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Almitra's Question
Kareem Roustom/El-Zafeer Ensemble
Almitra's Question
Genres: International Music, Jazz
 
  •  Track Listings (6) - Disc #1

A unique blend of jazz and Arabic styles with compositions by Kareem Roustom, John Coltrane and Olivier Messiaen. Featuring violinist Hanna Khoury, Guitarist Kareem Roustom, Percussionists Karim Nagi Mohammed, Catherine Al...  more »

     

CD Details

All Artists: Kareem Roustom/El-Zafeer Ensemble
Title: Almitra's Question
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Fuller Street Music
Original Release Date: 12/21/2004
Release Date: 12/21/2004
Genres: International Music, Jazz
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 825346805726

Synopsis

Album Description
A unique blend of jazz and Arabic styles with compositions by Kareem Roustom, John Coltrane and Olivier Messiaen. Featuring violinist Hanna Khoury, Guitarist Kareem Roustom, Percussionists Karim Nagi Mohammed, Catherine Alexander, Souhail Kaspar, and bassists Danny Dunlap and Fernando Huergo

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CD Reviews

Mature and beautiful. Communicates on more than one level
Jamil Farah Aboudaoud | Paris France | 02/05/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"While Kareem Roustom and El-Zafeer Ensmble are not the first to blend jazz and Arabic music, they do this in a way all their own.



Indeed, improvisation, a common characteristic of both jazz and Arabic music, has inspired musicians and singers from Europe, America and the Arab World to blend styles over the last thirty years or so. However, while Ziyad Rahbani improvises little, Rabih Abou Khalil settles for the lazy notion that harmony has no role to play in Arabic music, Anouar Brahem reduces the rythm section and Fawzi Al-Aiedy softens the edges and discards complexity (quarter-tones, complex rythms...), El-Zafeer take up all these challenges and produce rich textures and a variety of modes and moods.



"Al-Mitra's Question" strikes a delicate balance - between composition and improvisation, between the rough edges of an ever-present double bass and the softness of the acoustic guitar (though sometimes they trade these roles), and finally between the more traditionally "Arabic" sounds of the violin and the adventurous, sometimes hauntingly eerie, guitar chords. The centerpiece, "Al-Mitra's Question" epitomizes this balance while moving the listener through different moods, images and beats.



The secret does not lie only in the diverse experience of each of the musicians but also in the fact that they let their tastes and experiences run free. Influences do not seem to scare them. In fact, this is more than a jazz/Arabic fusion. Even Messiaen is at home here!



Finally, Kareem Roustom and El-Zafeer avoid the pitfall of the merely intellectually fascinating works of the genre. They often, though not always, manage to reach the feelings of the listener. This is music which communicates on more than one level."