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Cult Cargo: Belize City Boil Up
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Cult Cargo: Belize City Boil Up
Current price: $22.99
Barnes and Noble
Cult Cargo: Belize City Boil Up
Current price: $22.99
Loading Inventory...
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In Belize, "boil up" is a traditional stew made out of such ingredients as pigs tails, bananas, eggs, plantains, yams, and whole fish. As the liner notes point out, it's an apt metaphor for the music contained in this delightfully quirky compilation -- though the musical recipe adds up to something that many will probably find much more enticing than a stew made out of bananas and fish. The Belizean music scene of the 1960s and '70s was greatly enriched by the scattering of refugees to the U.S. following Hurricane Hattie in 1961. Aching for music from home, members of the Belizean diaspora created a demand for home-grown recordings in a variety of styles, all of them imbued with a certain Belizean something -- and bands like the
, the
and the
rushed to fill the void with R&B, soul, reggae, calypso, and Latin 45s that sound utterly of their era, but feature something just a bit different around the edges of their sound as well. The
' version of
's
is a bit too fast for reggae and a bit to hard-edged for ska; the
's rendition of
has a slippery drum beat that sounds a bit like something from New Orleans and a rubbery guitar part that hints at rocksteady; the
' take on the theme from
is spooky and weird, with a buzzsaw guitar poking relentlessly at a haunted-house Farfisa organ -- also, it's the theme from
, which fact is spooky and weird enough. There's no denying the kitsch element to these recordings, but many of them succeed without irony in their own right, and the whole album will be a sure-fire hit at any hipster party. Excellent. ~ Rick Anderson