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Afro Celts
Rise Above It

Real Media


 

Volume V: Anatomic

Anatomic: concerned with anatomy, concerned with dissection, related to the structure of an organism...

It’s been ten years now since Afro Celt Sound System began their journey, pioneering an expressive musical path that fused world music and electronica. With each of their albums, they’ve delved deeper into sound and into themselves. In that decade their four albums and a remix collection have sold a staggering 1.2 million albums and contributed to the soundtrack of the Oscar-nominated Hotel Rwanda.

Afro Celts Sound System are:

Simon Emmerson - guitars, keyboards and programming
Martin Russell - keyboards, programming and engineering
James McNally - keyboards, whistles, bodhran, accordian
Iarla O'Lionaird - vocals

Now, with Volume V: Anatomic, out on 3 October 2005, they’ve taken a profound trip into their hearts and souls and once again the Afro Celts have grown. This time six of the nine tracks began with members Martin Russell and James McNally collaborating in the studio, “with James playing the bodhran, and building from there,” Russell recalls, “so things had his rhythmic interpretation on them as a base.” From there the Afro Celt Magic took over as each of the band members added their unique signatures in the group’s London studio. N’Faly Kouyate’s kora parts interwove with Simon Emmerson’s guitar and bouzouki hooks while a rhythm section combined live and programmed beats with world class dhol, tabla and talking drum, and McNally’s virtuosic multi-instrumentalism layered in whistle tunes and top line pipe melodies with keyboards and guitars. Finally, with all the pieces in place, the massive tapestry of sound was bound together and brought into focus by Russell and Mass's keyboard and drum programming.

“The way we make music is by presenting an organic whole out of millions of minute parts,” says Simon Emmerson. “We’re very proud of this record.” It has, he observes, “more of a live feel. That gives the sound a lot more air and openness, and we programme around that. There’s as much drum programming as on the other albums, but it’s more sympathetic to what we’re playing.”

Of course, they can still make a fierce, inimitable groove, as the title track and ‘Dhol Dogs’ (which started as one of Mass’s breakbeat club tracks) demonstrate perfectly, but Anatomic also contains the most exquisite songs of the band’s career - like the delicate African colours of ‘Sené’ and Ó Lionáird’s caressingly lovely ‘Beautiful Rain’.

“I had it written before I went to bed. We got up early and recorded it,” Ó Lionáird remembers. “We laid down the vocal and basic rhythm track at my house, then they took it back and there was programming and some percussive elements that I thought were great. It’s complete.”

It’s the latest step in a groundbreaking journey. Back in 1995 the idea of bringing Celtic and African sounds together with electronic dance grooves seemed revolutionary. But to producer Simon Emmerson, who’d worked with Senegalese star Baaba Maal, among many others, ex-Pogue James McNally, producer, engineer and keyboard player Martin Russell, and Irish sean-nós singer Iarla Ó Lionáird it was a concept bursting with possibilities that they started to explore on their debut, Sound Magic.

“When we came together we were all speaking different languages and I felt we got lucky that so many people created magic,” recalls McNally. “After the first album worked, we had to figure out how we did it. That’s where we had to open the can of who we were and could we work together.”

Their third album, 2001’s Further in Time, was a turning point for the Afro Celts. Their global, danceable grooves had already won them a worldwide audience. But they’d also become strong, sophisticated songwriters, as they showed on the number one AAA hit ‘When You’re Falling’ with its Peter Gabriel vocal.

With appearances on Conan O’Brien and David Letterman, and a major tour of America lined up, the Afro Celts were set to go to the next level. Then the tragedy of 9/11 happened, and the world that had been rapidly opening up for the band suddenly shut down. Yet out of misfortune came a blessing.

“If we’d had the success that seemed likely,” Emmerson says, “we’d have been chasing our tails trying to write another radio hit and we’d never have made Seed.”

Seed took the band in a different, more transparent direction, where confident songwriting and sparkling acoustic playing moved above subtle programming. It built perfectly on all they’d done before.

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