Oyaya!

~ Release group by Angélique Kidjo

Album

ReleaseArtistFormatTracksCountry/DateLabelCatalog#Barcode
Official
Oyaya!Angélique KidjoCD13
  • DE2004-05-03
Columbia (Sony Music, worldwide except JP; formerly owned by CBS between 1938–1990 within US/CA/MX)516441 25099751644125
Oyaya!Angélique KidjoCD13
  • US2004-05-04
Columbia (Sony Music, worldwide except JP; formerly owned by CBS between 1938–1990 within US/CA/MX)CK 89053696998905320
Oyaya!Angélique KidjoCD13
Columbia (Sony Music, worldwide except JP; formerly owned by CBS between 1938–1990 within US/CA/MX)516441200, COL 516441 25099751644125
Oyaya!Angélique KidjoCD14
Sony Music (global brand, excluding JP, owned by Sony Music Entertainment)SAN 51632825099751632825
Oyaya!Angélique KidjoDigital Media14Saint George5099751632825

Relationships

Discogs:https://www.discogs.com/master/703259 [info]
reviews:https://www.bbc.co.uk/music/reviews/r8jw [info]
other databases:https://rateyourmusic.com/release/album/angelique-kidjo/oyaya/ [info]
Allmusic:https://www.allmusic.com/album/mw0000697871 [info]

CritiqueBrainz Reviews

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Most Recent

With her sophomore Sony release comes a theme with a broader international appeal from this gutsy and powerful West African (Beninoise) vocalist/songwriter. Those expecting an African-roots approach might be slightly disappointed as the sheer strength of the overall sound quality and musicianship renders 'l'authenticite' obsessives somewhat redundant in this instance.

The mostly latino session players are highly adept at turning their hand to virtually any style here on Oyaya. "Seyin Djuro" is an afro-salsa in the style of Ricardo Lemvo, whilst "Congoleo", the song picked for single release, is a joyful guitar-led porro with a Colombian 'costeno' feel. "'Bala Bala" is a Cesaria Evoria-ish bolero-son whilst"Oulala" isa pan-Caribbean wake-up call in the Juan Luis Guerra mould, with even a touch of steel-pan (a real one, thank goodness, not the all-too-common synthesiser version).

"Congo Habanera" is solid Miami-style latino pop (I thought of Gloria Estefan in her Mi Tierrra period). "Adja Dada" is an old-school mambo (i.e. slowish tempo)and "Djovamin Yi" takes us back to the afro-salsa style of the opener. Angelique's home-from-home - Paris - shines out strong on a sexy zouk-love tune ''Dje Dje L'Aye". "Macumba", belying the Afro-Brazilian promise in its title, comes over as funky, modern Cuban piece.

The only nod to Benin tradition is in the closing "Bissimilai", a folkloric female-choir song.

Angelique Kidjo has always been too strong a personality to corral in the dusty 'traditional world music' racks or - just as limiting - a series of 4/4 club-remix plodders. A big thumbs-up to her producers Steve Berlin and Alberto Salas, then,for such a radical and successful repositioning of her larger-than-life style and talent.