Niyaz

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (103 ratings)

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 51:20

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The Best

bfitzsimons2001

This is one of my favorite albums--if you like middle eastern influenced music, here is a unique take that is amazingly beautiful. I wish I could find something else like this...

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Niyaz on stage

gdc

I was recently happy to experience Niyaz live on their tour in Stockholm, Sweden. What works on album worked extremely well on stage. This album is not for every occasion but when it fits, it's perfect. And if you're at all interested in modern fusion of oriental world music and electronica, this album will please you.

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Spectacular

TwistedDirtyLogic

Wow What an album! If you like good world music, look no further. This album I play over and over. Sen-freakin-sational, Niyaz: Don't stop making albums and make sure you post all your newies on EMUSIC!! Absolutely beautiful. Little internal orgasms shoot through your brain cells.

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Hauntingly Beautiful

docajay

The music is nothing short of hauntingly beautiful. Ali's voice blends perfectly with the instruments of old and new. Rizzo's touch to it was what is missing from most other bands that try to achieve this blend and balance between "east/west". The album opens up strong with "Ghazal". Songs like "Allahi Allah" trancends one to an almost spiritual nirvana. This album will serve as a landmark of what is to come. The only thing I was not sure of was why the album did not have a "Dance remix" of one or several of the songs, as Rizzo is known for doing with other songs. By far one of the best albums in my collection. Looking forward to the follow up album.

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They Say All Media Guide

Niyaz is something of a miniature electro-worldbeat supergroup. Consisting of singer Azam Ali (of Vas), multi-instrumentalist Loga Ramin Torkian (of Axiom of Choice), and producer/remix artist Carmen Rizzo, the trio has a sound that centers on Ali’s ethereal vocals and incorporates musical elements from Iran, Pakistan, India, Western Europe, the U.S., Turkey, and many other regions. Three of the songs on the band’s eponymous debut album are based on the writings of the acclaimed Sufi mystic poet Jalaluddin Rumi; another is a setting of an Urdu poem by Sauda. But these ancient traditions are given settings that could have been created at no time but the present — while traditional instruments are used liberally throughout, everything is undergirded with up to the minute breakbeats, electric guitars, and synthesizers. The resulting sound isn’t slick, but it’s definitely complex and frequently highly danceable. Highlights include the bhangra-flavored “Allahi Allah” (on which Ali’s singing is especially beautiful), the dark and funky “Golzar,” and the slowly simmering “Dunya.” One or two other tracks (notably a rather slight instrumental titled “Arezou”) fail to match the intense beauty of this album’s best moments, but then, this is the first release by Niyaz — the trio’s next one should be even better. – Rick Anderson

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