Magic Carpet - Do You Hear The Words (1972) Psych Folk Music, Sitar. скачать видео бесплатно


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From Magic Carpet (1972) available at iTunes http://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/magic-carpet/id309506467 Amazon UK http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B000060K8M

Magic Carpet - Do You Hear The Words (1972)

In the 1960s and 70s, both in the UK and in America, there was a burgeoning interest in Indian culture and music, most famously spear-headed by virtuoso sitar player Ravi Shankar and sarod player Ali Akbar Khan, amongst others. Numerous UK bands of the era began to use sitar and Indian musical sounds generally to add a flavor of the east to their recordings. By contrast, Magic Carpet was a more cohesive Anglo-Indian fusion, the Indian instrumentation generating and being integral to the music, not simply an addition. Based around the classically trained sitar virtuoso, Clem Alford, and the ethereal voice of Alisha Sufit, Magic Carpet created a distinctive sound described (perhaps misleadingly) as "psychedelic progressive folk" music.

The Magic Carpet album has been described as "a psych folk gem - a unique and extraordinary fusion of east and west, Magic Carpet being one of the very first bands to truly combine Indian and western instrumentation". After a launch at the 100 Club, London, UK, the Magic Carpet band performed at Cleo Laine and Johnny Dankworth's Wavendon, enjoyed airplay on Pete Drummond's Sounds of the Seventies on BBC Radio, plus made several club and festival appearances. However, this novel collective split up shortly after the first album was released. It was only after a lapse of some fifteen years that recognition followed. Widely and more positively reviewed, the original Magic Carpet album has now been reissued on CD and vinyl by the UK Magic Carpet Records label.

Seven of the vocal tracks written by Sufit employ modal tunings in the guitar accompaniment. These 'open' guitar tunings, first introduced and popularized by musicians such as Davey Graham and Joni Mitchell, are supremely compatible with the modal tuning of the sitar, allowing a true integration of sounds. Sufit's vocals feature on nine of the twelve tracks, the remaining three being purely instrumental.

Комментарии

9 years назад

Starry&Bohemian

If we Wake up over an Azeri Carpet

11 years назад

singthebodyeclectic

I actually rather like the vocals. They aren't perfect, sure, but they're assertive and passionate.

11 years назад

Saifuddin Ismailji

Agree - terrible vocal

12 years назад

nwodedispumi

Kinda interesting, but I don't like the vocalist at all. Chandrama's cover of Aerosmith's 'Sweet Emotion' is cool, but more Rock than this.

12 years назад

Starry&Bohemian

@lazymornings the cult tangerine dream are quite different ... it's more mellotron moog and other strange keys... but well it's really psychedelic too... and gong... it's as if a 70s circus has visited town last night ... Here Those Carpets seems to fly high ...i need to listen other songs for a more serious opinion

13 years назад

dead guru

I bought this when it got reissued and lost it when I moved....absolutely love this band and her voice gives me the chills. open tunings...so good. thanks for posting

13 years назад

TWD66

A very fine tune, thanks for loading it.

14 years назад

Shazzula Vultura

Love that Album! Thank you!

14 years назад

tripmonk0

I've met Clem Alford in London where he still lives, I think. I really like this album & was pleased when it came out on CD. Nick

14 years назад

minutegongcoughs

Also that Clem Alford is trained in music theory for The Sitar. The Lp/Cd has a few tracks less vocal. I think Noel Gallagher picked up on a track from a compilation.

14 years назад

TigerRocket

I've always kind of thought that's the point of middle eastern and eastern musical structure and notation. Mellifluous sounds that meld seamlessly into the mind creating an atmosphere of ''oneness'' between mind, body, and environment. Harold budd and Brian Eno among others have recognized this. Observe the style of dance often performed to this type of music, smooth, flowing, almost ambient. Music from without, tripping from within. ''Life flows on within you and without you. . . . . ''

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