Tasnif-E Rast: Saman Booyan (They, Smelling of Jasmine) - Masters of Persian Music, Kalhor, Kayhan
Avaz va Saz: Nayriz, Aragh, and Dashti
Zarbi Instrumental
Tasnif-E Dashti: Faryad (The Cry) - Masters of Persian Music, Shajarian, Mohammad
Track Listings (9) - Disc #2
Avaz va Saz
Traditional Tasnif: Chehre be Chehre (Face to Face) - Masters of Persian Music, Alizadeh, Hossein
Chahar Mezrab: Abu Ata With Avaz - Masters of Persian Music, Alizadeh, Hossein
Ham Avazi Shushtari
Tasnif-E Homayoun: Yar-e Delnavaz (Comforting Beloved) - Masters of Persian Music, Alizadeh, Hossein
Moghaddameh-e Torkaman
Torkaman - Masters of Persian Music, Alizadeh, Hossein
Forud: Rastpanjgah
Tasnif-e Rast: Boosehaye Baran (Kisses of Rain) - Masters of Persian Music, Alizadeh, Hossein
As a meeting of living masters, this collaboration between legendary vocalist Mohammed Reza Shajarian, his multi-instrumentalist/apprentice singer son, Homayoun, kamancheh (spike fiddle) virtuoso Kayhan Kalhor plus Hossein... more » Alizadeh, a noted exponent of the tar (lute) would be hard to top. Thus, it is not surprising that their recent USA tours were routinely sold out or that their debut album, Without You, was nominated for a 2003 Grammy. The tradition these artists so peerlessly exemplify is drawn from medieval Persian court music and Sufi devotional poetry. Intricate melodies flow outward from ancient modal tunings as the scratchy violin, rumbling tombak (a goblet-shaped frame drum) and plangent plucked strings alternatively mirror, augment and embark from Shajarian Senior¹s plaintive, soaring, preternaturally fluid flights of improvisation. That the performances were captured live under ideal sonic circumstances transmits all the immediacy of witnessing epochal interpretations as they flower from seed to deliriously fragrant full bloom. --Christina Roden« less
As a meeting of living masters, this collaboration between legendary vocalist Mohammed Reza Shajarian, his multi-instrumentalist/apprentice singer son, Homayoun, kamancheh (spike fiddle) virtuoso Kayhan Kalhor plus Hossein Alizadeh, a noted exponent of the tar (lute) would be hard to top. Thus, it is not surprising that their recent USA tours were routinely sold out or that their debut album, Without You, was nominated for a 2003 Grammy. The tradition these artists so peerlessly exemplify is drawn from medieval Persian court music and Sufi devotional poetry. Intricate melodies flow outward from ancient modal tunings as the scratchy violin, rumbling tombak (a goblet-shaped frame drum) and plangent plucked strings alternatively mirror, augment and embark from Shajarian Senior¹s plaintive, soaring, preternaturally fluid flights of improvisation. That the performances were captured live under ideal sonic circumstances transmits all the immediacy of witnessing epochal interpretations as they flower from seed to deliriously fragrant full bloom. --Christina Roden
Joe Sixpack -- Slipcue.com | ...in Middle America | 01/22/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"A stunning 2-CD set of live performances by the Persian supergroup now known as the Masters Of Persian Music... Kalhan Kalhor (also of the group Ghazal) played the Ur-fiddle known as the kamancheh, with rhythmic accompaniment by Homayoun Shajarian on tombak and melodic counterpoint by Hossein Alizadeh on the tar (lute). One of Persia's greatest modern vocalists, Mohammad Reza Shajarian leads with lyrical, soulful interpretations of mystical poetry by various classic Persian poets. Both the vocals and the instrumental sections rely heavily on improvisation, and this element of all the artists being fully in the moment adds to the sense of conviction and emotion that characterize all the recordings by this widely lauded group. The first disc is mellower and more introspective, while several songs on the second set build towards a more frenzied, ecstatic release... If you've enjoyed earlier albums by Ghazal or the Masters ensemble, this live album will thrill you as a well. Recommended!"
More than eminently listenable
M. Clark Troy | Princeton, NJ United States | 07/28/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I'm no connoisseur of Persian Classical music, I know nothing to speak of about it aside from what I've heard here. But this is intense and beautiful music, melodic and rhythmic in a way that is different from Western music without being so far afield (like, say, Chinese opera) that it demands entirely new ways of listening. It's a great introduction to a tradition. Having bought it, I'll buy more."
Unpolluted by western trends
Alan Arcus | 04/10/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Music interpreted with scholar responsibility. An impecable and sensitive interpretation. A chance to meet the Persian musical tradition without the new age rhetorics. Awfully cinematic !"
Faryad
Bellydancuh | US | 05/28/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"AWESOME music. These musicians are incredible. What a great deal for a 2-disc set of this traditional music."