プライム無料体験をお試しいただけます
プライム無料体験で、この注文から無料配送特典をご利用いただけます。
非会員 | プライム会員 | |
---|---|---|
通常配送 | ¥410 - ¥450* | 無料 |
お急ぎ便 | ¥510 - ¥550 | |
お届け日時指定便 | ¥510 - ¥650 |
*Amazon.co.jp発送商品の注文額 ¥3,500以上は非会員も無料
無料体験はいつでもキャンセルできます。30日のプライム無料体験をぜひお試しください。
Rough Guide to Psyche..
よく一緒に購入されている商品
対象商品: Rough Guide to Psyche..
¥1,444¥1,444
最短で6月1日 土曜日のお届け予定です
残り2点(入荷予定あり)
¥1,191¥1,191
最短で6月1日 土曜日のお届け予定です
残り5点(入荷予定あり)
総額:
当社の価格を見るには、これら商品をカートに追加してください。
ポイントの合計:
pt
もう一度お試しください
追加されました
一緒に購入する商品を選択してください。
この商品をチェックした人はこんな商品もチェックしています
ページ 1 以下のうち 1 最初から観るページ 1 以下のうち 1
曲目リスト
ディスク: 1
1 | Alergico de Flores |
2 | Nordeste Oriental |
3 | Cantando Ciranda Na Beira Do Mar |
4 | O Jarro |
5 | Jardim Das Delicias |
6 | Obnoxious |
7 | Lindo Toque |
8 | Noite |
9 | Uai-Uai/Revolta Queto/Xamb 1832 |
10 | Renata |
11 | Amarelasse |
12 | Agua Clara |
13 | Anthropologica II |
14 | C Pra N S |
15 | Reza Brava |
16 | Sorriso Selvagem |
ディスク: 2
1 | Um Lugar Do Caralho |
2 | A Tortas E As Cucas |
3 | Querida Superhist X Mr Frog |
4 | Pictures and Paintings |
5 | Eu E Minha Ex |
6 | Walter Victor |
7 | As Outras Que Me Querem |
8 | Sociedade Humanoides Fantasticas |
9 | O Novo Namorado |
10 | Miss Lexotan 6 MG Garota |
11 | The Freaking Alice |
12 | Essencia Interior |
13 | Can O Para Dormir |
14 | A 7 Enfervescencia Intergalatica |
登録情報
- 製品サイズ : 14.66 x 0.61 x 12.5 cm; 68.04 g
- メーカー : World Music Network
- EAN : 0605633129021
- 商品モデル番号 : 26922840
- オリジナル盤発売日 : 2013
- レーベル : World Music Network
- ASIN : B00BMHS4YO
- 原産国 : アメリカ合衆国
- ディスク枚数 : 2
- Amazon 売れ筋ランキング: - 288,496位ミュージック (ミュージックの売れ筋ランキングを見る)
- - 8,479位グローバルミュージック (ミュージック)
- - 79,297位輸入盤
- カスタマーレビュー:
他の国からのトップレビュー
gary bolwell
5つ星のうち5.0
Good Quality
2021年2月24日に英国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Quickly delivered and well packaged AAAAA +++++
Pancho36
5つ星のうち5.0
Dance, dance, dance!
2013年7月6日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Totally fun summer CD -- full of great tunes and danceable tracks. Has been in the CD player since I bought it!
Comment Man
5つ星のうち4.0
Wonderful Brazilian music inspired by the Beatles
2013年6月9日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
What exactly is psychedelic music?
The simplest response would be music inspired by the deranged hallucinations caused by certain drugs--particularly LSD and psilocybin.
This naturally doesn't get you very far in a discussion. A great variety of music, poetry and art have been inspired by various drugs.
If the intrepid historian looks to what the term is actually applied, he begins to find an elephant among the hoses, tree trunks and ropes thrown up by earlier researchers--who were hampered (unlike our current reviewer natch) by consumption of psychedelics during their speculations.
Psychedelia refers to a musical movement of late 1960s and early 1970s. Thanks to David Byrne and his indispensable label Luaka Bop the world wide dimension of the music is more apparent.
I think this is most accurately music inspired by the Beatles after the Help! . The Beatles truly had a world wide reach matched by few band in any era.
Now a small group would hold that music derived from trash like In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida might be psychedelia. I only note this because I have met such annoying people--I naturally banish them instantly to 7th circle of Hell, where you spend eternity listening to In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida played by accordions and kazoos over and over again.
Brazilian music had been astonishingly fertile. Major figures have emerged in almost all musical genres--classical, jazz and rock--from Brazil in the last century. In the minor realm of psychedelia, the Os Mutantes, in my opinion, are either the equal or the superior to the other two major psychedelic bands, the Beatles and the Beach Boys. After the huge publicity in America for the Mutantes, it is only natural the rough guide series would manage to get around to issuing this CD.
The Rough Guide series is one step from the Starbucks series--very easy listening music. Sometimes I wonder why I keep buying them--after all, Rough Guide never seems to spend the money to license any major artists from any genre. However, they are one of the few way Americans can hear world music.
In the late 1960s, Brazil suffered the tyranny of a particularly nasty military dictatorship. This dictatorship did not attempt to prevent music from being made--as the Taliban and other extremist Islamic groups in our times have--nor did it reject Western European music--the way the Soviets unsuccessfully tried to do--but it did censor speech and exile prominent dissenters and torture imprison and kill obscure dissenters.
With this background, rock music sounded the herald of a new generation--and the Tropicalia movement--spearheaded by the great Gilberto Gil and Caetano Velaso with supporters from the younger generation like Tom Ze (whose work is amazingly challenging) and the Os Mutantes--defiantly challenged the military government with music that managed to be simultaneously non-political and deeply political. For those interested in this music, Tropicalia is the best anthology--a definite 5 star CD with a great small history of the movement in its linear notes.
The Beatles deeply influenced the music of Brazil's younger generation. Rita Lee, called Brazil's queen of rock and roll and founding member of the Os Mutantes, released a wonderful Beatles tribute CD in her middle age-- Bossa N Beatles .
Which is all a very long way to say that the Rough Guide--in search of easy listening music--could find a good deal of relatively obscure Beatles inspired music from Brazil. This Cd only included two artists I am familiar with--Tom Ze and Suba--but all seem quite talented and the music is melodic and interesting. One song even features the sitar, a la George Harrison.
Apparently much Brazilian psychedelia emerged from the northern region of Pernambuco--I know little about Brazil but apparently Pernambuco is both beautiful and poor--a prelapsarian paradise which bred musicians almost as prolifically as New Orleans or Trenchtown. The wonderful anthology Psychedelic Pernambuco is superior to this anthology--but contains fewer female singers. This dismays me, since Brazilian female singers are wonderful.
I highly recommend this CD for its enjoyable and pleasant music--but it fails as an historical anthology.
Rough Guide has taken to including bonus CDs with their productions--a nice touch. I have normally enjoyed these. Unfortunately the bonus CD with this anthology--by Jupiter Maca--is so slavish in its devotion to the Beatles--Jupiter even earnestly strives to imitate John Lennon's look from about 1968--that I found it boring and uninteresting. I would rate it at one or two stars.
The simplest response would be music inspired by the deranged hallucinations caused by certain drugs--particularly LSD and psilocybin.
This naturally doesn't get you very far in a discussion. A great variety of music, poetry and art have been inspired by various drugs.
If the intrepid historian looks to what the term is actually applied, he begins to find an elephant among the hoses, tree trunks and ropes thrown up by earlier researchers--who were hampered (unlike our current reviewer natch) by consumption of psychedelics during their speculations.
Psychedelia refers to a musical movement of late 1960s and early 1970s. Thanks to David Byrne and his indispensable label Luaka Bop the world wide dimension of the music is more apparent.
I think this is most accurately music inspired by the Beatles after the Help! . The Beatles truly had a world wide reach matched by few band in any era.
Now a small group would hold that music derived from trash like In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida might be psychedelia. I only note this because I have met such annoying people--I naturally banish them instantly to 7th circle of Hell, where you spend eternity listening to In-a-Gadda-Da-Vida played by accordions and kazoos over and over again.
Brazilian music had been astonishingly fertile. Major figures have emerged in almost all musical genres--classical, jazz and rock--from Brazil in the last century. In the minor realm of psychedelia, the Os Mutantes, in my opinion, are either the equal or the superior to the other two major psychedelic bands, the Beatles and the Beach Boys. After the huge publicity in America for the Mutantes, it is only natural the rough guide series would manage to get around to issuing this CD.
The Rough Guide series is one step from the Starbucks series--very easy listening music. Sometimes I wonder why I keep buying them--after all, Rough Guide never seems to spend the money to license any major artists from any genre. However, they are one of the few way Americans can hear world music.
In the late 1960s, Brazil suffered the tyranny of a particularly nasty military dictatorship. This dictatorship did not attempt to prevent music from being made--as the Taliban and other extremist Islamic groups in our times have--nor did it reject Western European music--the way the Soviets unsuccessfully tried to do--but it did censor speech and exile prominent dissenters and torture imprison and kill obscure dissenters.
With this background, rock music sounded the herald of a new generation--and the Tropicalia movement--spearheaded by the great Gilberto Gil and Caetano Velaso with supporters from the younger generation like Tom Ze (whose work is amazingly challenging) and the Os Mutantes--defiantly challenged the military government with music that managed to be simultaneously non-political and deeply political. For those interested in this music, Tropicalia is the best anthology--a definite 5 star CD with a great small history of the movement in its linear notes.
The Beatles deeply influenced the music of Brazil's younger generation. Rita Lee, called Brazil's queen of rock and roll and founding member of the Os Mutantes, released a wonderful Beatles tribute CD in her middle age-- Bossa N Beatles .
Which is all a very long way to say that the Rough Guide--in search of easy listening music--could find a good deal of relatively obscure Beatles inspired music from Brazil. This Cd only included two artists I am familiar with--Tom Ze and Suba--but all seem quite talented and the music is melodic and interesting. One song even features the sitar, a la George Harrison.
Apparently much Brazilian psychedelia emerged from the northern region of Pernambuco--I know little about Brazil but apparently Pernambuco is both beautiful and poor--a prelapsarian paradise which bred musicians almost as prolifically as New Orleans or Trenchtown. The wonderful anthology Psychedelic Pernambuco is superior to this anthology--but contains fewer female singers. This dismays me, since Brazilian female singers are wonderful.
I highly recommend this CD for its enjoyable and pleasant music--but it fails as an historical anthology.
Rough Guide has taken to including bonus CDs with their productions--a nice touch. I have normally enjoyed these. Unfortunately the bonus CD with this anthology--by Jupiter Maca--is so slavish in its devotion to the Beatles--Jupiter even earnestly strives to imitate John Lennon's look from about 1968--that I found it boring and uninteresting. I would rate it at one or two stars.