Showing posts with label Charlie Gillett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charlie Gillett. Show all posts

Friday, September 17, 2010

VARIOUS ARTISTS Sound of the World Presents: Anywhere On This Road (Warner Classics & Jazz)

The poignant introduction by Charlie Gillett’s daughter informs us that the finishing touches to his eleventh annual scoot around the world’s sounds was one of the final actions the great man took before his sad and far too premature passing. And so we approach the final Sound of the World release with a mixture of loss and celebration that’s reflected by much of the music within.

As for Suzy Gillett, so for many us the joy of these illuminating, ear-opening, occasionally quirky, sometimes even frustrating but always challenging choices lays in the guesswork of that first blind run-through, wherein a solid backbone of world music big-hitters and/or CG-championed semi-regulars (amongst which this time Tinariwen, Ojos de Brujo, Yasmin Levy and Fat Freddy’s Drop) mingle with myriad mysterious, obscure and newly-celebrated names.

And so a shot of Ribot-esque guitar links British Latin-Americana with mid-European art-pop, parping Balkan trumpets bleed into pure African soul, and strummed Argentinean acoustic guitar links to the wild picking of the Colombian harp.

Absorption in the sharply-observed sleeve-notes (ably augmented and gap-filled by Gillett’s assistant Lilly Ladjevardi) imbues new favourites with deeper meaning; almost unbearably so in the case of Lhasa’s eloquently emotive subtitle-track, the Canadian singer having herself been cruelly cut down far too young at the turn of the year. Elsewhere can be found more in the way of celebration, notably the Congolese commotion of Staff Benda Bilili and funky Malawians The Very Best.

It’s not all going to work for everyone. For this listener the album is slightly overburdened with interchangeably pretty, and at times pretty bland, ladies; and certain geographical blind-spots will frustrate others. Conversely, the personal touch brings wonderful surprises such as a hair-raisingly eerie piece of Korean folkloric music. And continental Europe as ever is gratifyingly well-served.

The second of two choices by pianists who summarise the compiler’s broadcasting path is the greatest revelation of all. Allen Toussaint’s inclusion is a decent enough nod back to Gillett’s early days as a documenter of rock and roll’s rich history, but the closing tune - a solo piece by Ethiopia’s Emahoy Tsegue-Maryam Guebrou - possesses such exquisite poise and melodic sensitivity it seems almost perverse to leave it to the end. It’s a fitting coda to a remarkable life, one which constantly brought magic moments like this to the airwaves.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

VARIOUS ARTISTS - Sound of the World presents Otro Mundo: Another World (Warner Classical and Jazz)


Happy tenth anniversary to Charlie Gillett’s annual round-up of all that rocks his particular corner of the “world” world. These days each release takes a unique title (rather than the generic “World 20YY” of the past) and possesses a cover picture of a bus with new destination, livery, personnel and shape. But what never seems to change is the existence of trends, threads and patterns in the sequencing that defy the iPod shuffle tendency of today’s listener with their logic and flow. One of the notable trends over the last few compilations is for gentle, insinuating and identifiably rooted melodies set in very modern arrangements. Otro Mundo’s exemplars include the moody laid-back funk of Peru’s Novalima, Brazilian experimentalists Sonantes and the thoroughly modern middle-eastern tones of the ex-pat Iranians that make up Niyaz. Each has a tune whose perfume lingers for long after it’s finished, and each is enhanced by the carefully-sequenced tunes placed either side of them. And every selection is worthy of its place amongst such big-hitters as Rokia Traore, Manu Chao and Oumou Sangare, as well as Belizean ensemble Umalali, whose horn-punctuated Caribbean twister Merua already feels like a classic.
Other highlights and revelations include a mesmeric, rolling Algerian groove by Gaada Diwane De Bechar, an extraordinary Anatolian/Armenian mood-piece from Turkish percussionist Sjahin During alongside the never-less-than-incredible Arto Tunçboyaciyan, and the return of what might be loosely termed Americana (in the form of Calexico and Australia’s C W Stoneking) as well as what seems to have become a perennial rule-breaker, a not-so-recent track from a recently deceased great; and who could begrudge the legendary Miriam Makeba one last swansong from her Sangoma album from 1998?
Asia is the only (broadly) geographical area that seems particularly under-represented, but as a seasoned broadcaster and self-styled DJing jackdaw, Gillett’s focus is on picking what appeals to his and his listeners’ tastes rather than being an exercise in geographical or genre box-ticking. And when you pick up a copy of this double CD from a stall in a festival field somewhere this summer, remember to follow the sleeve-note hints - both textural and pictorial - as to which albums are worthwhile following up; the rest of the time you can be rest assured that what you are getting are the absolute gems hand-picked and ordered for maximum effect.


This review first appeared in fRoots magazine