Radio Minorias

Uniendo Culturas/Uniting Cultures

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Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Cairo. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Cairo. Mostrar todas las entradas

viernes, 16 de febrero de 2018

febrero 16, 2018

TootArd - Laissez Passer

Famously, Rachid Taha’s first band was called Carte De Séjour, alluding to the difficulties of residents of France who were nonetheless less than citizens. Similarly, TootArd’s album title makes their status into a statement. They are from the Golan Heights, and therefore live in Israeli territory (and indeed record in Jersusalem) without being citizens of any nation. “Laissez Passer”, sings Hasan Nahkleh on the opening track; “your name . . . your image isn’t familiar . . . your roots are unknown . . . your homeland is unknown.” The music blusters in like the Touareg desert blues known simply as “Guitar”, fidgety and riff-driven.

TootArd play an engaging mixture of desert blues, dub reggae and all-out psychedelic rock. After the opening track Nahkleh plays his electric guitar like an oud, with a sour sound on “Musiqa”, with its stop-start rhythm eventually mutating into jaunty reggae; at the start of “A’sfur” a lengthy vamp owes as much to Knopfler as to Cairo.

His bandmates are his brother Rami, on bass guitar and percussion, and Amr Mdah on saxophones. Rami provides an off-kilter clatter of percussion on “Sahra”, its gritty guitar and reed interplay occasionally broken by a poetic vignette about “a night from a thousand nights”. The music falls away into a steady handclap. “A beautiful brunette”, the band chant, “her smile flamed my heart with a spark”. Then Mdah’s saxophone lifts into an airy solo.

This is music with its eyes on the far horizon. “Rebel, rebel, oh bird”, sings Nahkleh on “A’sfur”, “fly high/so there are no barriers in the world and the tall wall is demolished.” Later, on the yearning “Nasma Jabalyia”, his guitar echoing like a mirage, he sings to a turtledove and a mountain breeze. TootArd proclaim a mountain music open to anyone “from Baniyas and Hula plains to the Qarn and the Hareer valley . . . ” This is internationalist music, never more so than on the closing, wordless “Syrian Blues”.


1 Laissez Passer 3:54
2 Musiqa 3:25
3 Sahra 5:25
4 A'sfur 4:08
5 Nasma Jabalyia 3:20
6 Oya Marhaba 4:16
7 Bayati Blues 3:46
8 Roots Rock Jabali 4:06
9 Circles 4:09
10 Syrian Blues 4:54




Fuente:
 http://www.folkradio.co.uk/2017/11/tootard-laissez-passer/
 http://glitterbeat.com/artists/tootard/
 https://www.ft.com/content/1a26ff48-c357-11e7-a1d2-6786f39ef675

lunes, 30 de octubre de 2017

octubre 30, 2017

Maryam Saleh, Maurice Louca, Tamer Abu Ghazaleh - Lekhfa الإخفاء

Lekhfa is the creation of Maryam Saleh, Maurice Louca and Tamer Abu Ghazaleh, three legendary musicians who came of age in 1990s Cairo. Decades later, the three trailblazing musicians, each having paved their way through the alternative Arabic music scene, have united to create a stunning new album. A rapturous combination of extraordinary musical talent and creativity, Lekhfa gives birth to an off kilter sound where layers of grit and beauty intertwine in and around the dystopian poems of their contemporary Mido Zoheir, whom they’ve dubbed the fourth ‘member’ in this creation, and one of the most talented Egyptian poets of their generation. 

 1. Kont Rayeh
2. Nefsif Akli
3. Ekaa Maksour
4. Mathaf Fonoun El Ghesh
5. Mazzikaw Khof
6. El Shahwa Wel Soaar
7. Teskar Tebki
8. Woshoush El Leil
9. Makonsh Wakoun
10. Ayez Awsal