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10 new of 11 responses total.
micklpkl
response 2 of 11: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 02:51 UTC 2001

Here's another interesting announcement about Susana Seivane, this one from
the folks at discosbits.com ....

From this Friday, 28th September until 12 October, will we be broadcasting
the new disc from Susana Seivane (ALMA DE BUXO), in honour of its release.
This series of netcasts will be at 19:00, Spanish time. [12:00 CDT, 1pm
Eastern]

The playlist will be the following:

From 18:30 to 19:00 -- several tracks from Na Lua's new CD [12:30EDT/11:30CDT]

Starting at 19:00 --- the new CD from Susana Seivane will play *two* times,
consecutively, heard in this order:

1. Vai de polcas (3:48)
2. A farandula (2:53)
3. Samnza-Riofrmo (4:06)
4. Roseiras de Abril (4:01)
5. Xoaniqa (3:00)
6. Rumba para Susi (3:00)
7. Vals Bretsn.-Muiqeira picada (4:51)
8. Na terra de Trasancos (3:22)
9. Muiqeira de Alin (2:31)
10. Ti e mais eu (3:14)
11. Chao Curuxeiras.- Xosi Manuel Seivane (3:06)
12. Chao Curuxeiras.-Susana Seivane (3:25)
13. Marcha procesional dos Cinco de Galicia (4:34)
[oops. ascii doesn't do those diacritical marks, and I'm not correcting]

To listen to these songs, you will need software compatible with internet
radio transmission protocol (winamp, Windows Media player, realaudio,
quicktime) The program will be broadcast at the address
http://64.152.82.191:20588 

*************

They go on to say that since this is the first time they've ever tried this,
don't expect everything to be perfect. I might try to remember to tune in to
find out how her sophomore effort sounds.
krj
response 3 of 11: Mark Unseen   Sep 9 20:10 UTC 2002

(Susana Seivane, mentioned in Mickey's old responses above, plays the 
Ark in Ann Arbor in about a week.)
 
I went looking for any recent information about Greece's wonderful
Kristi Stassinopoulou on the web.  No new album releases are being
mentioned anywhere, but she's actively touring: she was in 
New York and Washington DC this summer.
 
A promo page for her Central Park appearance compares her to 
Patti Smith, Jefferson Airplane and Fairport Convention; no wonder
I like her so much.  :)
 
I found a one hour Real video of her Washington DC performance
on the web at:
   http://www.kennedy-center.org/programs/millennium/archive072002.html

This didn't play too well at 56K; have to try it at a higher bandwidth
location to see how good the fidelity is.  There is a stock of other
shows from the Kennedy Center at this site.
krj
response 4 of 11: Mark Unseen   Sep 18 02:38 UTC 2002

*Great* concert at the Ark tonight by Susana Seivane and her band.
The lineup:  cittern (or similar 8-stringed thing); electric bass;
Susana on pipes; a drummer who switched between bass drum and 
a drum kit;  accordion player who also switched to snare drum
when the bass drum was being played.   Vanessa Salya (?), the 
main drummer, got some wonderful percussion lines going at
times.   Susana sang one song but other than that it was 
a purely instrumental evening.  Quite loud, and Carol and I 
were in the second row with no one in front of us, so my ears
are still ringing.   I kind of regret that her touring band is 
different than her recording band.
 
(see resp:1 and 2 for more about Susana.  Her second album 
is now out on Green Linnet, finally.)
 
Only about 30 enthusiastic people in the audience.   I should have 
twisted a few more arms to get people out to the show.
mcnally
response 5 of 11: Mark Unseen   Sep 18 04:22 UTC 2002

  Had I not already driven 10 hours today to reach Muskegon,
  I'd've been inclined to drive to AA to see that show.
  The low turnout sounds quite unfortunate..
krj
response 6 of 11: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 14:41 UTC 2002

Ann Arbor concert preview:

Monday at the Ark is Lo'Jo, a "world music" band from France.
Denis Pean croaks his vocals in a chanson style, a Gallic Tom Waits
perhaps, while sisters  Nadia & Yamina Nid El Nourid sing sweet 
harmonies in counterpoint.  Lots of fiddle and accordion, some 
African kora (sort of a harp?) in the instrumental mix.  
 
I didn't grasp their 2000 album BOHEME DE CRISTAL at all until 
I saw them live at the Detroit Festival of the Arts, and then it 
all made sense and the album went on to become an enduring favorite
from that period.   So far I don't like their 2002 release as much,
but I'm hoping that seeing the band live will be as illuminating
this time as it was in 2000.  (The 2002 release has two different
titles;  A LUNE DE SIENS in France, AU CABARET SAUVAGE in the USA.)

The band's website is at http://www.lojo.org
krj
response 7 of 11: Mark Unseen   Oct 7 02:30 UTC 2002

Interesting  Lo'Jo show on Monday, not great.  The violinist might have
had some intonation problems for part of the show, but when sisters
Nadia and Yamina sang together, all was forgiven. 
 
Small notes: the instrument I thought of as a small kora, which is 
played by Yamina, is actually called a ngoni.  The fiddler played 
something which might have been a full-sized kora, I'm not sure.
He also had an African fiddle-like instrument, a one-stringed thing
with a gourd for its soundbox.   And, some of the sounds from the 
new album which I thought came from a guest electric guitar are 
apparently produced on the fiddle, though I can't imagine how.
 
Turnout was atrocious.  About 20 people in the audience; probably 
five of them were volunteers, and I was responsible for 
another 4 people being there.  I guess I shouldn't expect to 
see the band back at the Ark for a while.
orinoco
response 8 of 11: Mark Unseen   Oct 9 00:02 UTC 2002

On some Dave Matthews Band albums, according to my DMB-fanatic younger
brother, there's an electric fiddle playing what would usually be the rhythm
guitar part.  Apparently, a scratchy fiddle playing open fifths isn't so far
off from a distorted guitar playing power chords.  
krj
response 9 of 11: Mark Unseen   Oct 11 19:22 UTC 2002

(interesting, Dan, thanks for the technical description...)
 
The November issue of FRoots magazine (just in) contains a listing
for a new album by Kristi Stassinopoulou.  "The Secrets of the Rocks,"
on the Hitch-Hyke label.  FRoots offers no further information, and 
web searches on Kristi and the title don't turn up anything about 
the new CD.  Hitch-Hyke appears to be a Greek label.  I will have to 
write to the Greek music specialist in Britain, who furnished my
copies of the previous Kristi albums.   Kristi's last album, 
ECHOTROPEA, was my favorite from 2000.
krj
response 10 of 11: Mark Unseen   Sep 21 19:34 UTC 2003

In "Now Playing" item #135, mcnally wrote:
 
#111 of 111: by Mike McNally (mcnally) on Sat, Sep 20, 2003 (03:52):
   re #108:  If you like fado you'd probably also like the related
   Cabo Verdean form known as morna.  The Ann Arbor library has 
   (or had) an excellent collection of Cabo Verdean music called
   "The Soul of Cape Verde", which I highly recommend.
 
   Meanwhile I'd be interested in any fado recommendations you might
   have..

The big new heavily promoted name in Fado right now, at least in BBC-land,
is Mariza, with two albums out, FADO EN MIM and FADO CURVO.  Fado has 
always bored my socks off in the past, so Mariza's the first fado singer
to really catch my attention -- I bought her first album.
mcnally
response 11 of 11: Mark Unseen   Sep 22 01:15 UTC 2003

  I haven't had much success yet with my experiments in fado listening,
  so I may be in the same boat as Ken.  However, I really like Cabo Verdean
  mornas, which are noticably similar, so I'm thinking that if I find the
  right fado it might appeal to me.  I should probably be starting with
  Amalia Rodriguez, the recently deceased unchallenged queen of the genre.
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