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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Spiritual & musical journey - easily the best album of 2002
1 Giant Leap is a stunningly ambitious, moving and uplifting project featuring some of the most amazing musicians on the surface of the globe. It takes you on a spiritual and musical journey, evoking and stirring emotions, bringing a sense of unity and joy for the great artistic creativity in the world. 1 Giant Leap has a message; a purpose.

The album opens with Baaba...

Published on January 4, 2003 by alexliamw

versus
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Striking Results
Producers Duncan Bridgeman and Jamie Cato bring together seemingly disparate talents from the world stage to often striking results on 1 Giant Leap, a multimedia project which is also available on an equally eclectic DVD. The jumping off point for these 12 tracks is electronica, but they diverge wildly into mbaqanga, qawwali, Indian trance, gospel, hip-hop. It's hard...
Published on June 15, 2002 by WrtnWrd


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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Spiritual & musical journey - easily the best album of 2002, January 4, 2003
By 
alexliamw (New Haven, CT) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 1 Giant Leap (Audio CD)
1 Giant Leap is a stunningly ambitious, moving and uplifting project featuring some of the most amazing musicians on the surface of the globe. It takes you on a spiritual and musical journey, evoking and stirring emotions, bringing a sense of unity and joy for the great artistic creativity in the world. 1 Giant Leap has a message; a purpose.

The album opens with Baaba Maal evoking sunrise over his native Senegal on 'Dunya Salam'. The spiritual, prayerful, soulful vocals are stunning and truly beautiful. It then moves into single 'My Culture' featuring British popstar Robbie Williams and rapper Maxi Jazz, whose unlikely pairing results in a strangely moving track with urgent lyrics, a sense of joy and fantastic production, with funky bass, trumpets and ethnic percussion. When all the music stops and Maxi says 'If I don't see that I'm strong then I won't be' it is a spine-tingling, affirming moment.

Next is 'The Way You Dream', another amazing track which again sees an unlikely pairing in REM's Michael Stipe and Indian superstar Asha Bhosle. It begins slowly with aromatic drums, atmospheric acoustic guitar and ethereal vocals from Bhosie, then a darker sounding guitar comes in with synths giving the track a mysterious feel. Michael Stipe sounds right at home in the ambient surroundings although it sounds nothing like REM, and then the music quietens before building into full on rave with trance keyboards, very fast drums, but still the vocals of the two singers sounding perfect.

Fourth is 'Ma'Africa', beginning with Ulali's sweet backing before moving into a fast, funky global dance track with the energetic vocals of the Mahotella Queens and a beautiful poem by Moseo calling for African unity. This is very powerful. Braided Hair is next, probably the most straightforward pop song it features Speech and Neneh Cherry who offer nice vocals and fantastic lyrics. Its great though not as ambitious as other tracks.

Ta Moko opens with a sample from Tom Robbins who offers very important advice that our regrets are over not spending enough time with who we love, not over work or money. When the track proper begins its a slow-burning, darkly mysterious track with vocals from Whiri Mako Black of New Zealand. Bushes again features vocals from Baaba Maal and while not quite as stunning as Dunya Salaam his vocals are always delightful.

Passion features a beautiful poem written and read by Michael Franti in his deep voice and then spiritual vocals from Uganda. Daphne opens with the great quote 'music is proof of the existance of God' and suitably is a spiritual track with jazzy bass and guitar. When the track gets into full swing its Eddi Reader, a UK folksy singer who takes the main duties.

All Alone on Eileen Shore is a mostly Western track, mostly because of the fact that Duncan, one of the two British instigators of the project, takes vocals. The track is the most similar to Faithless on the album (Faithless being the band that Jamie and Duncan are involved with). Although the vocals are vocoded, something I don't usually like, it makes them strangely sweet and ethereal and perfect here. The backing is mellow, ambient acoustic electronica. It the middle of the track it gets darker and we get Ram Dass, a philosopher, reading important, touching words. Parts of the track then are more ethnic. It is one of the album's best.

Racing Away is fantastic as we get the reggae vocals of Horace Andy over an ethnic electronica canvas which is amazingly effectively, and it has the spirit of peace and nature that is important in reggae. Grant Lee Phillips offers more conventional American pop-rock vocals but the melody and lyrics are still groundbreaking. Overall it is again one of the best tracks. The album closes with the eerie 'Ghosts' again featuring Eddi Reader which is haunting and a perfect closer.

Overall, this is a perfectly constructed album. It is for everyone, not just fans of world but of dance, electronica, funk, rock, pop, philosophy or just great music. Its message and ambition are so huge that it is enormously important. Its a true spiritually uplifting experience. Its the best of 2002 and one of the great world music albums ever. 5 stars.

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28 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The World Dreams in Music, August 13, 2003
This review is from: 1 Giant Leap (Audio CD)
Each friend represents a world in us, a world possibly not born until they arrive, and it is only by this meeting that a new world is born. ~Anais Nin (1903-1977)

The first time I listened to this CD, I listened to "All Alone" obsessively. I became so intoxicated with a feeling of immense completeness as every sadness in my soul dissolved into pure love.

The world could have disappeared and I would have been standing in the middle of a field of crimson roses all blooming to the sound of Duncan Bridgeman singing: "If you stay or if you go." The friend who sent me the CD said to listen to the track before I went to bed and I've never experienced such a healing gift. In life, you often meet people who will give you gifts your soul needs and then at times friends can work together to heal the world.

When Jamie Catto met Duncan Bridgeman it was a random moment in time. Like most creative friendships they found they had so much in common. Once they started talking they realized they had similar beliefs about the state of modern music. Jamie was the singer and keyboardist in the UK band Faithless and Duncan Bridgeman had been mixing albums for big-name artists. Together they have created a CD I can hardly believe exists.

I had no idea the impact it would make on me. I also didn't realize you could fall madly "in love" with a CD. ;) Once "My Culture" takes off, you are going to understand the meaning of "primal high on a soul level."

"I'm what I feel, what I'm feeling is surreal
I'm a mass of spinning wheels
Always digging in my heels
Now I've got the faith to

Fall back again
Crawl from the warm waters
Don't ever forget
You're on your feet again
Your feet again" ~My Culture

This CD is a spiritual journey into a land where you can escape from ordinary consciousness. You will feel you connect instantly with the universal wisdom in the lyrics. There is a richness of culture in the freeing dance of philosophy and world music. Multicultural voices mingle with beautiful intellectual tangents. Visual images dance through your mind as the music creates a deep soothing soul vibration that radiates through you like the most comforting feeling you have ever experienced.

"The Way You Dream" is one of my favorite songs as it blends the mysterious voice of Indian star Asha Bhosle with the completely intoxicating voice of Michael Stipe.

This CD also features Dennis Hopper, Kurt Vonnegut, Robbie Williams, Tom Robbins, Senegal's Baaba Maal, Ram Dass, Gabrielle Roth, the South African Mahotella Queens, Neneh Cherry, New Zealand's Whiri Mako Black, Revetti Sakalar and Eddi Reader.

1 Giant Leap is a fusion of sound and word captured through travels in Senegal, Ghana, South Africa, Uganda, Kenya, Bombay, New Delhi, Calcutta, Bangkok, South East Asia, Los Angeles, New York, India, Thailand, Australia and New Zealand. This CD is the result of recordings from 25 countries.

Jamie Catto and Duncan Bridgeman literally spent six months traveling across the globe with a mobile studio and crew. Together they recorded storytellers, shopkeepers, authors, artists, philosophers and even cabdrivers. Each song contains a mixture of sounds and lyrics from various parts of the globe.

The chants, ethereal cries and primal rhythms will at times send chills up your spine. When Michael Franti sings "We are alive with the spirit of our passion" you can't help wanting to live, and live for a long, long time so you can see all your dreams become a reality.

The entire CD really represents a unity humanity could strive for if they could find peaceful resolutions to the issues haunting us all. The themes of the album are death, confrontation, sex, money, blasphemy, faith, happiness, inspiration, time, masks and unity.

Healing, loving, intoxicatingly spiritual and poetic beyond words. Perhaps the most beautiful music I've ever heard. 1 Giant Leap shows our humanity, the wide diversity of cultures and the beauty of unity through music.

~The Rebecca Review
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The album of 2002? Quite possibly., April 14, 2002
By 
William Barber (Edinburgh, Scotland) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: 1 Giant Leap (Audio CD)
Jamie Catto and Duncan Bridgeman are geniuses. Travelling the world with a laptop to record a wide range of musicians, scientist, authors and thinkers on is unusual to say the least. However, they've produced what may well be some of the most beautiful and haunting music ever heard. They describe it themselves on the back of the CD as "exploring the unity in the diversity" and that it is.
Spanning all genres and all the world, this album truly is a masterpiece that deserves a place in everyone's collection. Featuring international stars such as Robbie Williams and Michael Stipe to relative unknowns like Baaba Maal and Speech. None of these artists recorded together yet the songs are contructed so masterfully that you'd never know. The vocals of Speech and Neneh Cherry on 'Braided Hair' are particularly impressive as it sounds so much like they recorded with each other.
The wonderful fusion of different styles in exceptionally good, "Ma' Africa" mixes an African womens choir with modern dance to great effect.
'The Way You Dream' is one of the standout tracks, Michael Stipe's voice will haunt you and effect you more than you can imagine.
This album will leave you enchanted and you can't fail to fall in love with it. Likely to be labelled "World" music which may put some off but don't let it for this really is an outstanding work which will appeal to everyone and deserves huge recognition, let's hope they do it all over again.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Williams,Stipe,Faithless,etc Do World Music-Amazing!, April 9, 2002
By 
Ian Creamer (Dublin,Ireland) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 1 Giant Leap (Audio CD)
1 Giant Leap can best be described from the 2 lines on the rear cover when it says "We travelled around the world collaborating with the most happening musicians, authors, scientists and thinkers we could find to explore the unity in the diversity." Essentially the theme of the c.d. is totally admirable but it's the musical aspect that will linger most in the listeners memory. Ex-Faithless member Jamie Catto and Duncan Bridgeman have compiled a world music meets modern western music and presented it in an exciting way like I've never really heard before. Amazingly this c.d. was almost entirely recorded on a laptop in various musicians homes and then was all put together in a recording studio. In this they have harnessed the latest modern technology and mixed it with musical values that have been heard around the globe for centuries. Rhythm is the main mover in this c.d. They have amalgamated various rhythmic and ethnic sounds from every continent across the globe-from South/North America to Asia, From Africa to Oceania and Australia-and yet it's all mixed together with real cutting edge sounds of modern dance music. Each of the tracks feature vocalists who have extremely different styles coming from vastly different cultures. They recorded the music completely separately and you'd imagine that this would give this c.d. a very disjointed feel to it-yet nothing can be further from the truth. The first 2 tracks are an example of this-Babba Maal the amazing Senegalese vocalist shares a track that has rhythms that have origins in India and Asia. Then this leads into track 2 which starts of with a Maori emphasis before we go into modern dance style of Faithless lead rapper Maxi Jazz. His voice intertwines with the poppier sounds of Robbie Williams to give us the amazing track "My Culture". It's been a long time since Robbie Williams has been involved with such a great track. It's beginning to get lots of airplay here and to me this is quite bizarre as it's not often you hear World music fused with modern dance beats on mainstream radio or even on M.T.V.

While this track is excellent it's not the main one off highlight. Track 3 is simply beautiful and lasts for 8 minutes. It features Asha Bhosle the Indian icon and subject of Cornershop's famous #1 hit "Brimful Of Asha"-her vocals lead into Maori Whiri Mako Black and then the unmistakable sound of Michael Stipe-rarely have I heard him sounding quite so stunning, so tender on the amazing chorus and verse section as all these sounds fuse in a moment of musical glory. Think of a really great R.E.M. song but it will have a definite Asian-African fused sound.Each of the 12 tracks are mixed together in much the same way. It sort of keeps the listener totally absorbed and lulls you into a dreamy soundscape, yet you're also kept on your toes as you have no idea from what culture or where each song will lead. Some of the mixes are truly daring-like on track 4 we have choirs from South Africa interchanging with Native American choirs. Some tracks have middle eastern sounds which drift into a more Celtic vibe. They also collaborated with other great vocalists who are all mentioned in the track listing.

This really is quite a startling album-no weak tracks in my opinion and quite a few very memorable ones. The inner sleeve recalls how a drummer's call in Senegal will be answered by voices in Delhi and then a call from New York will be answered in Ghana 'all mixed together with other rhythms creeping in-One Global Pulse!'-Just perfect!

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant Effort!, December 7, 2002
This review is from: 1 Giant Leap (Audio CD)
When I first got hold of this CD, I thought it would be just another off-the-shelf world music album. How wrong I was. This CD has surpassed all boundaries and contains some of the best fusioned music ever released in recent times. From Kenya to India, it fuses an array of diverse musical talents and sounds from around the world. All 76 minutes of this CD is sheer listening pleasure. Listening to each track, takes you on the journey it was intended to. And Duncan & Jamie have released & produced a superb craftmanship in 1 Giant Leap. This album truly proves that indeed there is, Unity in Diversity. And thanks to Duncan & Jamie, that gap is bridged. Let the music speak to you as the sheer delight of the great musicians and thinkers involved in this project transcend you to an elated bliss. To sum it up, 1 Giant Leap is taking it's greatest leap ever!
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars This truly illustrates the diversity of music, July 4, 2002
By 
This review is from: 1 Giant Leap (Audio CD)
I was intrigued by the concept of 1 Giant Leap when I found out that founding Faithless member Jamie Catto was partially responsible for the album (and DVD). I was even more intrigued when I saw the list of guest appearances. The list includes Faithless's Maxi Jazz, international pop star Robbie Williams and REM's Michael Stipe. The entire album has an international flavor to the album combined with introspective lyrics. I didn't realize until now that the vocals were recorded separately and were eventually pieced together. I am impressed to say the very least. Duncan Bridgeman and Jamie Catto did a bang up job of tying the vocals together and making them sound as if they were recorded together. "My Culture" is the perfect example. This sound is my favorite track on the album. Robbie Williams' vocals are so high that at times he sounded like a girl which isn't a bad thing. His vocals blended well together with Maxi Jazz's unique rapping style. "Dunya Salam" is a song that I would might hear either on a Talvin Singh or DJ I Cheb Sebbah album. I love that Indian/Middle Eastern influences in the song. There is something about traditional Indian and Middle Eastern music that sends chills down my spine. "Dunya Salam" has that same haunting aspect. My other favorite song off the album is "The Way You Dream" with Michael Stipe and Asha Bhosle. It is a beautiful song. I particularly enjoyed listening to Michael's vocals on this song. "1 Giant Leap" is a great example of when modern music is fused with traditional music from all over the planet. The music isn't completely modern nor is it truly international. Somewhere in between "1 Giant Leap" is stuck in the middle. If only there were more concept albums (if you want to call this album a 'concept album') like "1 Giant Leap".
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best of 2002, February 22, 2003
By 
Guardian of the Zen Sea "Indigo" (Looking after the sun and surf) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 1 Giant Leap (Audio CD)
I lucked into this one by hearing it as part of a CD review process for Community Radio of Alaska. My, my, my. There are no words for this CD. There are many more elaborate reviews written here to describe in detail all the music, the concept and the artists. Normally, my Sunday night program features very mellow ambient-acoustic music. I added several of the more laid back tracks from this CD, and the phone began to ring with people asking for more information. The track, "All Alone" really got people going. It has to be one of the most uplifting and rational songs ever written about depression. Then there is "Sailing Away" the hommage to the weird world of TV. By combining the talents of so many musicians with the words of some insightful thinkers--you come away with something really worth listening to over and over again.

Let me just add this: I recently filled in as a host DJ on the Friday Night "Round Midnight " Program on KUAC-FM [...] and played most of this CD throughout the evening. The phone just kept on ringing with folks wondering how they could get ahold of this music. One group called to say they hadn't stopped dancing since the 1 Giant Leap CD started spinning.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, Marvelous CD, March 7, 2003
By 
H. A Huffman "haumf" (Mt. Prospect, IL USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: 1 Giant Leap (Audio CD)
This CD shines like a jewel in the cesspool which is American "pop" music. Each track is well crafted and entertaining. This really did not surprise me since I found out that Faithless band members were involved. I bought 1 Giant Leap after I saw the video on MTV (Yeah, an interesting video on MTV about politics, society and stuff. Maybe it will start a trend?) The first 3 tracks alone are well worth the price of the entire CD.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Striking Results, June 15, 2002
By 
WrtnWrd "Hankman" (Northridge, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 1 Giant Leap (Audio CD)
Producers Duncan Bridgeman and Jamie Cato bring together seemingly disparate talents from the world stage to often striking results on 1 Giant Leap, a multimedia project which is also available on an equally eclectic DVD. The jumping off point for these 12 tracks is electronica, but they diverge wildly into mbaqanga, qawwali, Indian trance, gospel, hip-hop. It's hard to tell which illuminates more, the strains of "world music" as "exotic" or the conforming confines of electronica. Indigenous music experiences a tinge of bland-out against synthetic backgrounds, while those same rhythmic and vocal interjections raise the standard drums'n'bass or junglist scenarios to another level. Your favorites could very well differ from my own, which include the Mahotella Queens ululating over "Ma' Africa", Michael Franti's earthy raps on the otherworldly "Passion", the hymnlike "All Alone (On Eilean Shona)". Best of all: Michael Stipe and Asha Bhosle's frantically erotic Bollywood jungle rave "The Way You Dream". Now all I wanna know is: when is Michael Stipe going to do his solo electronica album, wherein his raspy croon has never sounded warmer, more at home?
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Magnificent Visionary Musical Journey, March 14, 2006
This review is from: 1 Giant Leap (Audio CD)
This extraordinary DVD and CD will take you around the world and into the deepest mysteries of human being, through powerful music, compelling video footage, and thought provoking commentary. The whole is far greater than the sum of it's components. This inspired visionary and musical journey will take you to unforgettable places on the planet, and in your own psyche. Not to be missed!!!
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1 Giant Leap
1 Giant Leap by 1 Giant Leap (Audio CD - 2002)
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