Showing posts with label Germany. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Germany. Show all posts

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Alex Oriental Experience | Die Gunst Der Stunde


Reupped by special request here.

While riding my bike down Steinway one unseasonably warm January day, I noticed a second-hand store on the west side of the street. I can't for the life of me remember what it was, but something compelled me to pull over, park and lock the bike, and check the place out. Was I looking for something, maybe cheap dishes or a vintage shirt? I don't remember. I do remember that I found loads of things in the $2-each CD section, including Die Gunst Der Stunde (Windows of Opportunity).

Recorded in 1997 by Alex Wiska (saz) and Reinhold Görlitz (drums) and released on Wiska's Wiska Records label under the name Alex Oriental Experience, the six tracks on this stripped-down minor masterpiece showcase not Wiska's Kraut-rocked-out electric saz--which is phenomenal, even this late in his career--but an interplay between his saz and Görlitz's drums that feels both brain-meltingly complex and yet so tightly wound together that you almost register the duo's feelers of sound as though emerging from a single instrument.

Read more about Wiska and his relationship to the German and Turkish psych scenes at Mutant Sounds.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Şivan Perwer | Lê Dîlberê



Listen to "Mala Min"

Get it all here.

I don't know why haven't posted this one yet. Raw, beautiful, sit-up-in-your-seat powerful, this 1986 album by the world-famous Kurdish protest poet and singer Şivan Perwer is one of my all-time favorite recordings. I found it at least a decade ago in a Turkish music and DVD store in Manhattan that I'm almost certain no longer exists.

Here's what Wikipedia has to say:

"Şivan Perwer (pron: Shivân Parwar) (born on September 23, 1955 in Sarıdam (Sorî), Siverek, Turkey as İsmail Aygün) is a Kurdish poet, writer, musical teacher, singer, and performer on the tembûr (lute). Şivan lives in exile after fleeing Turkey in 1976 because of his music.

"For many years, his songs were banned in Iraq, Syria,and Turkey because they are sung in Kurdish and often cite the oppression against the Kurdish people in the Middle East.

"Şivan's homemade recordings were smuggled over the border, while thousands of people came to see him perform live. Fearing for his life and the welfare of his family and after calls from Turkish authorities demanding his arrest, he fled Turkey and settled in Germany in 1976. There, Şivan recorded his first official album of traditional Kurdish songs. ..."

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Chris Marker | PASSENGERS

cover-10_t_w276h368

My review of Chris Marker's amazing PASSENGERS photography show and book (Peter Blum SoHo and Chelsea) is the cover story of Berlin film journal CARGO.