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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fusion musics unite!,
This review is from: Gogol Bordello Vs Tamir Muskat (Audio CD)
Expect nothing normal when Gogol Bordello's Eugene Hutz does a global DJing gig at the Mehanata, with members of Balkan Beat Box. Instead, expect "Gogol Bordello Vs. Tamir Muskrat," where musical styles dance together and then smash into one enormous reggae-Indian-gypsy-punk-disco-vinylscratching mess. It sounds like the soundtrack to a gypsy action movie, except it's much more fun.
It opens with Eugene Hutz shouting, "The bride's side of the family relatives, come on down through the parking lot, directly through the garden to the house of the groom's family..." Then a rattling klezmer-rock tune kicks in, interspersed with happy cries from the audience. "East Wish Of The Bride" kicks itself into a dancey little tune, with an Arabic twist and lots of dancey, sinuous melodies. Let the party start. From there on, the unholy musicians veer to the hip-hop side of things with the horn-filled rap song "Gypsy Side of Town," before switching styles to fuzz-punk and accordion pop, to name just a few. It's hard to pinpoint all the styles that these mad musicians cram into these songs -- there are shreds of reggae, rap, Rai, and always a gypsy fiddler on acid. The fun peaks with "Bassar (Balkan Express Train Robbery)," a sort of Eastern-European version of a James Bond theme. From there on, they switch smoothly to the sensual beats of "Onto Transmigration," some insane horn-punk, and even a stately little traditional march.... which in context appears to be making fun of itself. From there on, they ended the album on a strong note, with a trio of raucous rock tunes that show them in their colourful glory. If this is an example of what Gogol Bordello and the Balkan Beat Boxers can do, then they should team up more often. This entire collection of songs is colourful, madcap and gloriously energetic. Even better, the talented instrumentation is so thick and tight that it's impossible to decipher on first listen -- it's not a performance, it's a friendly assault. Tamir Muskrat and Ori Kaplan (a former member) bring an extra dimension to the basic folk-punk, adding their Eastern European dance-folk rhythms to Gogol Bordello's gypsy-punk... plus a dash of the Middle-East, and whatever else Hutz throws into the pot. The music is often saturated in punky drums and buzzing guitar, but then the fiddles, accordions, klezmer, splashes of electronic beats, and an occasional flute. Eugene Hutz contributes pretty much all the vocals for this album, and his raw, unrestrained howl is perfectly suited for the music -- he yowls, he snarls, he raps, he drawls, he whistles, and even starts calling out in Ukrainian. He occasionally gets swamped by Muskrat's music -- not something you'll often hear -- but always comes back out with a roar. "Gogol Bordello vs. Tamir Muskrat" is a glorious mishmash of styles, instruments and songs -- and man is it ever fun. Exploding with energy and raucous good times, this is definitely worth checking out.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
JUF,
This review is from: Gogol Bordello Vs Tamir Muskat (Audio CD)
Comparing Gogol Bordello and JUF is like comparing apples and oranges. I have seen Gogol live more times than I have fingers and toes to count on. When I bought JUF I did not expect to hear anything remotely resembling a Gogol album. This is a dancehall album. You like it or you don't, but just remember it is a side project. It does not make any sense to compare it to other Gogol albums.
Listen before you buy.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Bulgarian Dancehall,
By Tzar (Nyack, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gogol Bordello Vs Tamir Muskat (Audio CD)
Gypsy violin, dancehall beats, horns somewhere between Jazz Jamaica and Klezmer, transylvanian-intoned singer. Wry lyrics. Simply a blast. Bought this blind and I love it.
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