$45.00
Out of Stock
[ Alia Vox SACD / Hybrid SACD ]
Release Date: Monday 7 August 2006
This item is currently out of stock. It may take 6 or more weeks to obtain from when you place your order as this is a specialist product.
Instrumental music from ancient Christian, Jewish and Muslim Spain, medieval Italy and Morocco, Israel, Persian Afghanistan and the ancient Ottoman Empire.
Driss El Maloumi (oud), Dimitris Psonis (santur, saz), Yair Dalal (oud), Pedro Estevan (darbouka, tambor, pandereta, riq-gunga), Khaled Arman (rubâb), Osman Arman (tulak flute) & Seiar Hashimi (tablas & zirbaghali)
"While some of the pieces could almost have emanated from the Celtic fringe, others speak from the deep heart of Islam. There are some wonderfully eloquent oud and santur solos, and much implied counterpoint lurking beneath the monody which was then the norm" (BBC Music)
"Recorded sound and packaging are up to Alia Vox's usual high standard. This is a rich feast indeed for music lovers of all persuasions." (International Record Review)
"Finding the common ground that can symbolise a shared humanity has been the impulse for Daniel Barenboim and Edward Said's West East Divan Orchestra and, more recently, violinist Daniel Hope's East Meets West collaboration.Yet for some 30 years, Catalan early music guru Jordi Savall has embodied precisely the same ideals with his ensemble Hespèrion XXI.Their Orient-Occident project creates a flowing dialogue of music from Christian, Jewish and Muslim traditions and medieval times, when the Mediterranean helped to link rather than divide cultures. Hespèrion's performances may be the result of painstaking scholarship, but it is not so much the dust of medieval manuscripts as that of the desert that makes these latterday troubadours so compelling. Savall's virtuosity is so understated as to risk being taken for granted, but the defining rhythmic discipline, the mutual understanding that permits brief flights of improvisational fancy, has a powerful effect. Prayers, dances and laments seemed to bubble up from the same wellspring of experience, voice and instruments echoing each other in assent, crossing great divides" (Guardian)