Word: jamã
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...Strawberry Jam.” Delivering on the promise of their finest early work—2003’s “Here Comes the Indian” and 2004’s “Sung Tongs” in particular—“Strawberry Jam?? was a masterpiece whose dense soundscapes alternately grinned and strained with near-violent anxiety. To date, that album is Animal Collective’s zenith.The band’s seventh album, “Merriweather Post Pavilion,” finds the quartet—temporarily reduced...
...people think there are a lot of causes that don’t have an impact,” Smekar said, “but this is something that will help these women.” This Thursday. the group is sponsoring a “Wake Up and Jam?? concert at the Queen’s Head Pub. The group will be collecting donations outside the door. Darfur Fast is co-sponsored by the the Harvard African Students Association, the Harvard-Radcliffe Christian Fellowship, the Harvard College Human Rights Advocates, the Harvard College Coalition for Ugandan Peace...
...Bollywood (Immigration)” also introduces Spanish vocals to a dancehall beat. Which is not to say these ethnic mishmashes aren’t sometimes great fun—they’re just all over the place. The 13-minute “Touch Your Button Carnival Jam?? may actually sample the music of every continent, and that includes Antarctica. Which brings us to Jean’s obsession with collaborators. Anytime an album is as chock-full of guest appearances as this one, you start to wonder about the strength of the artist behind...
...have enjoyed Juanes’s music—no translation necessary. “La Vida...Es Un Ratico,” his first album in three years, happily proves no different. The album opens with the lively, uplifting lyrics of “No Creo En El Jam??s.” Juanes sings about living life fearlessly and surrendering to one’s passions, and the song accordingly feels like it’s sung in a single, energized breath. “Báilala” is bound to induce dancing in anyone...
...lament the inevitable, as with expanding audiences comes a pull into the wiry world of the studio. Still, selfish as it sounds, there was a soft magic to the lo-fi ambiance of his earliest records, buried now below vocal effects and extended (by Beam standards) “jam?? sessions. While this diversification of instrumentation isn’t all bad, it’s a bit unsettling at first. Songs like “White Tooth Man” and the quasi-title track, “Wolves (Song of the Shepherd?...