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<atom:feed xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><atom:id>http://afropopshop.org/</atom:id><atom:title>New Music From Zambush on Calabash Music</atom:title><atom:updated>2008-08-29T09:35:39Z</atom:updated><atom:link href="http://afropopshop.org//world/publisher/artistView/action/getfeed/item_id/24002/feedtype/102/output/feed/atom.xml" rel="self"/><atom:author><atom:name>The Calabash Music Team</atom:name><atom:email>support@calabashmusic.com</atom:email></atom:author><atom:entry><atom:title>Zambush Vol. 2</atom:title><atom:id>http://zambush.afropopshop.org/#album_33683</atom:id><atom:updated>2006-11-17T07:12:16Z</atom:updated><atom:link href="http://zambush.afropopshop.org/#album_33683"/><atom:summary>Music from Zambush Vol. 2</atom:summary><atom:content type="html"><![CDATA[<img src='http://files.afropopshop.org/images/33683/zambush_vol._2.jpg'>Three Zambian legends: the sophisticated group The Big Gold Six featuring the jazzy guitar of Bestin Mwanza, the sweet singer from the province Emmanuel Mulemena, and the cosmopolitan Nashil Pichen Kazembe. Now we can finally hear how they sounded - and what we hear are three different great vocal sounds and three different great guitar sounds, that could only have come from Zambia. So once again put yourself in a dancing mode and let yourself be zambushed by this beautiful music!<br/>]]></atom:content></atom:entry><atom:entry><atom:title>Zambush Vol 1</atom:title><atom:id>http://zambush.afropopshop.org/#album_24004</atom:id><atom:updated>2005-04-12T10:55:32Z</atom:updated><atom:link href="http://zambush.afropopshop.org/#album_24004"/><atom:summary>Music from Zambush Vol 1</atom:summary><atom:content type="html"><![CDATA[<img src='http://files.afropopshop.org/images/24004/zambush_vol_1.jpg'>On Zambush Vol 1, One hears echoes of Congolese rumba's lilt, and the muted guitar favored by many Zimbabwean acts of this era, but these songs are distinctive. Many feature a ferociously fast 12/8 beat, but lyrical, harmonized vocal melodies and relaxed lead guitar lines give the music a deceptively laid-back veneer, as on the Serenje Kalindula Band's &quot;Umwana Wanshiwa,&quot; a moralistic song about an orphan.]]></atom:content></atom:entry></atom:feed>
