Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts

Monday, 17 October 2011

Medieval Middle Eastern Mix

We've just added a new mix to our MixCloud page: Medieval Middle Eastern Mix

It's a little unusual - it's mix of predominantly acoustic and vocal music from various traditions: Arabo-Andalusian Muwashshah, Castillian, Flemish, Arabian, Moroccan, Persian, Kurdish, European and more...Several of the tunes are collaborations between musicians from different traditions.  

Tracks
  1. Allah Mazare (Acoustic)
    Niyaz
  2. El Hechizo De Babilonia
    Luis Delgado
  3. El Vergel Ignorado
    Luis Delgado
  4. Feraghi - Song Of Exile (Acoustic)
    Niyaz
  5. Li Habibun Maqamuhu Fawqa Ra'si
    Ensemble Morkos
  6. Novus Annus
    Nour Ensemble
  7. Nu Alrest
    Radio Tarifa
  8. Ramo Verde
    Radio Tarifa
  9. Si J'ai Perdu Mon Ami
    Radio Tarifa
  10. Ya Sakinan Bi-Fu'adi
    Ensemble Morkos
Medieval Middle Eastern Mix

Wednesday, 21 September 2011

What is music?

SAotV

What is music? I don't mean the question technically, with definitions of rhythm or melody. Nor do I mean it philosophically - I have no interest in philosophy, generally deeming philosophers to be clever but bone idle people, too lazy to apply their immense brains to more purposeful activities.

No, the question arose from some observations and a quote.

 I pretty much live for music. I make it, buy it, steal it, blog about it, pimp it, opine about it and even listen to it. A lot.

Recently I went through a short period when I couldn't be bothered to put music on at home to listen to or to dial it up on my phone to provide a soundtrack to my daily commute to work. This got me worried - had I reached the age when people seem to just give up on all interest in music? In the end, I figured I was just very, cumulatively, tired from work and life in general. Sure enough, I took some time off work to rest and within a couple of days I was planning the next Secret Archives release and playing music very loudly in my flat as it was the daytime and my downstairs neighbours would be out.

Around the same time I met up with a friend who I hadn't spoken to for about a year. He'd always been a huge music fan - we'd booked artists together and run events and he'd often played me good music he'd been listening to. When we were catching up, he mentioned that he'd completely lost all interest in music and hardly listened to any now. In the previous year he'd been through a lot of pressure with his work and told me he'd suffered some mild depression. I threw in the idea that maybe it was because of that he'd lost connection with music and that maybe as he got more settled, his interest would revive.

Well, that very evening he spent a lot of time enthusiastically playing me tunes from YouTube, confirming my suspicion that losing interest in music is often connected with tiredness, depression and a general loss of the joie de vivre.

The next week I caught an episode of an American TV series called The History of Rock'n'Roll. Americans, of course, use the term to mean 'all music after 1952', so the series covered hiphop and other styles as well as rock. One snippet caught my attention. It was the legendary Joe Strummer:

'I think Rock n Roll, or hiphop, exists to deliver this truth that needs to be constantly delivered.... It reminds us, like this unspoken message is that, it is FUN to be alive.... It's a hell of a lot better than being dead'

And that, my friends, sums what I'd been pondering and trying to grasp. Music is a celebration of being alive. That explains why, when we're tired or struggling with life, it can be hard to get excited about music. But, at the end of the day, it's better being alive than being dead!

SAotV

Monday, 10 January 2011

Five albums with non-Western influences that you SHOULD own

Here are five albums you should own (in no particular order). They all have influences from outside the realms of UK/US mainstream musical forms and that's why I like them. They will change your life for the better!

Nagual Site - Sacred System
Nagual Site
http://www.discogs.com/Sacred-System-Nagual-Site/release/225451

Three EPS - Shackleton
Three EPs
http://www.discogs.com/Shackleton-Three-EPs/release/1955814

Shabeesation - Aisha Kandisha's Jarring Effects
Shabeesation
http://www.discogs.com/Aisha-Kandishas-Jarring-Effects-Shabeesation/release/235613

Electric Sufi - Dhafer Youssef
Electric Sufi
http://www.discogs.com/Dhafer-Youssef-Electric-Sufi/master/262377

Passion - Peter Gabriel
Passion
http://www.discogs.com/Peter-Gabriel-Passion/master/29882



Musicians in Morocco

Music 'releases mood-enhancing chemical in the brain'

Music 'releases mood-enhancing chemical in the brain'

This BBC news item reports on a study which says about the chemical dopamine: It is known to produce a feel-good state in response to certain tangible stimulants - from eating sweets to taking cocaine. Dopamine is also associated with less tangible stimuli - such as being in love.

It also says: Dopamine is a common neurotransmitter in the brain. It is released in response to rewarding human activity and is linked to reinforcement and motivation - these include activities that are biologically significant such as eating and sex.

Years ago I saw a documentary that said that enjoying clubbing was a learned experience. At that time we were just starting to make electronic music and, although I had loved going to rock or folk gigs for years, I had always felt that my few visits to clubs left me cold or, more accurately, utterly mystified. What did people get from bobbing about to tedious repetitive beats for hours on end? I knew lots of them were probably dropping Es but some weren't. So, maybe this study explains it to some degree. Some of the same brain chemicals released or augmented by drugs may well be released quite naturally by music, volume and physical activity. And bass!

As the years have gone on and we've made a lot of dance music, been to a lot of clubs and learned to just relax and go with the vibe, I totally get it now. Music still moves me and I don't need drugs to enjoy it.

Secret Archives of the Vatican

Friday, 3 December 2010

Mesopotamian Homesick Blues

Here's a new Secret Archives of the Vatican tune. We were holding this for the next release but we've had a harddrive failure in the studio so we're not sure if we still have the master WAV file. We've still got the multitrack recording so we can always do it again - but here's an mp3 of the original mix.

Secret Archives of the Vatican___ Mesopotamian Homesick Blues

Peace Through Superior Flowerpower

Here's a new Secret Archives of the Vatican tune. We were holding this for the next release but we've had a harddrive failure in the studio so we're not sure if we still have the master WAV file. We've still got the multitrack recording so we can always do it again - but here's an mp3 of the original mix.

Secret Archives of the Vatican___ Peace Through Superior Flowerpower

Peace Through Superior Flowepower

Transnational Trackfest

Generation Bass

Highly influential music blog Generation Bass has featured a Secret Archives of the Vatican tune and two unauthorised remixes/mashups that we put together for a DJ set by the Secret Archives of the Vatican Soundsystem a few weeks back. One of the remixes is listed as being by Yohei but that's because SoundCloud presents tunes as being by the uploader rather than the artist.

Check it out here:

Transnational trackfest

Thursday, 2 September 2010

New Natacha Atlas album - Mounqaliba

Mounqaliba

Mounqaliba (Arabic: منقلبة; English: In a State of Reversal), the new album from Natacha Atlas will be released 20 September 2010. Co-produced by Samy Bishai, it was inspired by the poems of Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore. In addition to original works, it also contains covers of songs by Françoise Hardy and Nick Drake . The album also features composers Zoe Rahman and Jocelyn Pook.
The album features audio clips from social theorists Peter Joseph and Jacque Fresco through multiple tracks, as well as references to Zeitgeist: Addendum and a resource-based economy.

Track list
  1. Intro
  2. Makkan
  3. Matrah Interlude
  4. Bada Al Fajir
  5. Muwashah Ozkourini
  6. River Man
  7. Batkallim
  8. Mounqaliba
  9. Le Cor, Le Vent
  10. Direct Solutions Interlude
  11. Lahazat Nashwa
  12. La Nuit Est Sur La Ville
  13. Fresco's Interlude
  14. Ghoroub
  15. Evening Interlude
  16. Taalet
  17. Egypt Interlude
  18. Nafourat El Anwar