1. DJ Sandrinho "Samba Ou Funk" (Man Recordings)
Currently my hottest pick. In this track, Sandrinho cuts up Quincy Jones Soul Bossa Nova" - it's the Brazilian response to Quincy Jones' interpretation of Brazil's hottest musical export.
2. MC Cidinho E Mc Doca "Rap Da Felicidade" (Som Livre)
It's one of the "older "funk tunes but for me this is one of the biggest funk anthems ever. The lyrics are about the life in the favela. It's poetry on a funk beat, and beautifully sung too - which you don't find often in funk tracks.
3. DJ Dedé "Tribos" (Man Recordings)
Dedé is one of Rio´s most promising new producers. In "Tribos" he cuts up African chants with a Tamborzao beat - it sounds like Madlib was inspired by Baile Funk. I would call this "post baile", it's an instrumental track that totally lives off its sounds.
4. Os Corrascos "Que Delicia" (Link)
A fantastic cover version of Eurythmic's "Sweet Dreams", with a MC that knows how to rhyme. A great party rocker
5. Stereotyp feat. Edu K & Joyce Muniz "Jece Valadao" (Man Recordings)
This is baile funk next level. Stereotyp from Vienna, known for his futuristic riddims, teams up with "Mr.Popozuda Rock n´Roll" to create a mind blowing, broken beat dancefloor bomb. Every time I play this, clubs go ballistic.
On the Web
DJ Haaksman: http://www.myspace.com/dahaaksi
Related:
Mixed media, Various Artists | Panama! 3, Crash course, More
- Mixed media
Film noir has been a running theme in composer/pianist Ran Blake's work since the beginning of his career — his very first album, The Newest Sound Around (RCA, 1962), with singer Jeanne Lee, began with David Raskin's theme to Otto Preminger's Laura .
- Various Artists | Panama! 3
If you purchase a copy of Soundway’s wonderful Panama! 3 — and you should — you get two things for the price of one. First, this is a carefully curated CD of “Calypso Panameño, Guajira Jazz & Cumbia Típica on the Isthmus 1960-75” that will keep you smiling — and perhaps dancing — for a healthy while.
- Crash course
Released in 2005, Ozomatli’s CD/DVD Live at the Fillmore is a crash course in how to put on a live show.
- Various Artists | Nippon Girls: Japanese Pop, Beat & Bossa Nova 1966–1970
Girl-group records are great and everything, yet the countless compilations out there were becoming a little hit-or-miss until 2005, when the great Girl Group Sounds Lost and Found box set finally gave this diverse genre a proper taxonomy.
- Sushi-Teq
PerSushi-Teq starts with a really mediocre idea — pairing sushi with tequila and salsa music — and drops it into a glass cube with a two-wall color organ.
- Shiko Mawata
Featuring Congolese rumba tinged with Afro-Cuban rhythms, Shiko Mawatu’s debut CD is compelling enough to transcend the oft-dubious distinction of “world music.”
- Nights on the town
By now, the bossa nova of Antonio Carlos Jobim has been completely ingrained in the language of jazz and pop.
- The Singing Statesman
It’s hard to imagine a better setting for a two-hour solo performance by one of Brazil’s greatest singer-songwriters.
- Lucky 13
Our producers Hall of Fame
- De-colonized
For the 32nd consecutive summer, the French Library’s Bastille Day Street Dance promises to be a world-music highlight.
- Rio representer
It was 2002 when the then unknown DJ Diplo first started throwing his Hollertronix parties in Philadelphia.
- Less
Topics:
Music Features
, Entertainment, Music, Regional Music, More
, Entertainment, Music, Regional Music, Latin Music, Quincy Jones, Less