Music OnLine : Bollywood : guide
A Bride's Guide To Wedding Music
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No DescriptionA Rough Guide To Feeling Rough
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No DescriptionYellowman's Good Sex Guide
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No DescriptionA Young Person's Guide To Compact
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No DescriptionThe Clubber's Guide to Goa Trance
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No DescriptionThe Rough Guide To The Music Of Italy
Boy, do we love the Rough Guides to European music. They take a place like Italy, which we've made mundane and familiar by spinning a web of stereotypes around it, and rip it open, exposing its intricate, distinctive musical seams: rollicking tarantellas (such as Musicalia's top-tapping one), folk dances both stately and saucy (La Macina covers both), Sicilian brass, polyphonic vocalizing (all-female Ariondela's "Beica" is gorgeous) and plenty of rocking roots bands. Oh, and more reeds than you can shake a stick at, from squealing saxophones to wistful clarinets to the zampognabagpipes.
Boy, do we love the Rough Guides to European music. They take a place like Italy, which we've made mundane and familiar by spinning a web of stereotypes around it, and rip it open, exposing its intricate, distinctive musical seams: rollicking tarantellas (such as Musicalia's top-tapping one), folk dances both stately and saucy (La Macina covers both), Sicilian brass, polyphonic vocalizing (all-female Ariondela's "Beica" is gorgeous) and plenty of rocking roots bands. Oh, and more reeds than you can shake a stick at, from squealing saxophones to wistful clarinets to the zampognabagpipes.A Field Guide To Blacklight Chameleons
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No DescriptionHitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy
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No DescriptionGuide To The Bodhisattva's Way Of Life
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No DescriptionThe Rough Guide To Dub
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No DescriptionAn Insomniac's Guide to a Lonely Heart
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No DescriptionThe Rough Guide To Celtic Music
Rough Guides got this pan-Celtic compilation beautifully right. Dervish, one of the most exciting traditional bands out of Ireland, opens the album with a suite of songs sung in Gaelic. From there, we head to Spain's Galicia and France's Bretagne (both part of the Celtic diaspora) and Canada, among other locales. Yet for all the geographic breadth, a certain hushed fervor pervades the album, a result of both the excellent song selection and the heady intellectualism that -- perhaps surprisingly to some -- underlies Celtic folk. A dusky joy from start to finish.
Rough Guides got this pan-Celtic compilation beautifully right. Dervish, one of the most exciting traditional bands out of Ireland, opens the album with a suite of songs sung in Gaelic. From there, we head to Spain's Galicia and France's Bretagne (both part of the Celtic diaspora) and Canada, among other locales. Yet for all the geographic breadth, a certain hushed fervor pervades the album, a result of both the excellent song selection and the heady intellectualism that -- perhaps surprisingly to some -- underlies Celtic folk. A dusky joy from start to finish.Mahjong Clubber's Guide 2006
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No DescriptionA Dater's Guide To Dying
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No DescriptionGuide to Online Degrees
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No DescriptionThe Ultimate Bride Guide
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No DescriptionGuide to Goal Realization
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No DescriptionThe Russian Alphabet Guide
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No DescriptionGuide My Way
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No DescriptionGringo Guide To Flamenco
A pretty spot-on introduction to flamenco as it sounded in the late 20th century. What had once seemed an unholy marriage between rock, jazz and flamenco was no longer shocking, and everyone from Paco de Lucia and Camaron de la Isla to Ketama had proved that what had been a stark folk music could reinvent itself as pop. Still, this is flamenco: you can't get out of here without hearing a few cries from the depths of a soul -- Carmen Linares', for one -- and 3 A.M. laments. After all, that's what hardcore flamenco fans live for.
A pretty spot-on introduction to flamenco as it sounded in the late 20th century. What had once seemed an unholy marriage between rock, jazz and flamenco was no longer shocking, and everyone from Paco de Lucia and Camaron de la Isla to Ketama had proved that what had been a stark folk music could reinvent itself as pop. Still, this is flamenco: you can't get out of here without hearing a few cries from the depths of a soul -- Carmen Linares', for one -- and 3 A.M. laments. After all, that's what hardcore flamenco fans live for.
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