Crossover is usually a pejorative term in the world of music, but these women do it with class. A Ma Zone may abandon the pure a cappella of earlier albums, but Zap Mama still have voices to contend with. Founded by Marie Daulne, a native of Zaire raised in Europe, this Brussels quintet reflects the eclectic cosmopolitanism of both Daulne's upbringing and their home city, with lyrics in French, various African languages and English. Elements of African tribal chants and Pygmy song blend seamlessly with Daulne's incredible lead vocals, which flow easily from breathless pixie to soul sister. But A Ma Zone should not be consigned to the world music section of record stores. It's a pop and hip-hop album, and it markets itself as such, down to Martin Ledyard's hip stylised cover art. "Songe" and the impossibly beautiful "Call Waiting" both blend in the stuttering backbeats of 90s R&B, while the inclusion of rapper Black Thought (from the Roots, Philly's famed hip-hop collective) on "Rafiki" makes a great counterpoint to Daulne's scat. Perhaps it's odd that a group that uses its foray into technology so well should decry its dehumanizing effects in their lyrics, but this album is so in the zone, it doesn't matter. A-
Read more in Arts
Where There's SmokeRecommended Articles
-
Washington Pays Tribute to HistoryA joint concentrator in social studies and anthropology, Kweli E. Washington '97 has applied his passion for material culture to
-
Singing in the Rain (With Rob Hyman)If standing in the Malkin Athletic Center Quad with a few hundred students in the rain while enduring an interminable
-
Purported Discussion On Asian Gangs Provokes Cultural DebateUncertainty marked the first Asian American Association (AAA) Discussion Group meeting last night in Loker Commons. The talk, billed as
-
Chuck D Urges Crowd To Fight Media PowerControversial rapper and outspoken cultural critic Chuck D, a man who Cornel R. West '74 called the "freedom fighter of
-
Arts First Weekend Kicks OffA visitor to Harvard yesterday could have seen a Shakespearean comedy, watched a hip-hop dance group, or played word games
-
Festival, Panel Address Black Artists' RoleFive members of the black community discussed the question of black artists' responsibility to society Friday night at the Kennedy