Startseite › Foren › Die Tonträger: Aktuell und Antiquariat › Aktuelle Platten › Majid Bekkas – Al Qantara
-
AutorBeiträge
-
Majid Bekkas – Al Qantara (Igloo Records, 2014)
Tracklist
Bania
Al qantara
Bled el ghourba
Bouregreg
Choroq
Sidi Ali Ben Hamdouch
Guinea
Ana bouhali
Lettre à AablaJazz aus Marokko. Das neue Album von Majid Bekkas erscheint bei uns am 26.09.2014.
Igloo wrote:In 1974, Majid Bekkas bought his very first guembri, with the dream of bringing international attention to Gnawa music. 40 years later, he has become the ambassador of African Gnaoua Blues and is releasing the magnificent new album “Al Qantara”.A crossroads of civilisations, Majid Bekkas’ Morocco is a land that is rich and the bearer of traditions and cultures. With this album, Bekkas shows just how much his country has been influenced and influences the history of Africa, the Middle East and the West due to its position. Morocco is a genuine cultural bridgehead.
In Arabic, this bridge is called “Al Qantara”.
Creator and blender of genres (jazz, blues, soul..), after sharing stages with a good number of virtuoso musicians – Archie Shepp, Louis Sclavis, Joachim Kühn, Klaus Doldinger… – the magician of musical encounters is back in a trio format and reconnects with the authenticity that made “African Gnaoua Blues” such a critical success. The result of an exended collaboration, the trio consists of percussionist Khalid Kouhen (African Gnaoua Blues – 2002) and the Belgian sax-player and flautist Manuel Hermia (Le murmure de l’Orient – 2012).
“I chose these musicians for the project as they – like me – are influenced by India and Africa, the East and the West. But also because a genuine complicity has developed between the three of us.”
Oud and guembri, tabla and bansuri, sax and clarinet; instruments that tell us the tale of musical migrants. The cover of “Guinea” by Don Cherry shows how much Africa has brought to jazz. The track “Al Qantara” covers the golden years of the Arabs in Andalusia, whereas “Sidi Ali Ben Hamdouch” reminds us of the cultural and commercial exchanges that too place along the Silk Route.
--
If you stay too long, you'll finally go insane.Highlights von Rolling-Stone.deHuey Lewis im Interview: „Die Mundharmonika ist die Antithese zum Techno“
Xavier Naidoo: Das „Ich bin Rassist“-Interview in voller Länge
„Westworld“-Schlusskritik: Tschüss, bin wohl zu blöd für die Serie
Rolling Stone Playlist: 10 Song-Schätze auf Single-B-Seiten
Courtney Love: „Kurt wollte sich jeden Tag umbringen“
Video: „Tagesthemen“ berichtet 1994 über den Tod von Kurt Cobain
WerbungWenn die restlichen Tracks nur ansatzweise ähnlich großartig sind, ist da ein Pflichtkauf.
--
Hold on Magnolia to that great highway moonKenne ihn bisher bloss aus dem Trio Kühn-López-Bekkas – und das finde ich toll!
--
"Don't play what the public want. You play what you want and let the public pick up on what you doin' -- even if it take them fifteen, twenty years." (Thelonious Monk) | Meine Sendungen auf Radio StoneFM: gypsy goes jazz, #151: Neuheiten aus dem Archiv – 09.04., 22:00 | Slow Drive to South Africa, #8: tba | No Problem Saloon, #30: tbaIch kenne bislang auch nur das Album Makenba von 2010, das ich nach wie vor ziemich großartig finde (Sahara Blues). Zu mehr hat es leider bislang nicht gereicht.
--
If you stay too long, you'll finally go insane.Bei mir „Kalimba“ (ACT) sowie diverse Live-Mitschnitte des Trios.
Hier gibt es eine Besprechung:
http://jazztimes.com/articles/19055-kalimba-joachim-k-hn-majid-bekkas-with-ramon-lopez--
"Don't play what the public want. You play what you want and let the public pick up on what you doin' -- even if it take them fifteen, twenty years." (Thelonious Monk) | Meine Sendungen auf Radio StoneFM: gypsy goes jazz, #151: Neuheiten aus dem Archiv – 09.04., 22:00 | Slow Drive to South Africa, #8: tba | No Problem Saloon, #30: tba -
Du musst angemeldet sein, um auf dieses Thema antworten zu können.