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<rss version="2.0"><channel><title>New Music From Mouth Music on Calabash Music</title><description></description><link>http://afropopshop.org</link><item><title>Shorelife</title><description>&lt;img src='http://files.afropopshop.org/images/13926/shorelife.jpg'&gt;Shorelife is an album ahead of its time, yet entirely involving and completely accessible.</description><pubDate>Fri, 09 Jan 2009 14:39:18 -0600</pubDate><link>http://mouthmusic.afropopshop.org/#album_13926</link></item><item><title>Mo-Di</title><description>&lt;img src='http://files.afropopshop.org/images/13944/modi.jpg'&gt;The title "mo-di" is the phonetic of one of the song titles; 'Maudit' which, apparently, is French for cursed. This is a very splendid album with depths that reveal the talent of Mouth Music.</description><pubDate>Fri, 09 Jan 2009 14:39:18 -0600</pubDate><link>http://mouthmusic.afropopshop.org/#album_13944</link></item><item><title>Blue Door Green Sea</title><description>&lt;img src='http://files.afropopshop.org/'&gt;Mouth Music And Mairi Macinnes</description><pubDate>Fri, 09 Jan 2009 14:39:18 -0600</pubDate><link>http://mouthmusic.afropopshop.org/#album_13918</link></item><item><title>Mouth Music</title><description>&lt;img src='http://files.afropopshop.org/images/13896/mouth_music.jpg'&gt;Unique and radical: the impact of this album still reverberates today. The name of both the album and the project comes from a literal translation of the Gaelic 'puirt a beul': a style of vocal music which developed as the English tried (unsuccessfully) to ban the use of instruments in Scotland. And here is the sound of a tradition: unembarrassed, needing to make no excuses and totally at ease with itself in the modern world. </description><pubDate>Fri, 09 Jan 2009 14:39:18 -0600</pubDate><link>http://mouthmusic.afropopshop.org/#album_13896</link></item></channel></rss>
