The Rough Guide to West African Music

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Rough_Guide_to_West_African_Music an entity of type: Thing

The Rough Guide to West African Music is a world music compilation album originally released in 1995. The second release of the World Music Network Rough Guides series, it largely focuses on Malian music, with six of the twelve tracks coming from that country. This is followed by Senegal (two tracks), and Guinea, Niger, Ghana, and Mauritania (one track each). The compilation was produced by Phil Stanton, co-founder of the World Music Network. rdf:langString
rdf:langString The Rough Guide to West African Music
rdf:langString The Rough Guide to West African Music
xsd:integer 41428079
xsd:integer 1005091447
rdf:langString Various artists
rdf:langString Full series
rdf:langString RoughGuideWestAfrica.jpg
rdf:langString Ali Farka Touré
rdf:langString Oumou Sangare
rdf:langString Super Rail Band
rdf:langString Orchestra Baobab
rdf:langString E.T. Mensah
rdf:langString Bajourou
rdf:langString Toumani Diabaté
rdf:langString Mansour Seck
rdf:langString Dimi Mint Abba & Khalifa Ould Eide
rdf:langString Kante Manfila
rdf:langString Moussa Poussy
rdf:langString Sona Diabate
rdf:langString Artist
<second> 185.0 212.0 277.0 284.0 297.0 319.0 369.0 406.0 434.0 498.0 521.0 471.0
rdf:langString (Complete list)
rdf:langString Global Partnership II
xsd:integer 1995
rdf:langString The Rough Guide to World Music
xsd:integer 1994
xsd:date 1995-11-21
xsd:integer 205
rdf:langString Toro
rdf:langString Djelika
rdf:langString Agne Anko
rdf:langString Almamy Bocoum
rdf:langString Djama Kaissoumou
rdf:langString Foliba
rdf:langString I Ka Di Nye
rdf:langString M'Bore
rdf:langString Mauritania My Beloved Country
rdf:langString Roucky
rdf:langString Utru Horas
rdf:langString Compilation
rdf:langString The Rough Guide to West African Music is a world music compilation album originally released in 1995. The second release of the World Music Network Rough Guides series, it largely focuses on Malian music, with six of the twelve tracks coming from that country. This is followed by Senegal (two tracks), and Guinea, Niger, Ghana, and Mauritania (one track each). The compilation was produced by Phil Stanton, co-founder of the World Music Network. Chris Nickson of AllMusic gave the album four stars, but lamented the broadness of the topic, stating "the real problem with this album isn't the music, which is glorious throughout, but the fact that it suffers from the size of its ambition and the inability to fully realize it." Michaelangelo Matos, writing for the Chicago Reader, praised the record's focus on slow to midtempo music, stating it "succeeds in sustaining a meditative, inner-gazing mood."
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4483

data from the linked data cloud