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Jollymusic - Jollybar FLAC album

Tracklist Hide Credits

1 Intro 1:07
2 Piano 2:43
3 DiscoDisco
Human Beatbox – E. Vivaldi VeraVocals – V. Raimondi*
5:22
4 Joollyo
Bass – V. Raimondi*Bass, Guitar – L. RaimondiVoice [Human Cuica] – I. Neri
5:00
5 Les Figalles 1:00
6 With Love
Percussion – V. Raimondi*Whistling [Whisteling] – R. Politi
3:40
7 Talco Uno 4:42
8 Drago 4:01
9 CrazySimon 0:19
10 Talco Due 4:46
11 Kfun 3:40
12 Crociera 5:12
13 LaDolceVita 1:42
14 Daddy 5:16
15 TapeJam 1:51
16 Borotalco 4:17
17 Reversi
Bass [Uncredited] – L. RaimondiVocals – S. Del Cado
5:05
18 Anicafill 0:45
19 Angel 10:30

Credits

  • Artwork By [Concept, Graphic Design And The Original "jolly" Font] – Santo & Jolly (E. Baldetti)
  • Guitar – V. Raimondi* (tracks: 3, 4, 14, 19)
  • Photography [Original] – Santo & BeboArt2000 (E. Baldetti & R. Politi)
  • Written-By, Composed By – Francesco De Bellis, Mario Pierro

Notes

Recorded in Numidia Recording Studio.
Category reads: NAT2118CD
On back sleeve, S. Del Cado is wrongly credited for vocals on track 18 "Anicafill".

Sleeve notes: "Vynil is an expressive medium. You can reconstruct years of musical expressions buying it in second hand for a very reasonable price, thus reconstructing years of musical expression typical of the place where you live. Vynil is expressive because it's more physical than CDs, and if you have a nice turntable you can use old records as instruments to express your feeling. The music in this record is created thru old vynils, turntable, compact cassettes, digital and analog technology, and some other instruments as well...each of them has its own sound and expressive power... jollymusic"

(all mispellings of vinyl are as on sleeve)

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
NAT2118 Jollymusic Jollybar ‎(2xLP, Album) Nature Records NAT2118 Italy 2000
ILLLP002 Jollymusic Jolly Bar ‎(CD, Album, Ltd) Illustrious ILLLP002 UK 2001
CDSAMP002 Jollymusic Jollybar ‎(CD, Album, Promo) Illustrious CDSAMP002 UK & Europe Unknown


Jollymusic - Jollybar FLAC album

Musician performer: Jollymusic

Title: Jollybar

Country: Italy

Date of release: 2000

Style: Downtempo, Experimental, Disco

Genre: Electronic

Size FLAC: 1139 mb

Rating: 4.8 / 5

Votes: 113

Other Formats: MPC VQF MP4 MMF VOX AU MOD

Related to Jollymusic - Jollybar FLAC Albums

Tinavio
The Italian duo Jollymusic only released a single album, JOLLYBAR, and it's too bad, since the album is full of weirdo disco-house. The cut-up samples of the "Intro" have an 'anything goes' attitude, and when the gentle chords of "Piano" come in, you know you're in another world entirely. "DiscoDisco" starts bringing the groove and dreaminess, while maintaining a warmth from the vinyl crackle that stays constant throughout. "Joollyo" slows things down or a more funk-inspired piece, and "With Love" has the quality of an early Air track. "Talco Uno" is all about the sunny vibes, while its brother, "Talco Due" is pure disco oddness, and "Crociera" picks up the pace considerably. "Daddy' has a denseness in its moody protest-folksy way, and "Borotalco" has some mystery in its funk initially before brightening up considerably. "Angel" closes the album on a brisk, glittery disco track, though it seems to close on a locked groove and more warped samples. Indeed, the best equivalent for this album would be The Avalanches' SINCE I LEFT YOU, which is high praise. But it's well-earned.
Tinavio
The Italian duo Jollymusic only released a single album, JOLLYBAR, and it's too bad, since the album is full of weirdo disco-house. The cut-up samples of the "Intro" have an 'anything goes' attitude, and when the gentle chords of "Piano" come in, you know you're in another world entirely. "DiscoDisco" starts bringing the groove and dreaminess, while maintaining a warmth from the vinyl crackle that stays constant throughout. "Joollyo" slows things down or a more funk-inspired piece, and "With Love" has the quality of an early Air track. "Talco Uno" is all about the sunny vibes, while its brother, "Talco Due" is pure disco oddness, and "Crociera" picks up the pace considerably. "Daddy' has a denseness in its moody protest-folksy way, and "Borotalco" has some mystery in its funk initially before brightening up considerably. "Angel" closes the album on a brisk, glittery disco track, though it seems to close on a locked groove and more warped samples. Indeed, the best equivalent for this album would be The Avalanches' SINCE I LEFT YOU, which is high praise. But it's well-earned.