Afro Celt Sound System

Volume 5: Anatomic - Afro Celt Sound System

Release Date: 1/01/2005

Recording Date: 10/2005

Tracks: 6

Length: 00:39:37 Hrs

Label: Virgin/EMI

Type: CD

Album Tracks (15)

Song Title
Length
Lyrics
3.
Search web for matches
10:35
5.
Search web for matches
04:59
6.
No matches found
05:24
6.
Search web for matches
05:24
7.
No matches found
06:29
7.
No matches found
06:29
8.
No matches found
06:25
8.
No matches found
06:25
9.
No matches found
06:04

To share this media with a friend, you must have AIM installed. Click the "Download AIM" button to install AIM. If you already have AIM, click the "Send Instant Message"

What the Critics Say

On Anatomic, the Afro Celt Sound System return as a streamlined quartet and to their original name. Following the CD/DVD remix project Pod, this is welcome return to the sound the band initiated on Seed. This is a group whose members no longer care about programming as their primary function, but instead work together -- writing, performing, and jamming -- as a band. The 14 guests here range from Celtic fiddle wizard Eileen Ivers to griot and kora master N'Faly Kouyate. The sheer heaviness and thudding beats are evident from the album's first cut, "When I Still Needed You," with the mighty Dorothee Munyaneza on vocals. Sevara Nazarkhan duets with the Afro Celts' tenor, Iarla O'Lionaird, on "My Secret Bliss," a seductive, deliriously romantic track created for nocturnal listening. Texture is everything on this recording. "Mojave" is a slow, gently swirling and droning piece with O'Lionaird working at the upper end of his register to reveal some of the mystery in the desert, and it works wonderfully as the cut shifts tempo and Emer Mayock's Uilleann pipes enter the fray in tandem with sequencers and James McNally's Edge-style pulsing guitars. The sheer loping beauty of "Mother," with its programmed sequencers elegantly making room for the pipes, acoustic guitars, and hand drums, is alone worth the price of the set, but when Munyaneza's vocal slips in through the back door and is joined by O'Lionaird's, it becomes transcendent. Ultimately, Anatomic is fresh sounding while retaining all the elements that made the Afro Celt Sound System so unique. It is a pleasure from start to finish, and may be their strongest album overall. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

ADVERTISEMENT
Watch free music videos, tune in to Aol Radio, get free music downloads, read music news, and search for your favorite music artists.