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The Official Orishas Website
It's been quite a journey since Orishas released their first album
'A Lo Cubano' in Spain in May 1999. Lauded by the press throughout
Europe ever since it came out, the group launched into a marathon
tour that started in summer 1999. From clubs to festivals, the European
tour stretched out to just over two years with evening performances
of their music catalogue at the Olympia, the Ancienne Belgique and
the Royal Festival Hall in England. They were to play at the most
prestigious festivals in Europe like the Lowlands (Holland), where
they topped the bill along with groups like Deftones and Cypress
Hill, and the Rosckilde (Denmark), where they brewed up a storm
alongside groups as disparate as Tool and Wyclef Jean. Orishas also
performed in the year 2000 at festivals like the Paleo Nyon Festival,
the La Rochelle Francofolies and Pop Kom.
The group gradually acquired international standing, and after conquering
Europe they went on to win over the United States in November 2000,
with the American press unanimous in its acclaim: articles and reviews
in Time, Rolling Stone, The Source, Vibe ,... Little by little they
became an essential live band, capable of sharing the stage with
artists as diverse as Compay Segundo, Orquestra Aragon, Iggy Pop,
Cypress Hill, Macy Gray and Marcus Miller. Orishas paid their dues
on the road and left Europe to take part in various jazz festivals
in Canada and South Africa, dropping in on Brazil and Mexico. Orishas
left no doubt that their musical fusion, unique in its genre, enables
them to break the frontiers of style and to be equally at home in
front of a latino, hip hop, pop or rock audience.
December saw their triumphal return to Cuba, where they had occupied
the top slots of the radio charts for months and where they gave
two concerts that brought together tens of thousands of young Cubans.
They had come full circle, because after touring the world Orishas'
dream finally came true: playing in front of their families and
the people of Cuba.
Collaborations came thick and fast, with Roldan Gonzalez appearing
on various French rap albums (Kerry James) or international rap
albums (,Dari, Weasel / Portugal).
After more than 200 concerts worldwide, the group decided to get
back to song writing in August 2001. It was only to be expected
that they would start working together again with the French producer
and composer Niko Noki, (Passi, Bisso Na Bisso), who along with
Roldan Gonzalez had been responsible for the tracks on the first
album. He in turn engaged the services of a young composer of the
future, DJ Mig-One, who had two albums with his group Starflam under
his belt. They strung several studio sessions together between Belgium
and Paris to knock up no fewer than twenty tracks. In November 2001
the group was ready at last to go back into the studio proper to
record the successor to A Lo Cubano. They opted for the EMI studio
in Paris, where the cream of Cuban musicians gathered at the group's
behest to immortalise the songs of the Emigrante album. The group
had matured and learned a great deal from touring the world, the
subjects are more profound and given a more international treatment.
Having had their eyes opened by the big world has had a visible
impact on their writing. As on the first album, Miko Niko is in
charge of musical production and most of the tracks, DJ Mig One
has penned 3 compositions that underpin the plurality of their influences.
The album was mixed at the Polygone studio in Toulouse under the
auspices of Mario Rodriguez (Notorious Big, Public Enemy, Mobb Deep,
Fonky Family, 113,...). Once again the alchemy is perfect. The new
album sees the return of two very talented artists and long-standing
friends of the group: Passi on La Vida Passa and Yuri Buenaventura
on 300 Kg de Rap.
The new album has a pan-European release on April 22, 2002 and is
being promoted in a tour that takes in more than ten countries before
being presented on the stages of the major European festivals this
summer.
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