Live Filastine
I keep meaning to post this, and forgetting.
For those who liked the 2nd half of the song from my recent dance bit, a recent performance from the artist, Filastine, is online at Spannered. Naturally, I highly recommend it -- he's one of the good guys in the realm of world music re-workings and re-imaginings, and the set is an amazing, high-powered drill, pokin' holes in the walls separating cultures.
Plus, it just Kicks My Ass Hard. Here's the description from the site:
(Hat tip to DJ Rupture for the reference.)
For those who liked the 2nd half of the song from my recent dance bit, a recent performance from the artist, Filastine, is online at Spannered. Naturally, I highly recommend it -- he's one of the good guys in the realm of world music re-workings and re-imaginings, and the set is an amazing, high-powered drill, pokin' holes in the walls separating cultures.
Plus, it just Kicks My Ass Hard. Here's the description from the site:
Filastine released his debut LP Burn It on DJ /rupture's Soot Records imprint earlier this year. The album showcases his skill as percussionist and vision as a producer, combining a globe-trotting sensibility with deft programming. Arabic, Brazilian and other traditions meet crunching street beats to create an album that is widely travelled but still rooted in a carefully crafted individual aesthetic. This mix showcases Filastine's live show, which has a rowdy edge not so audible on his studio work. The same striking fragments of recorded sounds heard on the record are combined with dubstep, breakcore, grime, dancehall and loops and acapellas from other cutting edge club sounds. Add the spice of live percussion, played on a darbouka, midi drums, and a shopping trolley, and you have the recipe for something very tasty indeed.
(Hat tip to DJ Rupture for the reference.)
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[...] As a follow-up to the Filistine post, here’s the kick-ass DJ Rupture’s Gold Teeth Thief mix — a free mix that was so good, I bought the CD. This was my introduction to Rupture’s music, music that’s deep and rich, that’s about cultures and the blurring of lines between them, even as his mixes underline the importance of those cultures’ rich heritages. His work is about far, far more than adding a drum machine to some old Egyptian tune, and his blog, Mudd Up!, is not just about cool native music, but about the politics and cultural implications of using that music. There’s a cool new post over at Glided Serpent that’s a mostly ol’ skool dancer roundtable*, and they start of with the question, for me, at the core of Rupture’s music, asking “How has music contributed to the phenomenon of fusion in Middle Eastern Dance?”. Having such rich and complex music at hand makes it easier for me to approach that Middle Way. For me, it’s the creative tension between tearing away from raqs sharqi and hewing to it’s traditions. I think there’s a rich energy in that space that’s yet to be explored — what happens when you bring sagats (”zills”) into a high-BPM music? How does layering hip-hop onto a slow Oud-driven tune change your dance? What, indeed, is the line between “real” middle eastern music, suitable for raqs sharqi, and something flat out outside of it? [...]