Sergent Garcia: Un Poquito Quema'o

Audio Samples

>Si Yo Llego Yo Llego
>Llevale Mi Canto
>Amor Pa'mi
>Oye Mi Bomba
>Hoy Me Voy
>Acabar Mal
>To' Fini Bié
>Medecine Man
>Jumpi
>Que Viene El Mani
>Camino De La Vida
>Afro-Cuban Orishas Underground
>Mamaye
>Que Palique
>9 Vidas (Nueve Vidas)
>Mojemonos
>Rumba De Los Quemaditos

Track List

>Si Yo Llego Yo Llego
>Llevale Mi Canto
>Amor Pa'mi
>Oye Mi Bomba
>Hoy Me Voy
>Acabar Mal
>To' Fini Bié
>Medecine Man
>Jumpi
>Que Viene El Mani
>Camino De La Vida
>Afro-Cuban Orishas Underground
>Mamaye
>Que Palique
>9 Vidas (Nueve Vidas)
>Mojemonos
>Rumba De Los Quemaditos

Album Reviews:

CMJ (1/08/01, p.42) - Included in CMJ's "N Essential 5 From 2000".

CMJ (2/21/00, p.28) - "...fiddles with electronic gadgets and works with an international cast of musicians to lay down a 'son'-reggae groove....Spanish and French lyrics sharply poke at injustice, unfair goverments and immigrant sentiments."

Dirty Linen (6-7/00, p.88) - "...A fun fusion album that deserves to be played at your next party..."

Album Notes

This sophomore record by the eclectic French pop act Sergent Garcia features energetic, genre-hopping songs such as "Oye Mi Bomba," 'Mamaye," and "Que Patique."

Sergent Garcia and his Locos del Barrio don't really fall in this camp, but they follow a pattern common to modern-day roots revivalists: they take the styles they love, jump the energy level a couple of notches, and rough 'em up a little around the edges. For this band based in France, that translates to an unlikely pairing of Cuban music dominated by up-tempo salsa and throbbing Jamaican raggamuffin on their lively debut album. Unlike many Euro-mix bands, Sergent Garcia doesn't throw elements of the two sounds into the same song that much. Only the Cuban flute floating over the Jamaican groove of "Medicine Man" and the organic shift from Latin trumpet to ragga rhythm on "Que Viene el Mani" fully live up to the salsamuffin tag they've adopted. "Camino de la Vida" is a side trip to U.S. soul and funk influences with a female rapper, and hip-hop is at the forefront of "Afro-Cuban Orishas Underground," a spare platform for the relocated Cuban rap group Orishas. But the Cuban-flavored percussion section shows that it's the prime focus on rambunctious salsa songs ("Jumpi," "Hoy Me Voy"), broken up by the occasional detour to scruffy raggamuffin ("Acabar Mal") or slower roots tunes ("Amor Pa'mi," "Que Palique"). It's party music first -- "Oye Mi Bomba" is the one strictly political song -- but the enthusiastic verve of the playing makes Sergent Garcia's party a very inviting proposition. ~ Don Snowden



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