Rabih Abou-Khalil - Songs For Sad Women (2007)
MP3 | 192Kbps | RS.com | 83mb | Covers
Genre: Jazz / World Fusion

BBC.com:
After twenty-five years and eighteen albums, it is unlikely that Rabih Abou-Khalil is going to spring any great surprises; long ago he found a distinctive individual style and has stuck to it since - with sufficient variations to keep it fresh and interesting. One need only hear this music for a few seconds to identify its creator. Aficionados will find everything that keeps them coming back for more; the characteristic blend of jazz-inflected Arabic melody with subtle rhythms combines into a hypnotic whole, as ever with Abou-Khalil's fluent oud playing in a central role.

On this album, the variation that stops the music becoming formulaic is the inclusion of guest artist Gevorg Dabaghyan, who plays duduk, a Georgian instrument similar to an oboe. In Dabaghyan's hands, it has a haunting, mournful sound that dominates the album. The opening track, "Mourir Pour Ton Décolleté" is a prolonged showcase for Dabaghyan, and one of the album's highlights.

Newcomers to Abou-Khalil can start here with confidence. Although the instrumentation of oud, serpent, duduk and drums may look exotic, the sound is easy on the ear. The serpent, an ancient blown instrument vaguely like a tuba or euphonium - played here by Michel Godard - largely fulfils the role of bass, but there is a fascinating serpent solo midway through "Para O Teu Bumbum" which reveals the instrument's versatility and hidden depths. For a prime example of the group sound, listen to "Le Train Bleu", with its half-familiar melodic line, the kind you can sing along to on the second listen. It's just one of the wonders of this album...

Enjarecords.com:
Abou-Khalil's new album "Songs For Sad Women" radiates with charming, elegiac beauty. Consisting of four players -- on oud (Arab lute), on duduk (Armenian shawm), on serpent (a mysterious brass instrument from the Middle Ages) and drums --, the band's rather singular instrumental mixture makes for an extraordinary sound experience. This is Abou-Khalil's most emotional music to date, heart- gripping, relaxed and haunting. The album's guest star is Gevorg Dabaghyan, one of the most famous players of the duduk, Armenia's traditional oboe and national symbol. Born in 1965 in Yerevan, Dabaghyan graduated from State Conservatory in 1989 and was the first to present Armenian mediaeval spiritual music on the duduk. He became famous for his cross-cultural collaborations with such as Jan Garbarek, Gidon Kremer and Yo-Yo Ma and his Silk Road Project. In Dabaghyan's hand, the duduk becomes an autumn breeze, fresh and bright. Like a rainbow in the sky, like an eternal voice coming from the mountains and rivers of Armenia, the sound of the duduk touches the listener's heart and soul.

Personnel:
Rabih Abou-Khalil oud
Gevorg Dabaghyan duduk
Michel Godard serpent
Jarrod Cagwin drums

Tracks:

01. Mourir Pour Ton Décolleté
02. How Can We Dance If I Cannot Waltz
03. Best If You Dressed Less
04. The Sad Woman Of Qana
05. Para O Teu Bumbum
06. Le Train Bleu
07. A Chocolate Love Affair
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