Various Artists Dengue Fever Presents Electric Cambodia (Coloured Vinyl)
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$48.00 SGD
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$48.00 SGD
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The band Dengue Fever have managed to build a career out of their obsession with Cambodian pop music of the 1960s and ’70s, and with this compilation, they’ve generously allowed fans to sample their treasure trove of rare recordings, rescued from battered cassettes brought back from visits to Southeast Asia. The music on Electric Cambodia: 14 Rare Gems from Cambodia’s Past more closely walks a middle ground between the distinct melodic and vocal style of traditional Cambodian music and the insistent rhythms and electric instrumentation of Western pop and rock; instead of suggesting Asian folk music with some American pop added to the mix, these tunes tend to offer a more equal fusion of the two styles, and the creative and cultural mashups result in some inspired combinations.
Highlights include the bright, kinetic sound of Ros Sereysothea’s “I Want to Shout” (complete with a killer guitar solo), the assured R&B shuffle of “Shave Your Beard” from the same act, “Give Me One Kiss” by Dara Chom Chan, which recalls an Asian girl group backed by a ska band, and several cuts from Pan Ron, including the polished but driving garage rock of “Don’t Speak,” some heavily rhythmic psychedelia with “Jombang Jet,” an appropriately melodramatic cover of Sonny Bono’s “Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)” dubbed “Snaeha,” and an untitled number that features some deadly fuzztone riffs Link Wray would admire. — (via AllMusic)
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The music on Electric Cambodia is the product of a golden age literally lost in time. This music disappeared when the Khmer Rouge took over in 1975; the murderous regime of Pol Pot killed all the of the musicians who appear on the album in their notorious and gruesome “killing fields”.
It is altogether remarkable that the cassettes used to create this collection ever survived. The music from the 60s until the mid-70s is a mixture of Western pop introduced by the Armed Forces Radio from the Vietnam (or American) War, emulating Hendrix, Santana, and even Cher and Nancy Sinatra, all with a Cambodian twist and flavor. — (via KCRW)
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- Released on cream coloured vinyl
- Comes with download card
- Download card includes 2 extra tracks not included on vinyl
↓
Label: Minky Records
Format: Vinyl, LP, Compilation, Limited Edition, Cream
Released: 2009
Genre: Rock, Pop, Folk, World, & Country
Style: Pop Rock
File under: Global Sounds
⦿
Share
- Regular price
- $48.00 SGD
- Regular price
-
- Sale price
- $48.00 SGD
- Unit price
- per
Couldn't load pickup availability
About
The band Dengue Fever have managed to build a career out of their obsession with Cambodian pop music of the 1960s and ’70s, and with this compilation, they’ve generously allowed fans to sample their treasure trove of rare recordings, rescued from battered cassettes brought back from visits to Southeast Asia. The music on Electric Cambodia: 14 Rare Gems from Cambodia’s Past more closely walks a middle ground between the distinct melodic and vocal style of traditional Cambodian music and the insistent rhythms and electric instrumentation of Western pop and rock; instead of suggesting Asian folk music with some American pop added to the mix, these tunes tend to offer a more equal fusion of the two styles, and the creative and cultural mashups result in some inspired combinations.
Highlights include the bright, kinetic sound of Ros Sereysothea’s “I Want to Shout” (complete with a killer guitar solo), the assured R&B shuffle of “Shave Your Beard” from the same act, “Give Me One Kiss” by Dara Chom Chan, which recalls an Asian girl group backed by a ska band, and several cuts from Pan Ron, including the polished but driving garage rock of “Don’t Speak,” some heavily rhythmic psychedelia with “Jombang Jet,” an appropriately melodramatic cover of Sonny Bono’s “Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)” dubbed “Snaeha,” and an untitled number that features some deadly fuzztone riffs Link Wray would admire. — (via AllMusic)
—
The music on Electric Cambodia is the product of a golden age literally lost in time. This music disappeared when the Khmer Rouge took over in 1975; the murderous regime of Pol Pot killed all the of the musicians who appear on the album in their notorious and gruesome “killing fields”.
It is altogether remarkable that the cassettes used to create this collection ever survived. The music from the 60s until the mid-70s is a mixture of Western pop introduced by the Armed Forces Radio from the Vietnam (or American) War, emulating Hendrix, Santana, and even Cher and Nancy Sinatra, all with a Cambodian twist and flavor. — (via KCRW)
—
- Released on cream coloured vinyl
- Comes with download card
- Download card includes 2 extra tracks not included on vinyl
↓
Label: Minky Records
Format: Vinyl, LP, Compilation, Limited Edition, Cream
Released: 2009
Genre: Rock, Pop, Folk, World, & Country
Style: Pop Rock
File under: Global Sounds
⦿
Share

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