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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
33 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Jewel,
By Arise Therefore (Orange, MA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: En Mana Kuoyo (Audio CD)
This recording is one of the few "jewels" in my collection of thousands of musical titles. The music on this disc is spacious, gentle, and at the same time, stimulating. Although I fear some of our reviews as listeners may sound a bit like reviews of `New Age' music, this is African music. (Perhaps informed a bit by Ayub's experiences in the western world.) If you have a heart connected to your ears and an appreciation for acoustic African music, you will be doing yourself a favor by adding this to your collection. If I may add, I find the review by Richard Gehr of ... unfortunate and upsettingly off target. Perhaps this just isn't his kind of music.
22 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
ALIVE,
By
This review is from: En Mana Kuoyo (Audio CD)
'alive' is how I feel listening to Ayub Ogada's music, and especially "Obiero". It is the sound of mother earth and father sky, and all the children. His vocalizations give rise to my own urge to let my voice resound. I want so 'sing with', even though I do not understand the words. His voice and music elicit a deep longing of my soul; a co-existence of joy and sorrow, an awareness of both, and a letting go, a birthing of both into song/music. My taste in music is rather eclectic; I am not a 'fan' of any particular group, direction, performer. Ayub Ogada stands out in the cosmos of music as one of the brightest shining stars. Anyone with a desire to feel his/her existence sounded in the most beautiful way can benefit from listening to this music. Opening the heart/voice to sound along is even better. (You will have to get over the insecurity of not knowing the language). What I have read in interviews/biography of Ayub only acknowledged the feeling I got from his music that he is a person of impeccability, giving expression to his inner spark of Divinity in the most diligent and beautiful way.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Soothing, haunting and soulful sounds of Africa,
By
This review is from: En Mana Kuoyo (Audio CD)
I fell in love with Ayub Ogada's music after hearing his haunting "Kothbiro" -- effectively the theme song of the film "The Constant Gardener."
I bought the disk for my wife who has played it over and over. She loves the simple, beautiful rhythms, Ogada's liltingly sensual voice and the sense-pictures his music provides of the unforgettable African countryside and people.
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