Filed under: Aural Pleasure, Visual Basics | Tags: Bonde Do Role, Radioclit, Coupé-Décalé, Chief Boima, Bablee, DJ Znobia, Konono #1
Fuck Shit Up w/ Your Booty Bouncin Bump Bump.
That could definitely be used to describe some different current musics of the African Diaspora. Baile Funk, so sure. Jungle/Drum’n’Bass, no question. Hip-Hop/Rap, mos def. Coupé-Décalé? What the shit is that?
Its like the Carnival of Soca, Samba, Baile Funke, Zouk, Kuduro, and Chicago House. Coming out of the Coups, Civil Wars, riots, political and social firestorms, of the last…well, 9 years more or less (the ’99 Coup, the ’02 Fuck-all, the ’04-’07 Explosion, the current oppression by Soro) Coupé-Décalé is Côte d’Ivoire’s up-tempo response that’s being picked up all across the UK, France, and apparently much of Western Europe.
This is a mixer spotting:
Tony Allen v Bonde do Role w/ “Awa Nare Remix”
Usher v. Chief Boima w/ “Love in this African Club”
Bablee w/ “Tout Est Dedans”
Elephant Man v. Chief Boima w/ “Free Your Soul”
Angola’s DJ Znobia w/ “Mono Mono”
Radioclit w/ “Secousse”
and
Konono No. 1 w/ “Paradiso”
Now Bonde do Role can border Baile (if only because they poke fun at it at times), but this is minimized and refixed so as to let the West African underpinnings buoy up. Chief Boima mixes Usher, which ain’t my drinkydrank, but Boima stills kills it. Bablee’s Tout Est Dedans is next with some ridiculous polyrhythmic-ity that apparently is only a 3-minute cut from the tracks 19+min build…I’m loving this cut so Imma have to find that madness.
And then there’s “Free Your Soul”. Which is the jam.
Shit is the JAMMMMM.
And the seamless segue way into Znobia’s Kuduro hitter is…yep.
“Secousse” drops the second-to-last bit, actually weighing more on the Kuduro side, but it makes for a good set-up to Konono #1’s “Paradiso”.
Check the video for some visuals:
Filed under: Aural Pleasure, Vidbit | Tags: Bonde Do Role, Brazil, mp3, Radioclit
Bonde Do Rolê have BLOWN UP over this past year. Damn, yo! Got signed to Mad Decent a while ago and haven’t looked back since.
These kids are ridiculous. Hailing from Curitiba, Brazil (look the place up if you don’t know about. One hell of a city.) these fools mash up Baile Funk, straight Miami-Bass, Punk and a little Hippy Hop. Beats like those on Melo do Tobaco and Funk da Esfiha are pure grungy Baile beats (especially Melo). You may think it sounds terrible at first, but trust me, it grows on you.
Crazy energy. Ridiculous lyrics. Lots of fun.
Bonde Do Rolê – Funk da Esfiha
Bonde Do Rolê – Salto o Frango