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Something Dangerous
 
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Something Dangerous

~ Natacha Atlas
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
Price: £6.48 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
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Frequently Bought Together

Something Dangerous + Ayeshteni + Best of Natacha Atlas
Price For All Three: £19.44

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  • This item: Something Dangerous ~ Natacha Atlas

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    This item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions

  • Ayeshteni ~ Natacha Atlas

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Product details

  • Audio CD (19 May 2003)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Mantra
  • ASIN: B00008PW4M
  • Other Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 38,299 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.

Samples
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. Adam's Lullaby 5:57£0.79
Listen  2. Eye Of The Duck (Featuring Tuup and Princess Julianna) 5:55£0.79
Listen  3. Something Dangerous (Featuring Princess Julianna) 5:36£0.79
Listen  4. Janamaan (Featuring Kalia) 5:15£0.79
Listen  5. Just Like A Dream (Featuring Princess Julianna) 5:26£0.79
Listen  6. Man's World 4:39£0.79
Listen  7. Layali (Featuring Z) 3:39£0.79
Listen  8. Simple Heart (Featuring Sinead O'Connor) 4:45£0.79
Listen  9. Daymalhum 5:52£0.79
Listen10. Who's My Baby (Natacha Atlas and Niara Scarlett) 3:46£0.79
Listen11. When I Close My Eyes (Natacha Atlas and Myra Boyle) 4:31£0.79
Listen12. This Realm 3:49£0.79
Listen13. Le Printemps (For Mona) 4:25£0.79
Listen14. Like The Last Drop 8:23£0.79


Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

It's quite extraordinary how Natacha Atlas can seamlessly combine so many languages and genres. On Something Dangerous, while singing in Arabic, Hindi, English and French, she draws her musical backing from drum & bass, Parisian vaudeville, R&B, ambient dance, pop, rap and film music, and never once do her sonic movements feel remotely gratuitous. Indeed, every track on Something Dangerous is of the highest quality. In this, she's undoubtedly aided by a stellar guest-list. Atlas is more than ready to step back and leave room for a love-hungry rap from Princess Julianna ("Just like a Dream"), some punchy positivist soul from Niara Scarlett ("Who's My Baby") and an insistent lament from Sinead O'Connor ("Simple Heart"). Add to these the grand orchestrations of Jocelyn Pook, the wacky Gem keyboards of Gamal Awad and the mournful trumpet of the late Sami El Babli, plus the efforts of Jah Wobble, Count Dubulah and Transglobal Underground and you have a collection that never veers from the classy. As a round-the-world excursion, Something Dangerous has more in common with Peter Gabriel at his coffee-table easiest than with the wild wanderings of Kate Bush. Nevertheless, for those who like their chill-out music to rise above the bland, there's much here to enjoy. --Dominic Wills

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars As a German living in the Middle East I truly appreciate this kind of music!, 29 Jun 2008
By amazon reader "amazon reader" - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   

Natacha Atlas released her first solo LP, Diaspora, in the summer of '95, and in time honored fashion, the critics scrambled for superlatives. The LP saw Natacha combining the dubby, beat-driven global dance of her longtime associates TransGlobal Underground, with the more traditional work of Arabic musicians like Tunisian singer-songwriter Walid Rouissi and Egyptian composer and ud-master Essam Rashad. The result was a collection of songs of love and yearning which genuinely fused West and East. Her second LP, Halim, sees Natacha exploring further her deeply felt affinity with Arabic musical heritage.

Natacha Atlas was born in Belgium, the daughter of an Egyptian father and an English mother. Natacha grew up in the Moroccan suburbs of Brussels, becoming fluent in French, Spanish, Arabic and English, immersing herself in Arabic culture, Egyptian "shaabi" pop and learning from childhood the raks sharki - belly dance - techniques that she uses to devastating effect on stage today. Even more striking than Natacha's dance moves, though, is her voice, which swoops and soars, blending unfettered talent and the complexities of Arabic musical theory into a burst of sound that is thrilling, immediate and evocative.

Natacha moved to England as a teenager and became Northampton's first Arabic rock singer. Since then has involved herself in a wide variety of musical projects. Dividing her time between the UK and Brussels, she sang in a variety of Arabic and Turkish nightclubs, and spent a brief stint in a Belgian salsa band called Mandanga. As she shuttled between Northampton and Brussels, however, she began to attract the attention of the Balearic beat crew ¡Loca! and Jah Wobble, then assembling his Invaders of the Heart. Wobble was looking for an eclectic Middle Eastern singer and fell in love with her voice.

In '91, both these projects bore fruit. Timbal by ¡Loca! started out as a track on Nation Records' Fuse Two compilation and became a massive club hit, while Wobble's Rising Above Bedlam - five tracks which Natasha co-wrote - attracted much critical acclaim and a Mercury award nomination. The success of Timbal cemented Natacha's relationship with the ground-breaking Nation Label, who introduced her to TransGlobal Underground (TGU), at that time enjoying Top 40 success with the anthemic Templehead.

First guesting with them in 1991, she became, two years, later, a member of the core quartet of Transglobal, as lead singer and belly-dancer (the latter not some kind of limp tourist-pleasing wiggle but the real raq sharki). A couple of years later, it was the band's Tim Whelan, Hamid ManTu and Nick Page (a.k.a. Count Dubulah, now of Temple of Sound) who helped her to make her first solo album, Diaspora.

In parallel with the success of her solo albums she remained a full-time TransGlobal member, and TransGlobal constituted her backing band, until they left Nation in 1999, and they have remained allies throughout her subsequent career. Atlas has appeared on most TGU albums and its members are usually involved in the production of her solo albums.

Diaspora was released (in the UK by Beggars Banquet/Mantra, as are all her albums) in 1995. It combined the dubby, beat-driven global dance approach of TransGlobal with the more traditional work of Arabic musicians, and the result was a critically acclaimed collection of songs of love and yearning.

1997's Halim followed, and then Gedida in 1999 , both intelligently and naturally fusing Middle Eastern and European styles, and delighting an ever-increasing audience in both territories.

2000 saw the release of The Remix Collection, in which material from the first three albums was given the treatment by a variety of remixers, including Talvin Singh, Banco de Gaia, Youth, 16B, Klute, the Bullitnuts, TJ Rehmi, Spooky and TransGlobal.

Natacha's fourth album Ayeshteni was released in 2001. It bears, as its only English-language song, a particularly splendid example of how this singer can take on a classic and cast new light and excitement on it - a mighty rendering of Screamin' Jay Hawkins' "I Put A Spell On You."

2002's album, The Natacha Atlas and Marc Eagleton Project's Foretold in the Language of Dreams, was a considerable departure. No beats; a calm, shimmering album, involving a slightly smaller cast than usual, including Syrian qanun master Abdullah Chhadeh, whom Natacha married in 1999.

Apart from her own projects, Natacha remains very much in demand as a guest singer for the recordings and performances of a remarkably wide range of musicians, including Nitin Sawhney, Jocelyn Pook, the Indigo Girls, FunDaMental, Ghostland, Abdel Ali Slimani, Toires, !Loca, Musafir, Sawt El Atlas, Franco Battiato, Juno Reactor, Dhol Foundation, Jah Wobble, Jaz Coleman, Apache Indian (on his chart hit Arranged Marriage), Mick Karn, Jean-Michel Jarre's Millennium Night spectacular at the Pyramids, Jonathan Demme's new film The Truth About Charlie, and David Arnold's film scores including Stargate and Die Another Day.

The success of her earlier work, both in the Middle East and in the West, including a top ten hit in France, has shown just how alluring a musical bridging of the divide can be; the exotic Arabic scales, rhythms and textures open up new horizons for 4/4-entrapped western pop and create possibilities for the enormous and varied Middle Eastern music scene to communicate outside itself.

For a while, at least, there were signs of that happening in France when, alongside crossover success for Rai singer Khaled and others, Natacha Atlas had a top ten hit with her Arabicised version of Mon Amie La Rose, and won Best Female Singer at the Victoire de la Musique Awards.

Natacha Atlas has been spending more and more time in her father's homeland, Egypt. There, she works with members of TransGlobal Underground and Egyptian musicians. Her album, Ayeshteni, was recorded and composed there.

In 2003, she released Something Dangerous, a solo album of contrasts and collaborations, in which she zips Middle Eastern music straight to the heart of current UK pop, pulling in as she does so dance music, rap, drum'n'bass, RandB, Hindi pop, film music and French chanson.

On Something Dangerous (2003), Atlas not only combines more styles than ever, but for the first time on an Atlas album it features guest vocalists, and a great deal more singing in English than she's done before. But it's no abandonment of Arabic; she embraces and combines the two languages, as well as Hindi and French. There is a collaboration with English composer Jocelyn Pook (who, among other things, created the score for Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut), it has Atlas' Arabic vocal lushly surrounded by Pook's western classical orchestration for the Prague Symphony Orchestra. Another guest is West Indian Princess Julianna, whom Atlas met when they were both guesting with Temple of Sound.
On the Arabic side, Atlas used Abdullah Chhadeh and one of Egypt's finest shaabi trumpet players, the late Sami El Babli (deceased in a car crash shortly after the recording), to whom the track is dedicated. Atlas and Sinéad O'Connor, who last recorded together on John Reynolds', Justin Adams' and Caroline Dale's 2002 Ghostland album, trade aphorisms in 'Simple Heart".

With Mish Maoul (MNTCD 1038), released in April 2006, Atlas' career came full circle to touch base with her roots. The new album harked back in its sound and traditions to the music she grew up hearing in the Moroccan suburb of Brussels, particularly when the Golden Sound Studio Orchestra of Cairo makes its entrance. It also reunited her again with Temple of Sound's Nick Page (aka Count Dubulah), with whom she first worked in TransGlobal Underground and who helped produce her very first solo album Diaspora.
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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars something dangerous something delightful, 29 Jul 2003
Natascha Atlas has surpassed herself on her new album, i have all her previous releases and ,as always, her almost ethereal voice never wavers from perfection.
'Something Dangerous' is infinitely more 'street' than previous releases fusing equal amounts of reggae/traditional/funk and,surprisingly,Hindi-There are no limits to Atlas's talents!
Tracks like 'Jaanaman' and 'Eye of the Duck' are outstandingly different from her previous work and experimental-'Le Printemps' and 'Man's World' uses her varied and special vocal range to the full.
'Love thing' fuses breakbeat,'Daymalhum' is electronica.
Consistently Natacha becomes more experimental as an artist however her music is fresh, wonderful and as enchanting as always.A must have for all Natascha fans and equally valuable to those who wish to acquaint themselves with Natascha's finest work yet.
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Too Many Cooks...., 27 May 2003
By D. Layton (Watford, Herts United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I dont think this is a bad album as such, but I was disappointed with it. I have played it several times, and I think all the guests and co-writers (& theres loads of the buggers) have diluted Natachas considerable talent , making a lot of the tracks sound too much like everyone else.
I have nothing against Princess Julianna or R&B etc, but I just dont enjoy the mix on this album. I love the middle eastern feel of Natachas earlier albums (Ayeshteni being my favourite), and this sound has been watered down too far on this album, for my liking at least.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Something Dangerous - Haga Khatira
As a huge Natacha Atlas fan, I had this CD ordered and delivered on it's day of release (Thanks Amazon!)... Read more
Published on 9 Aug 2004 by classy_diva

5.0 out of 5 stars OOooh Baby!
I have Ayeshtani by the same artist which is fab. but this one is even better, if in a slightly more dance music vein. Read more
Published on 20 May 2003

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