REVIEW

Music Review: Mofongo - Tumbao

Written by Richard Marcus
Published August 16, 2007

Music sampling is not something I'm completely comfortable with people taking recordings made by others and simply playing it over a drum and bass machine. That's not creating music as far as I'm concerned, it's just making a compilation tape and adding a couple of extra tracks.

I know that's a very simplistic way of describing it, sometimes samples from numerous songs are used to create a piece, but all that proves is that they know how to use technology and what songs sound good together. Hell, I could do that if you gave a good enough computer with the right software, and I would never consider myself a musician.

A musician is someone who at least offers up an interpretation of someone else's music, if not actually creating the damn thing themselves from scratch. Can you picture someone waking up and saying, "I feel inspired today so I think I'll go record a bunch of music from other people's records and splice them all together with a drum machine and mega bass?"

On the other hand a process I do have respect for, although it is remarkably similar in execution has nothing in common artistically with sampling, is the compilation and composition of found sounds into a musical piece. While in the first instance what's done is using another's music and basking in their glory in order to make mindless dance tracks,  the latter requires the composer to take a series of seemingly dissimilar sounds and assemble them into a coherent piece of music that is designed to have an emotional or intellectual impact on the listener.
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One of the first found sound pieces I heard was an album David Byrne and Brian Eno put out in the early 1980's called My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts. They took the title from a novel by a Nigerian writer and used found sound compositions to try and reflect the themes and ideas expressed in the book. They used everything from excerpts of radio talks shows, evangelical preachers, to a recording of an exorcism in their efforts.

While you could argue that they were more akin with samplers than found sound artists, their intent was similar to that of the latter far more than the former. Still, they were using recognizable sounds that would influence their listener's interpretations and impressions of their music. The difference between that and total found sound is evident when you compare their efforts with the new release by Puerto Rican musician Joe Ayala, (who calls himself Mofongo after a Puerto Rican dish made of mashed plantains, garlic, and pork crackling), on Aagoo Records, Tumbao

Mofongo started his musical life playing Salsa in his native Puerto Rico before moving to Boston to study classical guitar at the New England Conservatory. He also studied composition and improvisation and played in an experimental Salsa band called Jayuya for four years. While at school he had developed tendonitis, which had forced him take a year off from his studies. Four years of constant live gigging with Jayuya took a physical toll on him and that's when he began to experiment with electronic music.

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Copy02-11-Richard portrait-72-4x4.jpgRichard Marcus is a long-haired Canadian iconoclast who writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees it at Leap In The Dark and Epic India Magazine.
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Music Review: Mofongo - Tumbao
Published: August 16, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Music
Filed Under: Culture: Arts, Music: Ambient, Music: Classical, Music: Electronica, Music: Instrumental, Review
Writer: Richard Marcus
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#1 — August 29, 2007 @ 08:49AM — ilya [URL]

There's no difference between sounds found in the street and sounds found on the records you buy on the street. Both can be legitimately used for composition. It's possible to recontextualize and alter the meaning of a piece of music by sampling it. Sometimes all that is necessary to make something perfect is just adding a different beat to it.

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