ABUSE FORM
L. Subramaniam - Global Fusion (1999)
Posted By :
hanumanz
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Date :
27 Oct 2006 02:44:00
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Comments :
6
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Amazon Reviews:
Global Fusion is truly that - not just East meets West but also East (India) meets Far East (Japan and China). L. Subramaniam and his collaborators prove themselves adept at mastering a diverse range of styles and blending them skillfully. The music ranges from energetic pieces that will have you nodding your head and tapping your toes to dreamy, lyrical pieces that unfold slowly and carry you away. Most of the pieces are quite long (10 minutes or more) so the short clips here do not do them justice. But if you're looking for a musical adventure and the reviews sound appealing, give it a try.---JoAnn Whetsell
L. Subramaniam, the brother of violinist L. Shankar, has been making musical worlds collide since the 1970s, recording with jazz artists like John Handy and Larry Coryell. On Global Fusion the pace is set with "Jai Hanuman!", a rousing adaptation of the Balinese "Ramayana Monkey Chant" (a.k.a. "Ketjak") stoked by Indian percussion and Subramaniam's soaring violin. With its ability to go between the notes, the violin is perfectly suited to the microtonalities of Indian and Asian music. Subramaniam duets fluidly with Miya Masaoka playing the Japanese koto on "Lost Love" and creates an Indo-Chinese jazz on "Blue Lotus," with Jai Bing Chen playing the Chinese violin called the erhu. "Gipsy Trail" starts as a long raga alap, or introduction, with Kavita Krishnamurti's serene vocal melody, then launches into a slow-burn, Indian-Flamenco dervish section featuring guitarist Jorge Strunz of Strunz & Farah. Global Fusion should reestablish Subramaniam as a compelling improviser. --John Diliberto
Enjoy !
(You like my kind of music? Then you may want to see some of my other posts !)
P.S. :
Some friends asked me more about Indian Music and how to Listen. So here links I could find (html and chm) uploaded to RS.com) : For a Better Listening to Indian Music
L. Subramaniam - Global Fusion (1999)
Indian World Fusion Music
MP3 Lame Insane 320 kbs (RS.de 120 MB)
This publication is made with best regards to ostndr and opfesoft and their excellent posts at AvaxHome.
1 Jai Hanuman! 03:41
2 Lost love 10:01
3 Gipsy Trail 12:30
4 Blue Lotus 11:28
5 Harmony of the Hearts 11:01
Indian World Fusion Music
MP3 Lame Insane 320 kbs (RS.de 120 MB)
This publication is made with best regards to ostndr and opfesoft and their excellent posts at AvaxHome.
1 Jai Hanuman! 03:41
2 Lost love 10:01
3 Gipsy Trail 12:30
4 Blue Lotus 11:28
5 Harmony of the Hearts 11:01
Amazon Reviews:
Global Fusion is truly that - not just East meets West but also East (India) meets Far East (Japan and China). L. Subramaniam and his collaborators prove themselves adept at mastering a diverse range of styles and blending them skillfully. The music ranges from energetic pieces that will have you nodding your head and tapping your toes to dreamy, lyrical pieces that unfold slowly and carry you away. Most of the pieces are quite long (10 minutes or more) so the short clips here do not do them justice. But if you're looking for a musical adventure and the reviews sound appealing, give it a try.---JoAnn Whetsell
L. Subramaniam, the brother of violinist L. Shankar, has been making musical worlds collide since the 1970s, recording with jazz artists like John Handy and Larry Coryell. On Global Fusion the pace is set with "Jai Hanuman!", a rousing adaptation of the Balinese "Ramayana Monkey Chant" (a.k.a. "Ketjak") stoked by Indian percussion and Subramaniam's soaring violin. With its ability to go between the notes, the violin is perfectly suited to the microtonalities of Indian and Asian music. Subramaniam duets fluidly with Miya Masaoka playing the Japanese koto on "Lost Love" and creates an Indo-Chinese jazz on "Blue Lotus," with Jai Bing Chen playing the Chinese violin called the erhu. "Gipsy Trail" starts as a long raga alap, or introduction, with Kavita Krishnamurti's serene vocal melody, then launches into a slow-burn, Indian-Flamenco dervish section featuring guitarist Jorge Strunz of Strunz & Farah. Global Fusion should reestablish Subramaniam as a compelling improviser. --John Diliberto
| “ | Download: http://rapidshare.de/files/37498950/LS-GF.part1.rar.html http://rapidshare.de/files/37499149/LS-GF.part2.rar.html http://rapidshare.de/files/37499225/LS-GF.part3.rar.html PW: www.AvaxHome.ru | ” |
Enjoy !
(You like my kind of music? Then you may want to see some of my other posts !)
P.S. :
Some friends asked me more about Indian Music and how to Listen. So here links I could find (html and chm) uploaded to RS.com) : For a Better Listening to Indian Music
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especially the small download (non-music files)is worth gold!
i still look for an album where L. Subramaniam plays together with Larry Coryell (acoustic guitar) and Stu Goldberg (synthesizer). do you know it´s name?
Hi, perhaps you are talking about From the Ashes, Unfortunately, I have not it. I hope someone will upload it. Here more info:
http://store.acousticsounds.com/browse_detail.cfm?Title_ID=7639§ion=music
Cheers.
Uno all these albums of L.Subramaniam are hard to get...it would be much appreciated if U could re-up.
Global Fusion is simply awesome...I really wish to get a high bitrate MP3 -AND- Lossless rip of this record to replace my low bitrate version...
@ rrajamani : Thanx for pointing to the Solos-Duos-Trios..! I never saw it before...googled and found it within minutes...
@ hermanthegerman : In case U are still after this record...grab it here:
http://rapidshare.com/files/144200697/SG_SDT.rar.html
I am downloading it right now, so the link is upright at this time...cheers.
Haaaaaaaaaaa Music!!