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1977
Barnes and Noble
1977
Current price: $12.99
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Barnes and Noble
1977
Current price: $12.99
Size: CD
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A seasoned performer who divides her time between France and Chile,
Ana Tijoux
makes her U.S. solo debut with this disc, named for the year of her birth. On the cover, she wears simple jeans and a flannel shirt and doesn't meet the camera's eye; the introspective seriousness of her approach is made clear before a note is heard. Though she came to broad public attention within the Latin pop market by delivering a guest verse on
Julieta Venegas'
"Eres Para Mi"
in 2006,
Tijoux
isn't an extroverted MC like
Mala Rodriguez
, or U.S. female rappers like
Nicki Minaj
or even
Missy Elliott
. Instead, she rattles off her lines in a near monotone, hitting the beats with calm and precision. The music behind her is all echoed samples of horns and strings, plus the occasional bit of scratching -- mostly funky and occasionally lurching, these are jazzy beats firmly rooted in the tradition of
DJ Premier
,
DJ Cam
DJ Krush
, and other '90s classicists.
has no interest in getting the club jumping. Indeed, track titles like
"Humanidad,"
"Avaricia,"
and
"Crisis de un MC"
indicate that, like New York rappers of a prior generation like
Jeru the Damaja
, she'd rather get listeners thinking than soundtrack their parties. The music on
"Humanidad"
consists of little but strings and handclaps, with electronic noise around the edges; were it not for the rhythmic impetus of her delivery, it could be a spoken word track.
is clearly interested in hip-hop as a vehicle for communication, an approach that's almost anachronistic, but very welcome. ~ Phil Freeman
Ana Tijoux
makes her U.S. solo debut with this disc, named for the year of her birth. On the cover, she wears simple jeans and a flannel shirt and doesn't meet the camera's eye; the introspective seriousness of her approach is made clear before a note is heard. Though she came to broad public attention within the Latin pop market by delivering a guest verse on
Julieta Venegas'
"Eres Para Mi"
in 2006,
Tijoux
isn't an extroverted MC like
Mala Rodriguez
, or U.S. female rappers like
Nicki Minaj
or even
Missy Elliott
. Instead, she rattles off her lines in a near monotone, hitting the beats with calm and precision. The music behind her is all echoed samples of horns and strings, plus the occasional bit of scratching -- mostly funky and occasionally lurching, these are jazzy beats firmly rooted in the tradition of
DJ Premier
,
DJ Cam
DJ Krush
, and other '90s classicists.
has no interest in getting the club jumping. Indeed, track titles like
"Humanidad,"
"Avaricia,"
and
"Crisis de un MC"
indicate that, like New York rappers of a prior generation like
Jeru the Damaja
, she'd rather get listeners thinking than soundtrack their parties. The music on
"Humanidad"
consists of little but strings and handclaps, with electronic noise around the edges; were it not for the rhythmic impetus of her delivery, it could be a spoken word track.
is clearly interested in hip-hop as a vehicle for communication, an approach that's almost anachronistic, but very welcome. ~ Phil Freeman