onto here. "President" stands out as the album's obvious crossover attempt, and while it's a really great song that is among Wyclef's best and most heartfelt, it's unrepresentative of the remainder of the album, very little of which could ever find its way onto any commercial radio format in America. That's how freewheeling this album is -- it's so freewheeling that Wyclef's major-label affiliate, J Records, let this one pass by. The audience for an album like this is quite small, no doubt: of Wyclef's fan base, only those who enjoy him at his most creative or most Caribbean should consider this release. There are definitely no "Gone Till November"s here. That said, Welcome to Haiti: Creole 101 is nonetheless an amazing album and one that deserves acclaim. It's all the more testament to Wyclef's wayward genius. ~ Jason Birchmeier Wyclef Jean's musical tribute to his native Haiti is the mix of R&B, soca, hip-hop, and reggae you'd expect from this eclectic artist. Most of the songs are also sung in Creole, a notable exception being the hypnotic "President," with its macabre nursery-rhyme refrain "If I was president, I'd get elected on Friday, assassinated on Saturday, buried on Sunday, back to work on Monday," a neat confluence of Haitian magic and American political realism. The tranquil "Douce," with its sultry backing vocals, is a slow-burner, while the celebratory "Fistibal-Festival" is perhaps the most typically Caribbean of the tracks on offer here. But Jean's political message and his dance-floor aspirations find their smoothest blend on upbeat dance tracks "Fanm Kreyol" and "Haitian Mafia" (which features Foxy Brown), offering irresistible beats and rapid-fire Creole exhortations that bypass the synapses and go straight for the hips.
Mojo (Publisher) (p.97) - 4 stars out of 5 - "[T]his low-key independent release is a strident declaration of his love for his birthplace....[It] alternates celebration with introspection....A provocative treat." Welcome To Haiti Creole 101 Music Wyclef Jean Welcome To Haiti Creole 101 Songs | 1. | Jean Dominique Intro | |
| 2. | 24 e´ Tan Pou Viv | |
| 3. | President  | $0.99 | |
| 4. | Bicentenial | |
| 5. | Generation X | |
| 6. | Party By The Sea | $0.99 | |
| 7. | Haitian Mafia | |
| 8. | Le Ou Marye | |
| 9. | Fistibal | |
| 10. | La Bamba | |
| 11. | Bay Micro'm Volume | |
| 12. | Proud To Be African | |
| 13. | Douce | |
| 14. | Lavi New York | |
| 15. | Fanm Kreyol | |
| 16. | Nou Va Rive | |
| 17. | President Remix  | |
| Welcome To Haiti Creole 101 Music Welcome To Haiti Creole 101 Review
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$12.05 It's arguable that no other artist has so successfully conflated the mutually exclusive worlds of disco and avant-garde music than the late cellist/composer/producer Arthur Russell. In the late '70s, he casually mixed it up with New York City's modern classical elite, as well as in its burgeoning underground dance music scene. In 1979, Russell assembled a crew of seasoned session musicians under the name Dinosaur L, recording the first of his many innovative productions, 24-24 MUSIC. Working under the tight conceptual framework of minimal composers like Steve Reich--the title alludes to subtle changes in the music initiated every 24 bars--the album contains a brilliant interplay of structured rhythms and loose improvisatory jams. On "#5 (Go Bang)," staccato bursts of horns and organ vamps punctuate the thumping 4/4 disco beat--sounding like a curious fusion of downtown no-wave and afro-beat. Among the more odd-ball experiments are the acid-soaked funk guitar and faux-operatic vocals of "In the Corn Belt," and the J.B.'s-in-an-echo-chamber funk of "#1 (You're Gonna Be Clean on Your Bean)." An expansive, boundary-defying work, 24-24 MUSIC is a journey through the wild imagination of one of dance music's true geniuses. Of all the posthumous recordings in Arthur Russell's voluminous legacy, the Dinosaur L recordings from 1981, titled 24-24 Music on the original Sleeping Bag Records imprint, are the most delightful to listen to. While it's true in one way they are not the most musically sophisticated of his many recordings -- and this is not a disclaimer -- in another way they are. Who ever heard of improvisational disco in 1981? The tunes here (at the time they were issued simply with numbered titles, and here are restored to their original names) are a series of preprogrammed beats, which change every 24 bars, hence the title of the album. The band (which included the Ingram Family, James, Timmy, William, and of course Butch, in the rhythm section) had to improvise everything else on top of the beats: from guitar lines, horns, vocals, keyboard vamps, basslines, all of it! The Ingrams were an established act, and had worked with Russell and Will Socolov on the Loose Joints sessions the year before and were used to Russell's wonderfully inventive quirks. What follows here is a wonderful intersection of funk, disco, downtown and big biz funk improv, no wave playfulness, and (sometimes) ...
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