I'm in the midst of negotiations with my travel agent right now. I didn't really like my itinerary for Asia so I wanted to change it. Too much jumping around, South, West, East, North without any real rhyme or reason. I like my journey to have more flow to it. I've changed the master list to match my new agenda but my agent says I booked this awhile ahead & she might have a hard time re-arranging it at this late date. But what am I paying her for, right? Anyhow, India is my first stop either way, so here we are. Then, no matter what, I heading to Nepal. I'm running out of hash, that block of Afghani black is dwindling fast. But back to the real issue here...the musick.
Ananda Shankar was born in Almora, Uttar Pradesh, India
on December 11, 1942. He did not learn sitar from his uncle Ravi Shankar, but
from Lalmani Misra at the much respected Benares Hindu
University. Probably the
most major career decision he took was to move to LA in 1960 where he rejoiced in
a life away from the conservative mentality of India of that time. In America,
he got to played sitar with Jimi Hendrix.
On his self-titled 1970s release, Shankar creates great
covers of the Stones’ “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” & the Doors’ “Light My Fire”
along with many originals of his own.
Ananda Shankar – Ananda Shankar, Reprise Records RS 6398,
1970.
decryption code in comments
Side One –
Jumpin Jack Flash
Snow Flower
Light My Fire
Mamata (Affection)
Metamorphosis
Side Two –
Sagar (The Ocean)
Dance Indra
Raghupati
Highly sought after for years now, Sa-Re-Ga Machan
was released in 1981. It showcases Shankar's unmistakable sound which fuses
Western & Eastern music so perfectly. Shankar had a desire to incorporate
both the traditional instrumentation of Indian classical music with modern
Western instruments such as the electric guitar & synthesizer. On Sa-Re-Ga Machan the two distinct
sounds are conjoined perfectly. The album opens with possibly the most stunning
piece, the ten-minute title track which sums up the musician's intent
perfectly. You’ll be pleasantly surprised at how contemporary so much of this
sounds being that it is from 1981.
Ananda Shankar – Sa-Re-Ga Machan, EMI ECSD 2636, 1981.
decryption code in comments
Side One –
Sa-Re-Ga Machan
Romantic Rhino
Charging Tiger
Night in the Forest
Side Two –
Jungle King
Birds in the Sky
Monkeys’ Tea Party
Playful Squirrels
Dancing Peacocks
Jungle Symphony
*******************************************************
The Sitar Beat series collected some of the wildest,
heaviest, & most psychedelic Indian Funk ever recorded. These volumes are
lessons in just how ahead of their time India’s Bollywood composers were in
the 60s, 70s, & early 80s. These are Indian deep funk &
psycho-psychedelic masterpieces recorded for the Bollywood film industry. There
are Bollywood funk classics by acclaimed composers such as Kalanji Ananji &
R.D. Burman, with extended breakbeats & re-edits that upped the funk to the
boiling point.
How exactly did Bollywood corner the market on awesome.
Strange cross-cultural greatness can transpire when musicians from the East
hold up a mirror to Western traditions. Similar to what happened with the
confounding, weird, & aggressive skewering of punk & hardcore that came
out of Japan decades later, music directors from India in the 1970s offered
wonderfully twisted compositions rife with Western film score elements
exaggerated to extremes, perhaps even beyond Western tastes.
Following the success of the first Sitar Beat compilation
CD, a collection of Indian & Indian-inspired European funky selections from
the 60s & 70s, here’s Volume 2, with some of the rarest & funkiest
tracks recorded between the years of 1970 & 1984. Ironically (Sitar
Beat!) only two tracks here feature sitars prominently.
There are sixteen tracks of tasty Indian flavor, blending
heavy beats with the sounds of the sitar & the lush vocal sounds of beloved
Indian singers. The strange, psychedelic sounds possess their own cultural
mish-mash of styles combining traditional Indian instrumentation & melodies
with film music’s intensity.
Various – Sitar Beat! Indian Style Heavy Funk Vol. II,
Guerrilla Reissues SBR 202, 2007.
decryption code in comments
Side A –
The Witness (Babla & his Orchestra)
Awara Sadiyon Se (Kalyanji Anandji)
Everybody Dance With Me (S.D. Narang)
Wada Karle Sajna (Kalyanji Anandji)
Awara Sadiyon Se (Kalyanji Anandji)
Everybody Dance With Me (S.D. Narang)
Wada Karle Sajna (Kalyanji Anandji)
Side B -
Nigahon Ka Adaon Ka (Kalyanji Anandji)
Freak Out Music (R.D. Burman)
Dushmun Title Music (Laxmikant Pyarelal)
Pyar Zindagi Hai (Kalyanji Anandji)
Nigahon Ka Adaon Ka (Kalyanji Anandji)
Freak Out Music (R.D. Burman)
Dushmun Title Music (Laxmikant Pyarelal)
Pyar Zindagi Hai (Kalyanji Anandji)
Side C -
Tera Jasia Pyara Koi Nahin (Usha Khanna)
Phir Teri Yaad (Hemant Bhosle)
Main Akeli Raat Jawan (Ajit Singh)
Bekaraar Bekaraar Bekaraar Kiya (Laxmikant Pyarelal)
Tera Jasia Pyara Koi Nahin (Usha Khanna)
Phir Teri Yaad (Hemant Bhosle)
Main Akeli Raat Jawan (Ajit Singh)
Bekaraar Bekaraar Bekaraar Kiya (Laxmikant Pyarelal)
Side D -
Aaj Mera Dil (R.D. Burman)
Dard-E-Dil (Laxmikant Pyarelal)
Butterfly Version 2 (Keith Kanga)
Laila O Laila (Kalyanji Anandji)
Aaj Mera Dil (R.D. Burman)
Dard-E-Dil (Laxmikant Pyarelal)
Butterfly Version 2 (Keith Kanga)
Laila O Laila (Kalyanji Anandji)
Charanjit
Singh was one of a kind in the Hindi film industry of the 1960s & 70s, a
field that already had its share of eccentric individuals. He was a seasoned veteran
of countless Bollywood soundtrack orchestras, always turning up at session with
the latest new synthesizer acquired at great expense from London
or Singapore.
He was not, however, widely regarded among his country folk as someone pushing
the envelope. His band, the Charanjit Singh Orchestra usually found employment
performing for weddings, playing the popular hits of the day. Although he
played on many popular Bollywood recordings, Charanjit Singh was never a
household name.
In 2002, record collector Edo Bouman came across Ten Ragas
in a shop in Delhi.
"Back at my hotel I played it on my
portable player, and I was blown away. It sounded like acid house, or like an
ultra-minimal Kraftwerk." But it was the date on the record that
shocked Bouman. Released in 1982, it predated the first acid house record, often
regarded as Phuture's Acid Trax, by a good five years. Still today there is
raging speculation that Ten Ragas is a hoax cooked up by some Aphex
Twin-style techno joker as a prank. Much of the debate is fueled by the fact
that Singh made at least 10 albums, all of cover tunes.
But in Singh’s own words, “Frankly, this was the best thing I did. Other albums are all film songs
I just played. But this was my own composition. Do something all of your own,
& you can make something truly different."
The Gramophone Company of India Ltd. ECSD 2912, 1983.
decryption code in comments
Side One –
Raga Bhairavi
Raga Lalit
Raga Bhupali
Raga Todi
Raga Madhuvanti
Side Two –
Raga Meghmalhar
Raga Yaman
Raga Kalavati
Raga Malkauns
Raga Bairagi
Enjoy,
NØ
Ananda self-titled
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Sa-Re-Ga Machan
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Sitar Beat 2
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Ten Ragas
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