Toubab Krewe truly breakdown all genre barriers and have created their own sound, as they call it, “Afro-Cowboy-Ninja-Surf-Music”. When you catch them live you will call it a blast.
The many levels contained within Toubab Krewe’s self-titled album, surround and reward the ear upon multiple listens. The polyrhythmic spider webs entangle; meshing scurrying string romps with the pulsing of low end, the result is sense of community formed with the musical world as a whole, and a great rookie release from the Krewe.
Sounds, dance and blood into its vein. Ricky Martin and Shakira ain
deSol, a band of seven musicians from New York and New Jersey with strong Latin bloodlines, are standing atop the fence that runs somewhere between the salsa flavor of Ozomatli and the Texican blues of Los Lonely Boys.
Like Bill Laswell, whose Material project served as an early inspiration, Dub Gabriel makes trance music in the most traditional sense.
Xavier Rudd brought his environmentally spiritual and aboriginal influenced one-man show to a small but captivated Boston crowd to launch his summer tour of the U.S. Rudd had the honor of kicking off the rich musical night on the waters of Boston Harbor by taking his solo act to the Bank of America Pavilion for a warm and sunny 45-minute set. Robert Randolph & The Family Band had the following slot while Gov
The 70-minute feature documentary, Shanda (which means
Borrowing the term eclectic to describe a David Byrne performance is perhaps clich
Cyro Baptista and his Beat the Donkey take an art form that can easily grow tired from weeks on the road, and continually transform the stage into a lively circus atmosphere each night.
Built around the soothing rhythms of Cort Farris