Arab/Middle Eastern Fusions/crossovers presents :
Omar Souleyman

tapes (1996-2006)-> CD (2007), CD (2011)





















Sublime Frequencies        Omar Souleyman :
Highway to Hassake (SY,1996-2006,comp.2007)*°°

Too much heat I find difficult to live in. Being used to the mild and softening dewy inspirations, it is difficult for me to face the hot burning sun of many desert areas, where not much protects you from immediate heat. The music from many Arab desert countries are like presentations of that heat, with speeded up energy particles to a un-neglectable immediate use or burning up nature, often with harsh rhythms, singing with its thorn like protective sounds of local Arabic tongues.
Also with this pop star, many of the fast baked-to-tradition tunes immediately puts in mind the seemingly improvised melodies of that particular Middle Eastern wind instrument with that awful shrill and nervous sound that paralyzes snakes or perhaps just confuses them immensely.
Once used to this different temperature, hearing these guys playing, I can also sense the humour in it, the joy, and the hypnotic dance, working like channellings of celebrative enjoyment, making vivid pulses from that direct energy. This is especially attractive for us, hearing it played by an occasional electric guitar. The rhythms played often partly by cheap synthesisers are never too hard but are used almost as specific mini studio for percussive sound producers, making surprising combinations, not sure if always equally intended. The melodic speed often is really fast, but this has also something attractive and hard to sit still with. Not all the tracks are arranged similarly. “Atatat” for instance, is a slower tempo, bluesy repetition driven song, lead by oud, and a bit of electric guitar and rhythms. “Arabic Dabke” is led by flute and a train like percussive rhythm, which in an original way might be partly electronically produced ?? ; it seems to be a nationalist song !? Some songs are love songs, most of it is somehow dance related (weddings,..), or sometimes the songs are like a nationalist celebration. The quality taken from tapes is very different, can sound loud and worn out by perhaps sometimes not too professional recording techniques, with an effect which at times, reminds me of one occasion I had in a school where the local North African Arab parents took care for the music ; I think they were all deafened by taking care of loud and repetitive music on an occasion too often.

While much of the (mostly early) tracks on the compilation are interesting, in a way like feast-provoking attractive, I am still left with this feeling it is not exactly the kind of compilation I expected to be made for a western public. The music was meant for local enjoyment mostly. It is partly because of some strange occasional combinations it begins to become something much more than this.

Audio : video : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pgRUHIeaKOk & here
Label description : http://www.sublimefrequencies.com/item.asp?Item_id=34&
Other review with 3 audio tracks : http://www.boomkat.com/item.cfm?id=31498
Other reviews : http://www.clevescene.com/2007-02-21/music/omar-souleyman/ &
http://www.popmatters.com/pm/music/reviews/11223/omar-souleyman-highway-to-hassake/
& http://www.soundfixrecords.com/products/omar-souleyman-highway-to-hassake-folk-pop-sounds-of-syria & http://spidey.kfjc.org/?p=2248 & http://paperthinwalls.com/singlefile/item?id=568
Sublime Frequencies Omar Souleyman : Haflat Gharbia-The Western Concerts- (SY,2009-2011)****

Even I have this feeling of caution against what is being expressed in Arab language, having memorised the numerous local confrontations with the language being spoken as it seems mostly to express discontent and backbiting and with dialect influenced harsh sounds, this memory hangs in front of me before next confrontations like a protective predestined wall of an almost defined prejudgment. Also what we mostly hear from North African music, like in RAI, has these harsh sounds, banging like a overdrive of solar heat. Also more of the original recordings of Omar Souleyman weren’t mixed too well so that they’re more razor sharp as they could be. This recording however has all the qualities to forget all that. This is a collection recorded from various live sessions from the Western tours between 2009 and 2011, and they are recorded and mixed remarkably well. The selection also clearly took out energetically inflicting highlights from these tours, making this compilation one of the best starters to date of this folk-pop singer from north-eastern Syria, and a good example too.
The musical inspirations of Omar Souleyman it is said in the introduction by the label hang in between the Syrian electric folk of ‘dakbe’, the Iraqi ‘choubi’ and the Arabic ‘shaabi’. In common terms said we hear fast melodic almost sequenced loops on keyboards (mostly), played like the hypnotic whistling to a snake dance, hand clap rhythms on drum machine, percussion and sometimes with rhythm guitar accents, with accents of shouts and some accompanied singing, with what sounds like wah-wah electric guitar solos on top. This is very much feast music with dance rhythms of a whirly tension, inflicting, joyful and energetic. Within this field there are several variations in rhythm, arrangement and tension. The rhythm on “Bagdad Araby” sounded strangely enough a bit more East-European. The music in general has something of different African folklore song music style, while its energy is more penetrating, constant and vibrant. On “Kaset Hanzel” we hear a more sad emotional song accompanied by improvised guitar only mostly, before the rhythm changes more up tempo again forgetting all that grieve in an instant through a different energy.

Omar toured with Rizan Sa'id on keyboards, and Ali Shaker on electric saz.

Label info : http://www.sublimefrequencies.com/i...
Audio : http://boomkat.com/... & http://www.honestjons.com/... & http://www.rushhour.nl/...
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