Pasajero Gipsy Kings

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CD

  • Release Date: 01/23/2007
  • Original Release: 2006
  • Sales Rank: 5,542
  • Label: NONESUCH
  • UPC: 075597995923
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CD$17.99

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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Pasajero

1LISTENSi Tu Me Quieres 3:12
2LISTENPueblos 2:58
3LISTENMira La Chica 2:51
4LISTENCafé 3:22
5LISTENChan Chan 2:46
6LISTENCanastero 3:57
7LISTENDonde Esta Mi Amor 3:37
8LISTENAmor 3:25
9LISTENLa Tounga 3:28
10LISTENSol y Luna 3:24
11LISTENGuaranga 3:17
12LISTENPasajero 3:05
13LISTENRecuerdos a Zucarados 3:04
14LISTENLa Vida de Gipsy 6:16
15[CD-Rom Track] 3:42

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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

James Bond is not the only venerable European institution to get a shot in the arm in 2006. The Gipsy Kings, southern France's lords of rumba, have, like the British superspy, come fatally near parody over the years, but that's changed with this lean (46-minute) and mean session. The richly textured Pasajero picks up where the Kings'previous outing, the critically lauded Roots, left off. That album began the repositioning away from the disco beats and bellowing toward a more folkloric sound that emphasized the band's acoustic brilliance and their Gypsy traditions. Pasajero broadens the palette, incorporating other oft-heard airs whistling through their terroir -- jazz, flamenco, funk, Latin American, and North African strains especially. Fittingly, the album begins with a mock radio broadcast from "Radio Gitana" that captures the peregrinating soul of Pasajero. A nod to the power of airplay is their version of "Chan Chan," the Cuban hit made ubiquitous by the Buena Vista Social Club nearly ten years ago, but it sounds like a snatch of Malian club music crackling from a transistor radio. Thank producer Philippe Eidel, who gave Khaled a street-smart sound on his best '90s albums, for these and other deft touches that keep the disc chugging along. It's a journey that proves there's still plenty of life in these vets. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble



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