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Two Tenors & Qantara: Historic Live Recording of Arabic Masters
Two Tenors & Qantara
Two Tenors & Qantara: Historic Live Recording of Arabic Masters
Genres: Dance & Electronic, International Music, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (15) - Disc #1


     
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CD Details

All Artists: Two Tenors & Qantara
Title: Two Tenors & Qantara: Historic Live Recording of Arabic Masters
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Ark 21
Original Release Date: 7/25/2000
Release Date: 7/25/2000
Genres: Dance & Electronic, International Music, Pop
Styles: World Dance, Middle East, Arabic
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 618685001429
 

CD Reviews

State of Art Live Set/Arabic Classical Stars Meet Vanguard
Mitch Ritter | Po' Land, Or-Wa USA | 12/09/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"For lovers of both classical Arabic vocal and instrumental music, this state of the art live CD is bound to set a new standard. A rare U.S. appearance of old guard Levantine vocal masters Wadi El Safi (for Anglo fans who've put up with shoddy tapes labelled in slang, aka Wadi Essafi) and Sabah Fakhri, along with young Galilean lion Simon Shaheen's cutting edge orchestra, Qantara, this deeply satisfying evening's worth of music was recorded in Las Vegas, of all places! But you wouldn't know that from either the classy and musically challenging repertoire, or the elegant CD booklet that allows Anglos to follow along with the fuscha/proper Arabic poetry, presented with English translations provided. For second generation Arab-Americans or the linguistically ambitious, the lyrics follow in Arabic, facilitating a learning experience while delighting in the sounds.Before we are introduced to the Two Tenors, Simon Shaheen's spiraling violin lines soar through orchestral interplay with his Qantara (Arabic for Arc or Archway) ensemble on his dazzling composition "Dance Mediterrania." You may have heard a fiddler on a roof, but the exhiliration rises considerably when you've got a precise fiddler spinning ecstatically upon an undulating arch. Shaheen has spent half as many years based in the musically fertile New York scene as he did developing his deep reserves of talent in Phalesteen/Israel. His now out of print "TURATH/HERITAGE" oud recording made in Brooklyn, announced his aesthetics of steeping his artistic growth in the deep reservoire of Arabic classical music. Yet, Shaheen and his remarkably flexible Qantara musicians play even the most traditional of tunes with a hint of the modern. Their creative curiosity is frequently heard getting the best of them.Another New York-based Arabic virtuoso and fountain of harmonic ideas is Bassam Saba, originally of Lebanon, whose flute wizardry is heard here alternating on the symphonic instrument, and traditional Arabic reed variety, known as the nay. Saba has been working with an Arabic jazz group in New York called Myriade, whose debut CD "SOUKOUN" features some of the unexpectedly soothing and tranquil tones that punctuate Shaheen's own demanding and rigorous adherence to formal Arabic maqamaat/modalities.Shaheen's composition, "Al Qantara/The Arch," in both instrumentation and recapitulation of theme, bridges the near eastern and western harmonic spheres. This aural transmigration is aided by Jamey Haddad's complex percussion, and Arturo Martinez's Andalusian guitar work, that is so well complemented by Shaheen's own oud and violin parts, and Saba's beguiling airs.Wadi El Safi is known as the Voice of Lebanon, and his presence adds warmth, wit, and sly romantic elements to the evening. He grew up in a small Lebanese mountain village, and brought a wealth of Lebnani folk tradition to the big city of Beirut, where his more formal musical skills developed. El Safi has a kind of charisma that I don't think most Americans associate with Arab culture. It is gentle, laid back, and funny in a deadpan country (think Andy Griffith) sort of way. When he sings "Ya Hilwa/Oh Pretty Girl" you can just about hear him winking through the speakers. His own song, now considered a standard folk tune "Jannaat/Gardens" is a lovely stroll through Lebanon's more enchanted regions. El Safi acknowledges the devastating toll of civil war and social chaos in his good-humoured redemptive ballad "Ya Ghayibeen/Oh You Are Away," and in the moving poem/song by Zaki Nassiph, "Taalu Habaabna/Our Beloved Are Back." He opens his set with the widely popular staple of his repertoire, "Lebnan/Lebanon."Sabah Fakhri is more than a virtuosic tenor. He is a living repository of the wealth of musical traditions associated with Haleb, or Aleppo, the ancient northern Syrian fortress city. To get an idea of Fakhri's chops, as you are getting blown away by the contoured vocal gusts blowing through your speakers, bear in mind that the Syrian vocal master actually holds the Guiness World Record for non-stop and in perfect pitch singing, clocking in at over 13 consecutive hours. He doesn't have that kind of running time to play with on this CD, but we get an excellent cross-section of his vast and wide-ranging repertoire from muwasheshah (Andalusian or Umayyid religious and/or sensual poetry set to song) to mawwal (improvisational verbal sparring over divine and mortal attributes) to qadd, a style unique to Syria and heard here in the charming "Al Rosana." I would have liked to hear Fakhri draw some on the Mevlevi Sufi tradition for which he is known as an acknowledged musicological researcher and scholar. Many western listeners would be most surprised to learn that Islam produced an ecstatic and sensual spiritual tradition that included, rather than excluded women, and that has been ruthlessly suppressed in the Arabic World after its blossoming under the Turkish Caliphs, and in the nether North African regions of the Islamic Empire. Most satisfying here on this Mondo Melodia release is Sabah Fakhri's arrangement of the traditional "Qadduka Il-Mayyas/Your Swaying Hips." Fakhri's 18-piece (including vocal chorus) Haleb/Aleppo ensemble's setting of "Al Lu'Lu Al Mandood/The Beautifully Set Pearls" is an arranger's marvel. Again, it is Bassam Saba's flutework that rises out of the violin section (6 fiddles), dual cello, Ahmad Yasser Ousta's hand percussion, and Amer Ammouri's spritely oud accompanying Sabah Fakhri's well-tempered tenor on its deep sea dives and airy arcs. This recording should be the cornerstone of any World Music lover's Arabic collection."
The Two Tenors
Mitch Ritter | 11/08/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I loved this album...especially the piece by Quantara."
I'm no expert, but I know a couple
D. J. Djay | Ridgefield, CT USA | 08/02/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Frankly I have not listened to that much Arabic music (I prefer Irish!), but I like this CD a lot, and two of my aunts, who know what they are about, have the following to say about "Two Tenors and Qantara":My Aunt Mary: "It is unsurpassable."My Aunt Agnes: "The most gorgeous music I ever heard in my life.""