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LP
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UR 396LP
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"For his latest project Chico Mann recalls, 'When I moved from NY to LA, my intention was to start this AfroRock band, Here Lies Man. What you're hearing on this record is music I wrote for that band but has been reimagined to bring it back to its original form.' Using fewer elements of Highlife for its brand of Afrobeat, Double Life infuses more blues elements while still retaining an Afrobeat authenticity representative of African diasporic music. Since the early 2000's Chico Mann has been involved with projects across a wide swath of respected labels as well as earning the respect of musicians and fans alike. Seamlessly switching between genres such as Afrobeat with his work in Antibalas to dance-oriented adventures as a duo with Captain Planet, his current project explores the realm of Afrobeat with psychedelic flashes in a cinematic fashion."
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2LP
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WPR 010LP
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CD
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WPR 010CD
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"The sounds of Africa have taken multi-instrumentalist Chico Mann -- aka Marcos García -- all over the world. So it's fitting that on Analog Drift, his second album and first for Wax Poetics Records, he's returning the favor. Over the course of twelve thumping, impossibly soulful songs, including a cover of Talking Heads' 'Once in a Lifetime,' Chico Mann introduces the rhythms and guitarisms of Afrobeat to the music of Cuba, the Latin freestyle flavors of 1980s New York and Miami, and the synth-heavy electro beats of dance floors across the globe. 'I've spent years learning to speak Afrobeat, albeit with a Cuban accent,' García says. 'What I do is engage Afrobeat in conversation with Afro-Cuban funk, while electro and freestyle set the stage. I'm employing several dialects to make a larger musical statement. They're all branches of the same tree.' And that's exactly what Analog Drift is: a statement. It's saying something. At a time when most artists are blowing smoke in your face, García is blowing soul in your face. Not to mention truth and feeling. Songs like the searching 'Mentirosos' and the reflective 'Hay Que Correr' are guaranteed to get right to the heart of your matter; plus, synthy rumpshakers like 'Anima' and 'All That Is Rising' have been proven to get you movin'. So García's music is good for your mind and behind. And it's always real. The total package. But García says it best himself, on 'Go to that Place': 'If you want it you can have it / If you want it, you can take it, you can grab it.' So go out and get what you want, and let Chico Mann provide the soundtrack."
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