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<title>Music Videos by Buraka Som Sistema on Rhapsody Online</title><link>http://www.rhapsody.com/goto?rcid=art.11791610&amp;rws=%2Fburaka-som-sistema%2Fmusic-videos.rss</link><description>Portugal's Buraka Som Sistema are named in honor of a Lisbon suburb, but their reach is far broader. The band, founded in 2006, quickly became global ambassadors for &lt;i&gt;kuduro&lt;/i&gt;, an Angola-rooted fusion of hip-hop, house, dancehall reggae and local styles. &lt;i&gt;Kuduro&lt;/i&gt; has a strong presence in Portugal, given the country's colonial history in Africa; like Brazilian funk carioca or Baltimore breaks, it has captivated Western imaginations for its uncanny variants of Euro-American dance music styles. With the border-hopping, mischief-making M.I.A. as a booster (and guest singer on "Sound of Kuduro"), Buraka Som Sistema found a worldwide audience for their high-energy mix of fiery hand percussion, booming 808s, rave synths and rapid-fire chatter. They first came to attention with 2006's &lt;I&gt;From Buraka to the World&lt;/I&gt;, a surprisingly focused effort that wraps up diamond-hard electronic production with supple, swinging rhythms. In 2008, they released their debut album, &lt;I&gt;Black Diamond&lt;/I&gt;; the single featured remixes from Hot Chip and the Count &amp; Sinden, but those were hardly necessary to demonstrate &lt;i&gt;kuduro&lt;/i&gt;'s relevance to contemporary dancefloors.
They first came to attention with 2006's &lt;I&gt;From Buraka to the World&lt;/I&gt;, a surprisingly focused effort wrapping up diamond-hard electronic production with supple, swinging rhythms. In 2008 they released their debut album, &lt;I&gt;Black Diamond&lt;/I&gt;; the single featured remixes from Hot Chip and the Count and Sinden, but those were hardly necessary to demonstrate kuduro's relevance to contemporary dance floors.
- Philip Sherburne</description><category>Afro-Pop</category><language>en</language><ttl>720</ttl><pubDate>Tue, 1 Dec 2009 04:59:51 -0800</pubDate><image>
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<title>Music Videos by Buraka Som Sistema on Rhapsody Online</title>
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<description>Portugal's Buraka Som Sistema are named in honor of a Lisbon suburb, but their reach is far broader. The band, founded in 2006, quickly became global ambassadors for &lt;i&gt;kuduro&lt;/i&gt;, an Angola-rooted fusion of hip-hop, house, dancehall reggae and local styles. &lt;i&gt;Kuduro&lt;/i&gt; has a strong presence in Portugal, given the country's colonial history in Africa; like Brazilian funk carioca or Baltimore breaks, it has captivated Western imaginations for its uncanny variants of Euro-American dance music styles. With the border-hopping, mischief-making M.I.A. as a booster (and guest singer on "Sound of Kuduro"), Buraka Som Sistema found a worldwide audience for their high-energy mix of fiery hand percussion, booming 808s, rave synths and rapid-fire chatter. They first came to attention with 2006's &lt;I&gt;From Buraka to the World&lt;/I&gt;, a surprisingly focused effort that wraps up diamond-hard electronic production with supple, swinging rhythms. In 2008, they released their debut album, &lt;I&gt;Black Diamond&lt;/I&gt;; the single featured remixes from Hot Chip and the Count &amp; Sinden, but those were hardly necessary to demonstrate &lt;i&gt;kuduro&lt;/i&gt;'s relevance to contemporary dancefloors.
They first came to attention with 2006's &lt;I&gt;From Buraka to the World&lt;/I&gt;, a surprisingly focused effort wrapping up diamond-hard electronic production with supple, swinging rhythms. In 2008 they released their debut album, &lt;I&gt;Black Diamond&lt;/I&gt;; the single featured remixes from Hot Chip and the Count and Sinden, but those were hardly necessary to demonstrate kuduro's relevance to contemporary dance floors.
- Philip Sherburne</description>
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