| | Wyclef Jean Carnival II: Memoirs Of An Immigrant CD Wyclef Jean Discography of CDs
(9 Customer Reviews)
Personnel: Wyclef Jean (guitar). Additional personnel: Aadesh Shrivastava, Horacio Jiménez (vocals); David Brozer (guitar); Andy Grassi (guitars); Louis Farrakhan (violin); Rubin Kodheli (cello); Mike "Nyte" DeSalvo, Dave Clauss (horns); Arden Altino, Sedeck "All Hands On Deck" Jean, J. Thomas (keyboards); Jerry Duplessis (bass guitar); Marivaldo, Lamont "Logic" Coleman, Joe Tomino (percussion); LaTavia Parker, Anthony Leggett, Devon Golder (background vocals); Melissa Jiminez, Niia, Daniela Mercury, Djakout Mizik, Akon, Lil Wayne, Machel Montano, Mary J. Blige, Norah Jones, Paul Simon, Serj Tankian, Shakira, Sizzla, T.I., will.i.am, Black Alex, Chamillionaire. In the decade since his post-Fugees solo debut Wyclef Jean has become as well known as an activist as a pop artist. CARNIVAL II: MEMOIRS OF AN IMMIGRANT reflects Jean's political commitment in its detailing of immigrant experience, but not without also turning in an album of bright, eclectic, and continually inventive music. Reggae, Latin, and South Asian sounds can be heard amid the hip-hop and R&B, creating a multicultural pastiche that perfectly suits Jean's lyrical message. CARNIVAL II is star-studded affair, with everyone from Paul Simon to Mary J. Blige to Nora Jones to the Minister Louis Farrakhan making guest appearances. There's plenty of the smooth rapping and pop smarts that Jean fans expect, but the arrangements and production for the disc set it a cut above. "Riot," featuring dancehall king Sizzla and System of a Down's Serj Tanikan, is a highlight, as is "Hollywood Meets Bollywood," a track that features the Southern MC Chamillionaire. Ten years after his 1997 solo debut, The Carnival, former Fugee, "Hips Don't Lie" producer, and globetrotting activist Wyclef Jean presents the sequel, subtitled Memoirs of an Immigrant and meaning it. There's a star-studded guest list, but Carnival, Vol. 2 is composed from Wyclef's personal experience and filled with his commentary on 2007's immigration crisis. He even works his own green-card story into "Selena," a lighthearted love letter to the Mexican American diva that shamelessly quotes her "Bidi Bidi Bum Bum" over a light reggae beat before it morphs into a screaming loud carnival number. Many of the songs here shift genres with fascinating ease, like when the epic "Touch Your Button Carnival Jam" goes from a Black Eyed Peas-styled pop number to an intense soca workout. Then there's "Riot," a duet featuring System of a Down's Serj Tankian and dancehall dread Sizzla that utilizes a tense rock rhythm before exiting on a wet reggae beat. If it all sounds overwhelming, it's held together by Wyclef's well-crafted arrangements, and if Serj and Sizzla sound like an odd combination, try Sizzla and Minister Louis Farrakhan on violin for "Welcome to the East." Chamillionaire gets a Bollywood orchestra as a backing band, T.I.'s track is almost a hippie number, and Paul Simon croons over an R&B beat during "Fast Car," not the Tracy Chapman one but a song just as poignant. While this skillful mixing and matching of the A-list makes quite a first impression, it's the songwriting that sticks as Wyclef has upped his game. The deadbeat dad story "What About the Baby" is a convincing exchange between Wyclef and Mary J. Blige because of all the honesty written into it, and lines like "I got love for Miami all day/But if my Cubans get to stay/Why you turn my Haitians away?" add edge and weight to an album that's otherwise slick and immaculately polished. To make sure the immigration issue is always nearby, Wyclef quietly and at regular intervals references "shelter," "helping hands," and other words of refuge and protection. It's done so masterfully that it makes the couple "I'm gonna grab my guitar!" moments worth ignoring, which are the only times Wyclef's ego seems to be muscling into the mix. Otherwise, Carnival, Vol. 2 strives to give the immigration problem a face, turning those thousands of marchers seen on the news iRolling Stone (p.130) - 3.5 stars out of 4 -- "It's a breathtaking, ambitious ride through a carnival of global music too rarely explored." Entertainment Weekly (p.76) - "[With] the post-Katrina hymn 'Any Other Day,' on which Norah Jones joins Wyclef to paint a poignant picture of families stranded on rooftops..." Vibe (p.108) - "[The album] makes Wyclef's M.O. crystal-clear: There are no division. He's aiming for one world, rocking to his thick, improbable grooves." Q (Magazine) (p.124) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[T]he roll-call of guests reflects his savvy, anything-goes approach." Mojo (Publisher) (p.102) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "Jean's sonic scope is breathtaking, complemented by imaginative lyrics whose themes range from family break ups, prostitution and drive-by shootings to the US occupation of Iraq." Carnival II: Memoirs Of An Immigrant Music | List Price | $11.94 (You save $0.55) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, R&B CDs, Pop, Urban Soundtrack, East Coast Rap, Rap | | Label | Columbia | | Orig Year | 2007 | | All Time Sales Rank | 28307  | | CD Universe Part number | 7494271 | | Catalog number | 703947 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Dec 04, 2007 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | Wyclef Jean; Djakout Mizik; Jerry Duplessis; Sedeck "All Hands On Deck" Jean | | Engineer | John Pirretti; Julian Vasquez; Doug Rotwitt; Elvis Aponte; Mike "Nyte" DeSalvo; Serge "Serjical" Tsai; Idris "Baby Shaq" Washington; Kiana "Kiki" Sullivan; Joe Deluso; Devon Golder; Lamont Coleman; Glen Marchese; Elliott Carter; Wilner Alexandre; Dave Clauss; Andy Grassi | | Recording Time | 62 minutes | | Personnel | Wyclef Jean - guitar
Also: Lil Wayne, Mary J. Blige, Akon, Norah Jones, Paul Simon, Shakira, Claudette Ortiz, Joe Tomino, Daniela Mercury, Serj Tankian, Sizzla, Will, Lamont "Logic" Coleman, Rubin Kodheli, Andy Grassi, Jerry "Te Bass" Duplessis, Melissa Jiminez, Aadesh Shrivastava, Anthony Leggett, Black Alex, David Brozer, Devon Golder, Djakout Mizik, Horacio JimTnez, J. Thomas, LaTavia Parker, Louis Farrakhan, Machel Montano, Marivaldo, Niia |
Wyclef Jean Carnival II: Memoirs Of An Immigrant Songs Carnival II: Memoirs Of An Immigrant Music Review Average Rating: (4.4 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews I Like, You Like I'm a 57 year old white man and this is my first "rap" CD, you'll love it too! Enough said. Submitted by Roo (Cincy, OHIO) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
unbelievable this is the first album ive listened through all the way through (without fast worwarding or skipping tracks) since enter the 36 chambers
every song has its own feel...the production was amazing, the cameo performances were amazing, the lyrics were amazing, the messages wyclef came through with onj this album are both smart and entertaining
a MUST own Submitted by samsnewsn (brooklyn, ny) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
5 Stars For This Album Amazing Work! Very Recommended! But I Think It Shouldn't Be Classified As Hip-Hop, It's Only Pop. Submitted by Perrosky10s (Coximbo, Chilito Lindo) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Excellent HipHop and POP has distorted young peoples views of real music with sampled beats and garbage lyrics. Finally someone comes along with out of this world arrangements. Every song is a hit in my book. The blend of South Asian, reggae, rock and roll, calypso, pop, R&B etc shows wonderfull range and cultural intermingling of sound. Submitted by gchablal (Maryland) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
THANK U WYCLEF just when i though 2007 was gonna out without a decent album, wyclef saves us. hollywood to bollywood is the definite highlight...was good to see a tribute to selena awell, love this album from beginning to end, 5 STARS! Submitted by riot (New Zealand) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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