流水般的旋律,淳正的非洲节拍,音乐讲述了一个世界的故事,故事中有强烈的画面,故事描绘了一段不见头尾的旅程。跟着Arunda的步伐,我们得以在黑的夜里找寻阳光的痕迹。 经年累月之后的Keiya,对为自己写曲更感兴趣。在为多个工作室作过制片人,乐器演奏家,作曲家之后,他用来自非洲大陆的灵感,为自己打造了一张CD。Keiya想让自己的音乐听起来新鲜,丰富多彩且旋律优美。感谢现代的电子技术,使他能试验不同的音乐合成,以达到令人惊叹的音乐效果。
by Chris Nickson
Full of melody and invention, Sun Walker proves to be an album of surprises. There's plenty of lush instrumentation on the first three cuts, which offer a meditative feel of minor synthesizer chords over rhythms that stay polite. But then, with "Hello Sun Hayee" it turns positively jaunty for a track. By the time of "Bazaar," it's taken a turn that's, well, bizarre -- straight into some very good and authentic dancehall reggae that's add odds with the prior feel of the disc, including some excellent vocals. And from there the energy level seems to increase, with "Turquoise Drums" sporting a light dance feel, and "The Prodigal Son," with its didgeridoo sample, turning to a percussion-fest of sorts, before calming down again with "First Light." While based on a somewhat dubious, naive story (included in the booklet), the music from this Belgian artist proves to be very satisfying. The melodies flow with style and thought, the tracks develop well, and the occasional left-field addition breaks things up well. Keiya knows what he wants to do, and achieves it.