Gilles Peterson Brazilika Zip

Gilles Peterson Brazilika Zip Rating: 7,8/10 8337 votes

- 'Intro (Manha)' Demo Version 2. - 'Os Escravos do Jo' 3. - 'Obnoxious' 4. Krishnanda - 'Esta Tudo Ai' 5. - 'Canto Pra Oxum (Song For Oxum)' 6.

Gilles Peterson Brazilika Zip. 2/4/2018 0 Comments This needs additional for. Please help by adding. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately, especially if potentially or harmful. (August 2014) () Gilles Peterson Background information Birth name Gilles Jerome Moehrle Born ( 1964.

- 'Deixa a Nega Gingar' 7. Sidney Miller - 'E isso Ai' 8. - 'Malandro Quando Vaza' 9.

- 'Berimbal (Capoeira)' 10. - 'Galope' 11. Krishnanda - 'Quem Sou Eu' 12. - 'Vagalume' 13. Azymuth - 'Melo Dos Dois Bicudos' 14.

- 'Balinha' 15. - 'Chegada' 16. Friends From Rio 1 - 'Francisco Cat' (Pressure Drop Remix) 17. - 'Tudo De Bom' (Domu Remix) 18. Grupo Batuque - 'Na Batida Do Agogo' (Osunlade Remix) 19.

Azymuth - 'Depois Do Carnival' (Spiritual Soul Remix) 20. - 'Memories' (Jose Carretas Remix) 21.

- 'Feijao Com Arroz' (Bassline Mix) 22. - 'Joanna' 23. - 'Uno Esta' World renowned BBC Radio 1 DJ Gilles Peterson compiles a spectacular collage mix tape from the vaults of Far Out Recordings for this fifteenth anniversary celebration. A close friend to Joe Davis for 25 years, Gilles Peterson has been a constant supporter of the original and best UK based Brazilian record label. The pair released the original ‘Brazilika’ compilation on Gilles’ Talking Loud label 15 years ago and now go full circle with the fourth installment in Far Out’s series following block party mixes from Kenny Dope, 4 Hero and Andy Votel. Brazilian music aficionados Peterson and Davis introduced a new generation to the cream of Brazil’s bossa and post-bossa artists and here expertly blend the timeless with the new breed from Far Out’s vast catalogue.

Gilles Peterson’s ‘Brazilika’ includes five exclusive unreleased tracks and is the definitive collection of Far Out’s work, taking us on a breathless ride through a beautiful and barmy Brazil. Share this Product.

Far Out’s iconic Brazilika series encapsulates the absolute paramount of Brazilian music. Celebrating landmark years of Far Out Recordings, previous editions in the series have seen exceptional, globally celebrated compilations from Kenny Dope, Giles Peterson, 4hero and Andy Votel. To mark the label’s twentieth year, label boss Joe Davis has lovingly brought together his own retrospective of Far Out’s most stunningly immersive music, illuminating the virtuosity of this host of Brazilian brilliance. CD2 is a forward thinking, twenty-seven-track mix, featuring new, exclusive and unreleased material among timeless Far Out dance floor destroyers.

The mix was compiled by Joe Davis and expertly mixed by DJ, producer and Brazilian music aficionado Spiritual South, a longtime Far Out friend. Compiled by Joe Davis, one of the world’s foremost Brazilophiles, Brazilika yields some of the most musically rich and culturally significant output from the label over the last two decades, drawing together traditional roots rhythms, bossa nova, samba, jazz, funk, folk and psychedelia, as well as productions and remixes by producers from around the world. The compilation offered Joe an opportunity, not only to showcase the best of a wide range of Brazilian and Brazil inspired music, but also to thank the artists who have made Far Out what it is (although the track list is certainly not exhaustive in this respect!) Following a number of digging trips to Brazil and a good few years bringing back his finds to the UK where he would play ambassador of Brazilian music to the London DJ circuit, in 1994 Joe set up Far Out Recordings. “Joe Davis is the man who opened up Brazil to the entire DJ culture around the world.

There's no one else. Until Joe Davis went to Brazil, all the people knew from Brazilian music was the odd Milton Nascimento record and a little bit of George Duke & Flora Purim. But he was the one that went to Brazil and he pulled out the Pedro Santos, Krishnandas and all that. Those Holy Grail records.

He had those all first. I just wish I'd got them all then when he was flogging them for nothing.” Gilles Peterson Over the next two decades of passionate hard graft, developing artists and in turn creating an identity and sound for the label, Far Out would open a window to the magic of Brazilian music and culture for the world around. Maintaining the label’s identity and niche, while covering a wide array of Brazilian musical productivity would be Joe’s biggest challenge, a challenge that was achievable and ultimately most rewarding thanks to the talent, professionalism and creativity of artists like Azymuth, Marcos Valle, Joyce, The Ipanemas, Sabrina Malheiros and all those on this album, plus many more in the wider Far Out family. Providing an exploration through the more dance floor focused output of the label, highlights of the 27 track mix CD include a host of classics, ranging from the unclassifiable spaced-out, hypnotic electrolysis of Mark “Troubleman” Pritchard’s ‘Time Out Of Mind’ as well as his brooding, monstrously funky remix of Azymuth’s ‘Carambola’ to the intense, broken-beat samba meld of Zero dB’s remix of Grupo Batuque’s Afro-Brazil carnival stomper ‘E Ruim’. But the real drive behind the mix lies in the wealth of new and previously unreleased material, including six never-before heard Spiritual South remixes of both new and old tracks from the Far Out back catalogue, as well as Theo Parrish’s remix of Marcos Valle’s ‘1985’, which was released earlier this year on a 12”. More previously unreleased exclusives featured in the mix are T.S. Mario superstar baseball gamecube iso on wii.