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Afro Celt Sound System: Music Without Borders

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SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

African and Celtic music might seem to be an odd mix, but on Monday at Vynyl the London-based Afro Celt Sound System used the combination to produce a savory world music feast.

The seven musicians (and one dancer) played a set that moved seamlessly from one tune to another--most of them from the group’s current album, “Release” (on Real World)--triggering enthusiastic shouts and wildly eclectic dancing from a packed crowd at the Hollywood club. And with good reason.

Despite its multiple sources, the music was a dazzling entertainment, its foundation of galvanic dance rhythms overlaid with sounds that shifted easily from vocals (in two languages) to instrumentals.

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The rhythms, all mesmerizing, constantly morphed from African percussiveness to loping Celtic dances. At one point, there was a duel between drummers playing the Irish bodhran and the African djembe talking drum. Building in intensity, the skirmish was suddenly amplified by the cavernous sounds of the Indian dhol, from a player who had moved to a position in the audience.

Similarly dramatic events surfaced frequently throughout the evening. Leader Simon Emmerson has crafted the Afro Celts into a complete entertainment package with constantly mutating light patterns, frequent shifts of personnel and constant interaction among the performers.

The result at Vynyl was stunning, a presentation by a musical ensemble that is actually delivering on the promise of a musical world without boundaries.

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