l

Kirpi - The Song (INSTRMENTAL MUSIC WITH CLARINET)

Posted By MiOd On Thursday, January 12, 2012 0 comments

Turkish clarinet player Bulent Altinbas, has assembled an intriguing collection of ethnic jazz in The Song, but listeners have to get past three opening techno/ambient songs of dubious value to get there. The initial tracks are so at odds with the rest that it's hard to explain them, aside from an ill-advised attempt at broadening the recording's commercial appeal.

Altinbas, 34, performing under the nickname of "Kirpi" ("hedgehog" in English), started playing Turkish classical on clarinet as a child and has since expanded into modern music with many of the country's better-known artists. His tonal command is unquestionable in excellence and range, from rich low moans that are almost choral to thin vocal highs, and where they anchor the songs is where the album shines.

The way to appreciate this album, in fact, is to play it in reverse order—a one mouse-click operation on a computer—which is what I did after the initial listen. This put the eight-minute "Hicaz Improvisation" on top, a classic and masterful demonstration of the clarinet's longtime presence in Turkey's ethical and classical music with minimal ambient backing. The bit of beat appearing on "One Last Time" seamlessly blends into the background, with an ensemble of players collaborating on this concept.

A dreamy synth ambiance clashes a bit thickly with Altinbas, on "First Night Of Longing," where his role is primarily lyrical rather than improvisational, giving it the lite presence associated with soprano saxes and smooth jazz radio in the US. But "Clarinet And Piano" proves him capable of commendable ballads, and one can almost hear each player reaching for and clinging to the other's diversely verbose lines (Altinbas goes for the higher tones, resulting in a much more wailing and mournful quality). "The Song Of Angels" splits the difference, high and mournful, but synth-heavy and scant on innovation.

Listening this way I simply quit after the modern/traditional beat clash of "Teardrop," which incorporates about as much techo as AltinbaÅŸ or most ears can absorb comfortably. He solos over it with the grace of a decent smooth fusion player, offering an upbeat if not inspirational escape. The three "final" songs aren't worthy of individual scrutiny.

The Song is a notable step down from Altinbas previous Husn-u Klarnet, which scores highly artistically and commercially. (I found it among a scant collection of kitschy tourist-oriented albums at the airport in Istanbul, and its depth of traditional authentic tonality and modern compositional complexity is exceptional. It's also worth noting he has an earlier live double album, Live in Constantinople, that overdoes the electronics.) But Turkish jazz isn't exactly overflowing in US record bins, so those who want to hear AltinbaÅŸ can check out The Song and know they're hearing at least some of what has earned him so much acclaim at home.

(01). The Song , Bu sarki
(02). Spell , Büyü
(03). My name is kirpi , Benim adım kirpi
(04). Teardrop , Gözyasi
(05). Wind's melody , Rüzgarin melodisi
(06). Never ending longing , Bitmeyen Özlem
(07). The song of angels , Meleklerin Sarkisi
(08). Clarinet and piano , Klarnet&Piyano;
(09). First night of longing , Hasretin ilk gecesi
(10). One last time , Son defa
(11). Hicaz improvisations , Hicaz dogaclama

FLAC (EAC Rip): 300 MB | MP3 - 320 kbs: 140 MB | Scans

Archives have 5% of the information for restoration

FLAC
Part 1 | Part 2

OR MP3 320 kbps
HERE

Baghdad Ensemble - Music from Mesopotamia

Posted By MiOd On Thursday, January 12, 2012 0 comments

Track Listings
--------------
1. Samai Nahawand - 5:41
Comp.: Munir Bashir

2. Maqam al-Dasht - 8:24 Traditional

3. Je Mali Wali - 6:27 Trad.
arr.: Jamil Bashir

4. Shurouq - 8:17 Traditional

5. Mata al-Leka - 9:09
Comp.: Raed K. Shamson

6. Maqam al-Ajam - 8:11 Tradional

7. Longa Farah Fazah - 3:48
Comp.: Georg Meshel

8. Baghdad - 8:50
Comp.: Munir Bashir

Raed Khoshaba Shamson: Oud
Bassem Hawar: Djoze
Kassim Mohammed: Santur
Abdel Ali Djasouli: Tabla, Bendir, Riqq

FLAC (EAC Rip): 340 MB | MP3 - 320 kbs: 150 MB | Scans

Archives have 5% of the information for restoration

FLAC
Part 1 | Part 2

OR MP3 320 kbps
HERE

Michael Askill With Omar Faruk Tekbilek – Fata Morgana

Posted By MiOd On Thursday, January 12, 2012 0 comments

Musical inspiration is a tricky thing. It is hard to plan for; sometimes, it just happens. It certainly happened when percussionist Michael Askill met the Turkish multi-instrumentalist Omar Faruk Tekbilek for the first time in an Australian broadcasting studio. Askill is one of the finest percussionists in Australia; Tekbilek plays flutes, reeds, lutes, and percussion. With a trio of additional percussionists, these two musicians created an exhilarating romp through the musical cultures of the Near East, the Pacific Rim, West Africa, and Western jazz or classical music. Fata Morgana captures the spontaneity and joy of the music-making process - something usually missing from studio recordings.
Askill and Tekbilek collaborated on most of the compositions. Some, like Under Desert Stars, evoke the nocturnal music rituals of the desert; others, like The Goldsmiths or the clever Sufi House, recall Tekbilek's colorful and popular collaborations with Brian Keane. The inspiration for these works developed from simple images and stories shared by the two musicians; more conventional musical decisions - instrumentation, for example, or the tempo of a piece - were left for the actual recording sessions. As a result, Fata Morgana has a strong improvisatory quality, while at the same time creating a sound world that is clearly mapped out. Fata Morgana is both exotic and accessible; even more to the point, it captures the enthusiasm of two talented musicians from opposite parts of the globe, sharing their musical explorations with each other and with the listener.

Producer and composer Michael Askill is regarded by many as Australia's finest percussionist. He is a founding member and Artistic Director of Australia's premier contemporary ensemble Synergy, a composer, producer, and the former Head of the Percussion Department at the Canberra School of Music.
For Celestial Harmonies/Black Sun Music he has recorded Australian Percussion (13085-2), Fata Morgana (13110-2) with Omar Faruk Tekbilek, Space: Music for Bells, Cymbals and Gong (13262-2) with Fritz Hauser, Shoalhaven Rise (15019-2) with Riley Lee and Michael Atherton, Free_Radicals: Music for Voice, Percussion & Didgeridoo (15027-2) with David Hudson, Alison Low Choy and Alison Eddington, Rhythm in the Abstract: Selected Pieces 1987-1999 (15031-2) and Salome (15031-2) with Omar Faruk Tekbilek.

"I have a picture I carry in my mind," Omar Faruk Tekbilek reveals. "I call it the Tree of Patience." The road to becoming a professional musician was long and winding, a journey which required a fair amount of patience and acceptance of some unusual situations.

"My first teacher taught baglama (the long-necked Turkish lute)," he explains. "He had a music store, but he also had a regular government job during the day. So he told me, come after school, open the store, and I will teach you." Working in the store, Faruk learned the intricate rhythms of Turkish music, how to read scales, and more. But if the roots of Faruk's Tree of Patience were sown at home, in the small town of Adanali, Turkey, the trunk, he explains, grew up in the big city - Istanbul.

Faruk had been studying Sufism, the mystical branch of Islam, with the thought of becoming a Sufi cleric. At 15, he quit school to become a professional musician. "But I never quit studying, though," he maintains. "In fact, I am still studying; it's endless. Music for me is not something to show off. It's my life. It's the shortest path to God. Playing is prayer for me." He went to Istanbul and at the age of 17 met the Mevlevi Dervishes, the ancient Sufi order of Turkey. He did not join the order, but felt profoundly influenced by their mystical approach to sound and to the spirit.

To date, Faruk's recordings on Celestial Harmonies are Suleyman the Magnificent, Fire Dance and Beyond the Sky (13047-2) with Brian Keane, Whirling (13086-2), Mystical Garden (13092-2), Fata Morgana (13110-2) with Michael Askill, Crescent Moon (13176-2) and Dance into Eternity: Selected Pieces 1987-1998 (13190-2).

(01). Desert Wind
(02). Aman
(03). Distant Call and March of the Janissaries
(04). Cool Water
(05). The Goldsmiths
(06). Ocean Dream 1
(07). Sufi House
(08). Boiling Water
(09). Fata Morgana
(10). Ba-La-Ma
(11). Little Janissary March
(12). Ocean Dream 2
(13). Under Desert Stars
(14). From Emptiness
(15). Desert Wind

Flac (EAC Rip): 290 MB | MP3 - 320 kbs: 140 MB | Front Cover

Archives have 5% of the information for restoration

Flac
Part 1 | Part 2

OR MP3 320 kbps
HERE

Debashish Bhattacharya - Raga Pahadi Jhinjhoti

Posted By MiOd On Tuesday, January 10, 2012 0 comments
Born in 1963 to musically inclined parents, Debashish Bhattacharya was a prodigy of Indian music, taking up the guitar in its newest incarnations as an Indian classical instrument. Playing for All India Radio by age four, Bhattacharya developed his personal style over the next 20 years or so, studying under the father of Indian classical guitar, Brij Bhushan Kabra, as well as vocalist Ajoy Chakrabarty and Ali Akbar Khan. He was given the President of India award in 1984 at the age of 21. From here, he went on to work developing the Hawaiian slide guitar into a more Indian instrument, adding chikaris and sympathetic strings, and eventually coming out with a 24-string instrument based on the old Hawaiian six-string. This is universally regarded as the highest form of the slide guitar's development anywhere, making Bhattacharya one of the masters of the instrument, especially when considering his amazing abilities in playing Indian forms on it. Since gaining his renown, he's worked on a number of guitar tours and multicultural projects, most notably with John McLaughlin's Shakti and a number of projects with slide guitar master Bob Brozman. In 2003 Bhattacharya released Mahima with Brozman, fusing Hawaiian and Indian music.

1. Raga Pahadi Jhinjhoti - Alap, Jor & Jhala
2. Raga Pahadi Jhinjhoti - Madhya Gat In Jhaptal
3. Raga Pahadi Jhinjhoti - Drut Gat In Tintal

Debashish Bhattacharya (Slide Guitar)
Swapan Chaudhuri (Tabla)

FLAC (EAC Rip): 310 MB | MP3 - 320 kbs: 210 MB | Scans

Archives have 5% of the information for restoration

FLAC
Part 1 | Part 2

OR MP3 320 kbps
Part 1 | Part 2

Manitas de Plata - Gypsy Flamenco

Posted By MiOd On Tuesday, January 10, 2012 0 comments

Manitas de Plata was born in a Gypsy (Gitano) caravan in Sète in southern France. He became famous by playing each year at the Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer Gypsy pilgrimage in Camargue, where he was recorded live by Deben Bhattacharya. Manitas de Plata only agreed to play in public ten years after the death of Django Reinhardt, unanimously considered the king of gypsy guitarists. One of his recordings earned him a letter by Jean Cocteau acclaiming him as a creator.

Upon hearing him play at Arles in 1964, Pablo Picasso is said to have exclaimed "that man is of greater worth than I am!" and proceeded to draw on the guitar.

Manitas de Plata became really famous only after a photography exhibition in New York, organized by his friend Lucien Clergue. He had recorded his first official album in the chapel of Arles in France for the Connoisseur Society Label sold through the Book of the Month Club. This was a popular double LP that brought him to the attention of an American audience. An American manager obtained a booking for him to play a concert in Carnegie Hall in New York in December 1965.

In New York, Manitas de Plata, who was illiterate, represented Europe at the yearly gala of the United Nations.

Since 1967 Manitas de Plata has been touring the whole world and recording discs. He played with the dancer Nina Corti. In 1968 he played at the Royal Variety Performance in London.

Despite the fact that he was famous, he was also known for disrespecting certain rhythmic rules (the compas) that are essential in flamenco.

(01). Alegrias clasicas
(02). Seguiriyas
(03). Farruca
(04). Jota
(05). Malaguenas flamencas
(06). Soleares gitanas
(07). Granadinas
(08). Tarantas
(09). Bulerias
(10). Saeta
(11). Levantes
(12). Tarantas y bulerias
(13). Moritas moras
(14). Tarantas
(15). Sevillanas
(16). Fandangos

MP3 320 kbps including Front Cover

Part One
Part two

Vishwa Mohan Bhatt - Galaxy Of Strings

Posted By MiOd On Tuesday, January 10, 2012 0 comments

Vishwa Mohan "V.M." Bhatt is one of India's most innovative musicians. The inventor of the Mohan Veena, a nineteen string modified archtop guitar with three melody strings, four drone strings and twelve sympathetic strings, Bhatt has created a sound that blends the western Hawaiian guitar with sitar, sarod and veena techniques. The first Indian musician to be awarded the "Musical Scientist award" in Banglore, India, Bhatt was praised by "Acoustic Guitar" magazine as "one of the greatest and mosty expressive slide players in the world". The "Edmonton Journal" referred to Bhatt as "an inspiration even to Western guitarists". A long time student of Ravi Shankar, Bhatt belongs to an elite group of musicians whose imeage traces back to Mughal emperor Akbar's court musician Tansen and his Hindu guru, Swarmi Haridas. In addition to six solo albums, Bhatt has recorded with Ry Cooder, Bela Fleck, Jerry Douglas, Taj Mahal and Arabian oudh player Simon Shaheen. Bhatt became the first Indian to collaborate with a Chinese musician when he toured with Erhu player Jei Bing Chen. Bhatt's collaboration with Ry Cooder, "A Meeting By The River" received a Grammy award in 1994. His collaboration with Bela Fleck and Jei Bing Chen, "Tabula Rosa", recorded in a Santa Barbara, California church in October 1994, was nominated for a Grammy. Tunes from "A Meeting By The River" and "Mumtaz Mahal", recorded with Taj Mahal, were featured on the soundtracks of films, "Two Days In The Valley" and the Oscar award-winning, "Dead Man Walking". Bhatt is a skilled composer. His composition, "Raga Ganga", was performed during celebration of India's fiftieth year of independance.

1. Raag Bageshree
2. Raag Hansaddhwani
3. Dhun Mishra Ghara
4. Raag Hem Bihag
5. Dhun Pahadi

Flac (EAC Rip): 290 MB | MP3 - 320 kbs: 165 MB | Covers

Archives have 5% of the information for restoration

Flac
Part 1 | Part 2

OR MP3 320 kbps
HERE

Afro Celt Sound System - Vol. 5 Anatomic

Posted By MiOd On Monday, January 09, 2012 0 comments

Afro Celt sound system's fifth studio album sweeps an incredible sonic range, from their unmistakably beat driven and cinematic dance epics to emotive, melodic ballads radiant with the bands trademark fusion of soaring Celtic reels and syncopated African vocals and drum. Guests include Rwanden singer Dorothee Munyaneza and Uzbeki star Sevara Nazarkhan.

Their debut album broke down many tediously outdated barriers. Now the Afro-Celts are back with another genre-bursting, non-preachy, multi-culti soundscape. There has never been anything bland or generic about the ensemble's output as their concept of one-world music is less color-blind than color-appreciative; in other words, they don't ignore our differences but celebrate them. Anatomic continues an ongoing pilgrimage of respectful collaboration, wherein Western studio mastery abuts Irish flutes and percussion, harp-like West African koras, keening bagpipes, and gutty Greek bouzoukis, all presented over a resonant, crunchy bottom with beats and electronica for days. Iarla Ó Lionáird sings in English and Gaelic, sitting in with Sevara Nazarkhan from Uzbekistan (who is lovely if disembodied on "My Secret Bliss") and Dorothee Munyaneza, a genocide survivor whose soulful pipes made such a strong impression on the soundtrack to Hotel Rwanda. As always, Simon Emmerson's guitar fulfills dual roles as a melodic vector and tireless rhythmic powerhouse.

1. When I Still Need You
2. Secret Bliss
3. Mojave
4. Sene
5. Beautiful Rain
6. Anatomic
7. Mother
8. Dhol Dogs
9. Drake

Flac tracks (EAC Rip): 400 MB | MP3 - 320 kbs: 140 MB | Front Cover

Archives have 5% of the information for restoration

Flac
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3

OR MP3 320 kbps
HERE

The Anthologies (1): Nomades En Vol Portrait - Bratsch

Posted By MiOd On Monday, January 09, 2012 0 comments

Bratsch was founded 25 years ago by Bruno Girard and Dan Gharibian. Meantime the group enjoys cult status, not only in France, but in all the other countries they have performed in. With indisputable virtuosity and a multi-faceted repertoire Bratsch have played their way into the hearts of both audiences and critics. In their atmospherically intense concerts and performances these wily masters of acoustic music allow themselves considerable scope for improvisation, while at the same time captivating audiences by their delight in playing, their humour and their spirit. Above all, Bratsch fascinate us by their daring improvisations – in principle, they play "without a net"; their music is excessive, audacious and at the same time poetic. These "marvellous improvisers" (FAZ) give free rein to their passion for the music of Central Europe not only in concert, but also on their CDs. With one ear on the East and one on the West, and a keen eye on the South, Bratsch have set out on a unique journey through musical cultures. This double CD documents some of the highlights on that journey, including new recordings made specially for this edition. In a unique way, rembetiko meets the blues, and Romanian dance music meets jazz. Eastern European traditions such as klezmer are instilled with new life, as are the roots of gypsy swing. Greek, Armenian or Neapolitan songs are intoned with soul. With their great sensitivity and subtle arrangements Bratsch create a new acoustic music which they themselves describe as "pre-traditional". The press has been highly enthusiastic about their achievements, as one quotation should suffice to illustrate: "Bratsch are surely the best at mixing jazz, klezmer, south-eastern European and Roma music." (Concerto)

Track Listings
Disc: 1
01. Sirba D'Accordéon
02. Paploma
03. Yes Kou Rimet Tchem Guidi
04. Joulik
05. A Romalei Te Djilas
06. Maminka
07. Er Nemo Klantz
08. Avreimel Der Marvikher
09. Chiar Daca Dau de Necaz
10. Joc/Hummus Blues
11. Le Rindovani
12. Maruzella
13. Nane Tsora
14. Bayat
15. Irinaki
16. Fratelli
17. Dan's Freilach
18. Dan's Freilach 2
19. Mangeur De Lune

Disc: 2
01. Doina Ivoire
02. Sirba Ivoire
03. Johnny
04. Hassapo Servico
05. Yossik
06. Rien Dans Les Poches
07. Hanane
08. Melodie Si Hora Lautareasca
09. Postor
10. To Praktorio
11. Roumskat
12. Kani Vour Djanim
13. Bi Lovengo
14. Gira Gira
15. Frago Sîryani
16. Peylet's Freilach

Flac tracks (EAC Rip): 950 MB | MP3 - 320 kbs: 430 MB | Booklet Scans

Archives have 5% of the information for restoration

Flac
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6

OR MP3 320 kbps
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3

Haji Baba Huseynov - Mugam d'Azerbaidjan

Posted By MiOd On Monday, January 09, 2012 0 comments
Hajibaba Huseynov (19 March 1919 – 24 October 1993) is one of the most famous Azeri mugham singers and teachers. He received the title of National Artist of Azerbaijan in 1991

1. Mugam Humayun
2. Improvisation Au Tar, Mode Zabol
3. Improvisation Au Tar, Mode Kharej Segah
4. Mugam Kharej Segah

320 kbps including full scans

HERE