Robert Christgau's Music Criticism Blog - Expert Witness - MSN Music

Omar Souleyman/Original Sound of Cumbia

Standing Out and Having Fun

By Xgau Feb 10, 2012 2:54AM
Omar Souleyman: Haflat Gharbia: The Western Concerts (Sublime  Frequencies)

I don't know how I missed this guy, but though maybe his three earlier compilation-style albums on Sublime Frequencies render this one redundant, I doubt it‑-played blind, it grabbed me by the what-the? from the moment track two speeded things up and didn't quit till the end of track nine an hour and change later. A Syrian not to be confused with the Egyptian placeholder president of approximately the same name, Souleyman is a local wedding singer turned world-music attraction playing a supposedly dumbed-down, synthed-up, hickoid-metal variant of a major Levantine pop style called, how loosely or precisely I know not, dabke. Recorded in such exotic locales as Berlin, Melbourne, Philadelphia, and Kortrijk, Belgium, this delivers the kind of intensity Lester Bangs craved and almost got when he tore the shrink-wrap off the Count Five's Cartesian Jetstream. And don't nitpick‑-Lester couldn't understand the lyrics either. A MINUS

 

The Original Sound of Cumbia (Soundway)

Subtitled "The History of Colombian Cumbia & Porro: As Told by the Phonograph 1948-1979," this is a crate dig rather than a hits collection: two CDs culled from five years of rooting around among 78s by the prolific U.K. beatmaster-bandleader Bill "Quantic" Holland, who also provides 5000 words of fact-filled notes. There's not much of the surface sparkle of the Disco Fuentes cumbia comps here, but boy, are these guys determined to stand out and have fun. Few of the 55 three-minute dance tracks by 50-plus artists are catchy in the pop sense, but most boast a mark of difference‑-intro or small arranging trick, yodel or spoken byplay or Donald Duck voice or comic call-and-response or lead tuba or humorous squeezebox trickery. Accordions and a panoply of local percussion dominate the Afro-mestizo groove, so that the larger horn sections that materialize toward the end are almost buzz killers sometimes. Not the kind of album you put on craving greatness‑-the kind of album you put on craving company. A MINUS

 

401Comments
Feb 10, 2012 11:45AM
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The Original Sound of Cumbia really is great company, especially for walking or working out, and that goes double for Sofrito - Tropical Discotheque - both of which I purchased during a fruitful visit to Brooklyn last month. Who says record stores are dead? A lot more would be living if they had half-decent international selections. I like to think so anyway.
Feb 10, 2012 11:42AM
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I'll see you Klosterman and raise you Chuck Eddy: http://goo.gl/XNtsE
(Short version -- he really likes one of the tracks.)

Feb 10, 2012 11:13AM
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A Klosterman review of the new Van Halen album is up at Grantland.

But then it occurred to me that it doesn't make a lot of sense to spend my life writing about things I don't understand when there are things I actually do know about, which obviously includes Van Halen albums.
Feb 10, 2012 11:12AM
Feb 10, 2012 11:02AM
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Bris Piggy: Here's a good one of Carlos Santana shredding: http://goo.gl/g3kPQ
Feb 10, 2012 11:02AM
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Re. acoustic guitar, keep practicing! 

http://goo.gl/kYEkn


Feb 10, 2012 10:59AM
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7 Second Delay is always worth listening to, and host Andy Breckman is a very funny guy.  Co-creator of the Monk TV series, screenwriter (Rat Race, Sgt Bilko), occasional folksinger, etc.
Feb 10, 2012 10:54AM
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Guys, I just started guitar lessons last night and now all I want to do is watch folks play the acoustic guitar. Can y'all hit me up with some links to videos of great performances?
Feb 10, 2012 10:39AM
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I did a search for "WFMU Seven Second Delay," and followed the first or second result to the podcast homepage.
Feb 10, 2012 10:31AM
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Where can I find said podcast? I never could find it last night.
Feb 10, 2012 10:28AM
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Just listened to the podcast, which was great.  It got me thinking about something:  Sometimes, when I know a writer's speaking voice, I hear it in my head when I read his/her writing.  Other times, I don't.  It doesn't happen to me with Christgau.  It does happen with, for example, Charlie Pierce.
Feb 10, 2012 8:58AM
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I'm only four tracks into The Original Sound of Cumbria but I'm going to go ahead and declare it good music for hungover programming in PHP. After all, misery does love company.
Feb 10, 2012 8:46AM
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I posted earlier on this forum about my wonderful experience seeing Omar Souleyman perform in Vancouver last summer (was it?) -- one of the best shows I've ever been to.  Completely joyous.  There were oddities: people in the crowd took it upon themselves to police who could or couldn't go on stage and dance around the ever-stoic Souleyman.  But the vibe remained liberatory.  I couldn't resist having a picture taken with him, which was also intermittently done as he performed, mainly by groups of young, jubilant Arabic men.   From what I've heard, other shows on the tour weren't as hot, I'd surmise due to poor promotion, low turnout, low energy, less wild abandon.  Glad to have been there.  And equally pleased that he's come to the consciousness of the EWers.
Feb 10, 2012 8:36AM
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Let me just say I'm an unrepentant Smiths fan. Ok I had to just get that offa my chest it was one of my steps. 

Also, I need to put in a good word for SiriusXM radio's Little Steven's Garage (channel 21). They've got Andrew Loog Oldham as a DJ/host and he plays some really great stuff as you might well imagine, and to hear his anecdotes is priceless. Highly recommended for Nuggets fans and classic rot fans too. Not sure what his schedule is but catch it if you can sometime. 
Feb 10, 2012 7:50AM
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Late to The Wrens storage party:  Three of mine aren't actually in my shelves, they own a shelf by themselves. My oldest son got me Abbott 1135, Silver and Secaucus, all in bright cardboard covers, blue, green and orange respectively, and had all three autographed in big bold letters by the band. (Charles has the restrained signature. No surprise.) As a result they stand proudly, covers out, on a shelf all by themselves where I can see them every day.

The Meadowlands does sit on the shelf, between World Saxophone Quartet and X, which would be a fascinating shuffle if it came up just right.

Feb 10, 2012 7:44AM
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Andrew Ryce over at Pitchfork gives the new Die Antwoord a whopping 4.2. Hell, man, the cover alone is worth more than that!
Feb 10, 2012 7:41AM
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There's an Omar Souleyman Q&A from last October on the emusic site, though sadly little of his music, at least not in the UK.

 

They do have, however, some Bjork remixes he did that may be worth trying.

 

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It gets compared to Cartesian Jetstream ---> it goes on the want list
Feb 10, 2012 6:25AM
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xgau, how could you have missed the Omar Souleyman / Tinariwen show at Summerstage (6/10)?  Souleyman was great, in a "is he really serious?" kind of way.  He's got this one mannerism where, between verses, he rests the microphone under his arm and supplicates the crowd with an inward hand gesture as if to say "come to me."  Like this.  http://goo.gl/DcP9p
Maybe you had to be there.

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As for the Souleyman (cover Sam & Dave ever?), Bob's description of its intensity makes me wonder if it'll be more like the best moments of that Hakim double-live, more like "Elli Shatr Enhaa Tgannen", that amazing rapped duet on Yalla Hitlist Egypt, which actually first blew my mind at a party (hosted by a WASP Arabic studies major and her half-Israeli Jewish husband) years years after I'd originally passed on the album. Or, probably, neither of the above.
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about the blogger

Robert Christgau

Starting in 1967, Robert Christgau has covered popular music for The Village Voice, Esquire, Blender, Playboy, Rolling Stone, and many other publications. He teaches in New York University's Clive Davis Department of Recorded Music, maintains a comprehensive website at robertchristgau.com, and has published five books based on his journalism. He has written for MSN Music since 2006.

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