PrivateStephan Mikés : East meets South (US,2003)***

This is a live recording featuring Stephan Mikés on sitar, Dana Keller on dobro and Robert Thomas, Jr. (Weather Report) on percussion, with Stephan Alvin on tamboura.
This release is much closer to Indian Classical music, than the two other works from Stephan I reviewed before (on next page), with great spherical improvisations on the dobro (resonator guitar) close to the Indian classical music tunings in communication with the sitar. Here Stephan shows his dedication to Indian classical music from his teaching, under the leadership of Roop Verma, a primary student of Pandit Ravi Shankar and Ali Akbar Khan.

Audio : "Raga Blue","Moonlight Waves","Invocation", "Interlude", "George Khamaj (a tribute to George Harrison)", "Tears in the Rain","Appalachian Groove", "Anand Supreme".
Info on this release : http://cdbaby.com/cd/eastmeetssouth
Dobro guitar image here
More on the Dobro guitar : http://www.gibson.com/products/oai/dobro/
Homepage : http://stephanmikes.com/

2 other releases of Stephan are reviewed on http://progressive.homestead.com/INDIABEATS.html
short decription :

"The CD contains mostly nice ragas with sitar and percussion. The only song in western progressive contemporary pop fusion style (with accompanying double bass) is done very well. I wish only the group had done more like this. A few tunes are a bit more meditative, using an environmental effect twice. Some other small tracks are based upon percussion (-one small track with African drumming, and one track with flute, both not disturbing the mood started with Indian World Music).
The last tracks are a bit more dreamy. One is a very dreamy raga and two others are more Indian droning moods, slightly meditative."

Info : http://www.soolaba.com/ & http://www.ethnosuperlounge.com/othercds.htm
Explanation of Indian instruments : http://www.soolaba.com/instr.htm
E-mail : mail@soolaba.com
Soundfiles : http://www.soolaba.com/musiccds.htm
Reviews of Indian World Fusion :
Soolaba, Stephan Mikés, Julian Franks / Jules Franks,
Payuta & Friends, Lele Lele, Grimband
There exist a Tibetan/Indian Fusion item.
See at the Tibetan Fusion page
Soolaba : Indian Valley (AUSTR,1999)**°
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1. Great Mothers Hands Rec.   Julian Franks : Jewel In The Lotus (UK,2004)*°'

On the first couple of tracks (built up by sound recordings, keyboards, effect vocals, loud recorded rhythm-accompanying bass), the music started as rather mainstream pop first in a New Agey world music fusing context from a deliberate vision and choice or interest to mix Indian sounds with rather obvious effects, and a more poppy track with predictable content. One could already notice that at the same time this was no sampled world fusion, but still seemed to be deliberately similar. I had to listen twice to understand why, because further on the style had thoroughly changed and opened up. With each track the world fusion elements, and the progression moves further away from this, with a beautiful evolution going deeper into the enjoyment of what world music could produce from there. It is as if the composer Julian who first made a deliberate step of interest towards the world, with the help of friends evolves from the commonly recognisable Western new age world music pop vision towards truer essences, which are more deeply rooted in the countries musical elements he’d like to adapt. And in this evolution, it is as if Julian travels there, until he truly IS there, like Buddha once said something like “the world is here”. The tracks get more improvisations, built up in mood, use Indian, African and Asian elements, which by the second half have created their own perspective and vision, rather than an obvious reflection from where it started. This is a journeyl in a musical sense and perhaps a spiritual sense.

Audio : http://cdbaby.com/cd/julianfranks
Info : http://www.julianfranks.com/
Article : http://magazine.brighton.co.uk/...
Workshop info : http://www.whitemountainretreat.com/Drumming.htm


2. Great Mothers Hands Rec.  Jules Franks : Can we return to the heart (UK,2008)**°'

While previously having been involved in music that included Indian music inspirations, under the name of Julian Franks, this is something different, although there remains an underlying wish to spread and mobilize a vision that belongs to a wider perspective in the world. Musically this is more something that I would like to describe as Trance World Pop music. While the visions tend to lose ground for being alternatively spreading around with its energy, Jules Franks most of all is also a drummer, so that drums and electric bass always keep the structure tight and groovily dynamic and this while the bass driven voice (that carries well, with deeper tones, now and then slightly electrically deformed), spread its message and keeps an improvised, linear spreading improvisation with it. Female singer Genevieve brings the tones back into the air on a much higher register. On the opener you could easily imagine a sound influence between Legendary Pink Dots and Dead Can Dance, within this described vision. The second track starts with acoustic guitar and hand drum played steel pan, before other instruments are added for more dynamic energy. This includes clarinet and a certain ethnic bowed violin, an instrument which you can also hear in the next track, which is also built with steelpan, acoustic guitars, electric bass, percussion, and also some electric guitar solos. The fourth track also features sax. On the fifth track you can hear seagulls and water on the background. Only the last track features tablas, and quickly becomes electric. All tracks keep the middle between a meditative, ambitious vision inspired in words, a trance world grooviness, within a popular sounding attraction of this style keeping a darker centre.

Audio : http://www.myspace.com/julianfranks
Homepage : http://www.julesfranks.com/
On Rec.  Payuta & Friends : ...sitar...signs... (D,2003)**°'

I discovered the existence of Payuta through a Dieter Serfas release from 1997 (reviewed on next page), where he contributed with sitar on my personal favourite track of the album. Just recently I decided to check out what else he did next. After this period with serious Fusionrock musicians, he evolved to an area of a kind of trance-fusion style inspired by the spirit-idea of mood-improvisation which is more coincidentally associated with world music. After the cooperation and a tour with the Tuvan group Huun-Huur-Tuu and a worldbeat remixes-CD with several other musicians, he started from 2000 to release his own albums. I preferred to check out the two CD’s which were closest to the idea of ‘Fusion’, although “…sitar…signs…” it is actually more like music just played with sitar and with contributions of various other instruments.

The album “…sitar…signs…” is described on the CD as ‘trance-world-music’, which already shows how any approach to some kind of “fusion” here is entirely unpretentious. It’s better to say that this is a very calm, purely musical mood exploration. The contributing musician gives the calm melodic playing of Payuta a jazzy fusion touch, just for the mood of it, but at the same time they gives it an additional musical aspect, with a very pleasant result. The few more colourful keyboard rhythms, the 12-string guitar, vibes and other instruments fit well with the chosen tracks. Harry Payuta plays with feeling, and the other musicians know and feel how to interact perfectly. It seems that Mark Payuta played many instruments himself, especially on the four tracks without contributions.
This is perhaps the most enjoyable CD I’ve heard in a sitar-Trance-related style only intended as mood-making music. The back of the CD describes this mood as being “in a light Caribbean breeze under the spirit of India”.

The participating musicians were Frank Mattutat : bass, drums, shaker ; Michi Schmidt : vibes, percussion, Dietmar Kirstein, piano ; Bernd Schlott : clarinet ; Phil Krüger : 12-string guitar, voice ; Klaus Fey : tenor-,soprano sax.

Audio : http://www.emusic.com/album/10905/10905297.html
& http://www.karmadownload.com/album/?2136990
German info : http://www.payuta.de/CD_sitar_signs.html
Distribution info : http://www.jaro.de/php/...


Jaro Medien       Harry Payuta & Friends : India Redhot Blue (D,2004)**'

'India Redhot Blue' seems in the first tracks a small step further towards a kind of rock sound, and towards a jazzfusion style, still based upon simple mood improvisations. This time the description says “Indian Spirits, Caribbean spices”. With a few other friends into the band, the tracks are also somewhat longer than on the previous album. This works often well, but with the inevitable simpleness of its mood improvisation, some tracks become also become tedious, especially on "Moonlight Sight", which for me is too long for what it expresses.
Like “Déja Vu” on “…sitar…sings…” already showed, I notices again that some idea of the music from Payuta must have had inspirations from George Harrison’s interest to sitar music, from the time when he attracted Ravi Shankar to play with The Beatles. Also on this album, the last track pays some tribute to George Harrison, using a slow improvisation on the known Beatles track, "Within You Without You" .

The musicians which contributed were: Daniela Birschel: Esraj, vocals, Uli Bösking: viola, violin, Klaus Fey: tenor-sax, clarinet, Michi Schmidt: percussion, steeldrum, berimbao and xylophone, Frank Matuttat: drums, bass.

-A lesser known instrument which Payuta also used is the 'surhabar', a deeper toned instrument which looks similar to the sitar.-

Audio "Takecarib"
More audio & info : http://www.jaro.de/php/endex.php3/page/...
(German) Info : http://www.payuta.de/CD_india_rh_blue.html
German review : http://www.jazzdimensions.de/reviews/others/2005/harry_payuta_india.html

Homepage : http://www.payuta.de/
Pictures : http://www.eigenart-vissel.de/rueckblick.php?Veranstaltung=00054
demo  Lele Lele : 7-track demo (S/BULG/IND,2006)****°

This is one of the most unexpected Indian fusions I ever expected to hear : this is like Bulgarian traditional music performed with Indian instruments, with some stunningly convincing and brilliant crossover ideas and improvisations. Also some Bulgarian vocal melody parts are, actually rather funny at times, transformed into Indian rhythmic vocals. “Like a Donkey on an upslope” and “Yove Maku Mome” are really brilliant in this new style. “Don’t worry about them money” has a raga as well as a Bulgarian traditional in the melody. “Tejka” again fuses brilliantly like a gypsy from India with a kind of pleasure which flamenco styled gypsies wouldn’t dare to think of. It also has some euphonium improvisation, and a quieter almost medieval sad part with harp, sax and harmony vocals, before starting off with upbeat fun once more, in more or less Bulgarian style. “..pa ne sma videle” is once more a perfect mix between an Indian raga with a Bulgarian injection. “After Sunset” starts a bit more like a Bulgarian folk improvisation, with additional tabla but after the tabla improvisation and an Indian vocal part by the female singer this time, it is like it loses a grip on keeping just one foundation, and adapts another.

Instruments used are tamboura, sitar, surbahar, tablas, saxophone, clarinet, euphonium and voice.

Mihail Dintchev, one of Lele Lele's founders, is born and raised in Bulgaria and studied traditional folk from his country, and leads the Bulgarian part, and a part of the fusion form. He also plays the tamboura. Moa Danielson plays tablas and percussion. Stian Grimstad plays sitar and euphonium. They both studied Indian classical music in northern India for many years. Josef Danielson, vocals, has his musical background in rock and reggae and Björn Dahlberg, saxophones and clarinet, has many years of experience as a jazz musician in various places.
In June 2006 Lele Lele did a second tour of Bulgaria where they won a gold medal at the Albena Folk Music Festival and performed together with Theodosii Spassov.

I hope this band will have this released one day soon. They deserve wider recognition for many reasons.

Audio : "Like A Donkey On An Upslope", "Don't Worry About Them Money (They Come Rollin')"
Video's and more audio : http://lele-lele.se/music.htm
Homepage : http://www.lele-lele.se & with audio & videos : http://www.myspace.com/lele_lele 


demo  Grimband : 5-track demo (S,2006)***

Grimband is in fact a one man Fusion band consisting of some of the styles of the bandsStian Grimstad is involved in, like the KPE Fusion Project (reviewed on next page) and Lele-Lele (see one review up). He plays sitar, guitar, drums, bassmandola, euphonium, trombone and sur bahar. It is like a pleasant, relaxed late evening one man band instrumental version of Lele Lele, preparing to go to sleep (especially on “Tezvala”). After having listened to Lele-Lele I miss the live interaction, but I think the music still is inspired by that same energy, when relaxed and back at home and lingering on the grooves of it all (especially on “Cosmic Dojo”).

Homepage with audio : http://www.myspace.com/grimband10
Soolaba Duo &Trio







or go back to index
SITAR & INDIAN MUSIC FUSIONS & CROSSOVERS
or to general index page at
www.radiocentraal.be/psychevanhetfolk
all links updated 2004-10-19
new item added 2008-07-22


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