Show #147: The Spiritual Side of World Music
A few weeks ago we checked out some Spiritual Jazz classics, with music by John and Alice Coltrane, Pharoah Sanders, Azar Lawrence, Doug and Jean Carn, and others. This week…
<!-- missing image http://blogs.kcrw.com/rhythmplanet/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/blog-spacer.jpg -->A few weeks ago
we checked out some Spiritual Jazz classics, with music by John and Alice Coltrane, Pharoah Sanders, Azar Lawrence, Doug and Jean Carn, and others. This week we’ll do the same with world music. Here goes:
We start with the last recording Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan ever made, this time with film composer Graeme Revell, recorded in the Blue Mosque in Istanbul. I’ve always loved this recording, and put it on the final volume of Trance Planet, a series of five cd’s I produced 1994-2000.
We continue with the powerful voice of Tunisian singer DhaferYoussef, who wanted to become an imam but decided on music instead after hearing the music of his countryman Anouar Brahem. You can detect that he’s retained that powerful voice of an imam, and his music is leavened with spiritual overtones. Here Youssef works with a Norwegian string trio.
Norwegian singer Anne-Liste Berntsen is next, accompanied by a big pipe organ on a Norwegian religious folk song. Her soaring voice is crystalline and pitch-perfect.
Mercedes Sosa follows, performing before thousands of devoted fans upon her return from exile in Spain to Argentina. The concert was held just as the brutal junta was falling, and her audience is rejoicing at hearing their beloved diva of the dispossessed again. The whole album of hers is magnificent. I put her version of Violetta Parra’s anthemic song “Gracias a La Vida” on Trance Planet Vol 1.
JamshiedSharifi was born in Topeka, Kansas in 1960, graduating from the Berklee School of Music. I love his music; he brings many cultures together in it, as you’ll hear from the title track “One”.
Two Brazilian classics follow, GilbertoGil singing a tribute to his candomblé spiritual guide, and VirginiaRodrigues singing Baden Powell’s deep and lovely hymn to Iemanjá (Yemanjá), the orisha (goddess) of the seas and rivers.
French keyboard composer WallyBadarou is next with a short track from the reggae film Countryman. Badarou is well-known for his work with other Island Records artists, including Grace Jones, Herbie Hancock, Joe Cocker, the Tom Tom Club and others. I wonder what he is doing now because I haven’t heard anything from him in years.
Next we ramp up the energy with some Moroccan trance music (called gnawa) recorded in Morocco by BillLaswell and RichardHorowitz. This is the real deal, polyrhythms galore, intense music that can transport you to another realm altogether.
We calm things down with a gorgeous track from 10th-century Armenia, part of a divine liturgy in this ancient culture. TigranHamasyan is an Armenian pianist; “Havoun Havoun” (The Bird, the Bird) is sung by soprano JenniNazarian.
I love this music and amidst all the musical confetti that surrounds us every day, this is music of spiritual expression, depth and rejoicing. It will always be close to my heart.
Rhythm Planet Playlist for 2/26/16
Graeme Revell / “Vision Ii-Spirit Of Rumi” / Trance Planet Vol. 5/ Triloka
Dhafer Youssef / “Cantus Lamenticus”/ Divine Shadows / Jazzland
Anne-Lise Berntsen / “Jeg Ser Dig Sode Lam, At Staae” / Engleskyts / Kirkelig Kulturverksted
Mercedes Sosa / “Gracias A La Vida” / Trance Planet Vol. 1 / Triloka
Gilberto Gil / “Requiem Pra Mae Meninha Do Gantois” / The Eternal God Of Change/ Warner Brothers
Virginia Rodrigues / “Canto De Iemanja” / MaresProfundos / Edge Music
Wally Badarou / “Guidance” / CountrymanSoundtrack / Island Records
Various / “Chabako” / Gnawa Music Of Marrakesh/NightSpiritMasters / Axiom
Tigran Hamasyan / “Havoun Havoun” / Luys I Luso/ ECM