Review: Since emerging in their home country a decade ago, Caixa Cubo have flitted between labels (most notably Heavenly Recordings and Jazz 'N' Milk) while establishing trademark sound that expands on the jazz-funk-meets-samba-jazz template created by fellow countrymen Azymuth (like that band, they're a trio based around drums, bass and organ/electric piano). Unsurprisingly, they've now found a home on Joe Davis's Brazil-focused Far Out Recordings, a stable that has done much to champion Azymuth in the UK. Modo Avia (air mode) is typically warm, breezy and gently tropical, fusing killer grooves and infectious, off-kilter rhythms with brilliant solos, infectious riffs and far-sighted musical flourishes. It feels like the sort of set that will be talked about in hushed tones in 30 or 40 years, and we can think of no greater praise than that.
Life Forces (feat Zara McFarlane - Joaquin's Sacred Rhythm version) (6:18)
Life Forces (feat Zara McFarlane - Joaquin's Sacred Rhythm dub) (6:25)
Umoja (Joaquin's Sacred Rhythm version) (7:32)
Umoja (Joaquin's Sacred Rhythm dub) (8:02)
Soul Of The People (feat Bridgette Amofah - Joaquin's Sacred dance version) (8:23)
Soul Of The People (feat Bridgette Amofah - Joaquin's Cosmic Arts dub) (10:04)
Into The Light Of Love (feat Myles Sanko - Joaquin's Spirit Of The dance version) (9:37)
Into The Light Of Love (Joaquin's Spirit Of The dance instrumental version) (9:38)
Review: It's not often that jazz guitarists and bandleaders double up as DJs and producers, but neither is Nicola Conte the kind of person one often encounters. Here the Italian multi-talent proffers a new version of his latest spiritual jazz-house opus, Umoja. This record first came to be as a full-length 4x4 dance LP of serene, danceable tropicalias and sports-whistly whorls. They now come reincarnated, karmically re-endowed with the thermal force of an eagle, by way of an album's worth of reworks by the veteran producer's vim of fellow spiritual house height-scaler and abseiler, Joaquin Claussell. Whether invoking the exquisite voices of Stefania Dipierro or channelling the patent inspirations of Lonnie Liston Smith of Gary Bartz, Conte Conte-nues to propose endless Conte-nuations of his sound; all it takes is a little help from one's friends to evoke a sacred dance, a sonic world-spirit.
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