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Negu Gorriak

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Download links and information about Negu Gorriak by Negu Gorriak. This album was released in 1990 and it belongs to World Music, Alternative genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 36:13 minutes.

Artist: Negu Gorriak
Release date: 1990
Genre: World Music, Alternative
Tracks: 15
Duration: 36:13
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Esan Ozenki 2:20
2. Irakatsi Ziguten Historia 2:05
3. NG Dator 0:42
4. Azken Tangoa 1:57
5. Nahi Duzuena (Milenioa II) 2:01
6. Amodiozko Kanta 3:25
7. Bertso-Hop 3:36
8. Radio Rahim 3:23
9. Seinalea 2:36
10. Nire Bizitza Osoa 0:49
11. Malkoak 2:07
12. Napartheid 2:17
13. Raggamuffin Jaia 3:35
14. Bide Baten Bila 2:48
15. Gaberako Aterbea 2:32

Details

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Inspired by a 1988 Public Enemy concert in Paris, Fermín Muguruza, Iñigo Muguruza, and latecomer Kaki Arkarazo abruptly abandoned Kortatu to explore a harder-edged sound rooted in hip-hop and hardcore on Negu Gorriak. Fermín Muguruza's pit-bull snarl centers the brawling rock-bordering-on-metal guitars and drum-machine backbeats on their first venture into shaping the hip-hop DJ style and sample culture sound to their own ends. But if the musical vehicle changed, the militant lyrical message remains the same as Kortatu. The opening "Esan Ozenki" translates as "Say It Loudly" and the lyrics link Public Enemy's "Fight the Power," the Clash's "White Riot," and James Brown's "Say It Loud! I'm Black and I'm Proud" to the Basque experience. Even that rarest of Negu Gorriak beasts, a love song ("Amodiozko Kanta"), revolves around memories of a 55-minute prison visit. The racehorse pace of "Iraktasi Ziguten Historia," the old reliable "I Can't Explain" chords of "Radio Rahim," and "Malkoak" show traces of Negu Gorriak's later full-fledged attack while "Ragamuffin Jaia" maintains the Jamaican root. The primitive sound collages and the learning-as-you-go approach leaves Negu Gorriak as a spotty but valuable blueprint for the music to come.