Silent City

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Silent City album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 4   Total Length: 53:00

eMusic Review 0

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John Schaefer

eMusic Contributor

08.12.08
Central Asian music gets an exotic and loving reworking.
2008 | Label: World Village / IODA

You can justifiably call this cross-cultural effort a spinoff of Yo Yo Ma's Silk Road Project. The string quartet with the quixotic name Brooklyn Rider consists of musicians who first met each other, and Persian fiddler Kayhan Kalhor, while working in Ma's globetrotting world/chamber music ensemble. Kalhor is a master of the kamancheh, the spike fiddle of Persian classical music, and has become a primary composer for the Silk Road albums. On “Silent City” he and his Brooklyn-based colleagues draw freely on their shared loves of traditional Central Asian music and improvisation — which sounds like a recipe for a mushy, politically correct album of Classical Lite. Instead, the album sounds like the next step in an evolution that comes from the tradition of Béla Bartók, who tramped around the Hungarian and Romanian countryside in the early 20th century, recording folk songs and dances and incorporating them into his own string pieces.

In addition to the bowed Western and Persian strings, “Silent City” also features bass and percussion, and the combination is used to good effect on the opening cut, “Ascending Bird,” an exotic yet accessible work that wouldn't disappoint fans of Led Zeppelin's “Kashmir.” Each of the… read more »

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Blissful stuff

luckysmells

I haven't heard anything like this before. Its wonderful to discover something new and so beautiful.

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Stunningly Beautiful

RadicalOrthodox

This is music at its best: beautiful, moving, complex, capable of being listened to again and again. The title of the first piece of the album provides an indication of what is going on this music: this is music of ascension, music that elevates the mind and heart above the mundane, that reminds you of the possibilities of human art, the possibility of transcending ugliness and violence and disharmony.

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An absolute Gem!

mudhopper

I count it a privilege to have this album in my collection - and I enjoy listening to it again and again ..

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Stunningly good!

AroundtheWorld

Hard to imaging more moving, involving music. Read more about this remarkable project and what Kalhor has to say about it here: "http://www.spinner.com/2008/09/02/giving-voice-to-silent-city-kayhan-kalhor-bridges-tehran-and/"

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Absolutely beautiful!

songbern

I agree with the reviewer below. This is one of the most beautiful albums I have ever heard. This is truly music that nourishes the soul. Thank you so much eMusic for having such gems and continually exposing me to new and exciting music. The clips don't do this album justice. Well worth downloading!

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Deep, enchanting, and life-giving...

mlstein

Brooklyn Rider is a string quartet, and Kayhan Kalhor is not only a virtuoso player of the komancheh--the Iranian spike fiddle--but a collaborator with the Silk Road Ensemble and a composer. And what they do together is wonderfully beautiful. Kronos and others have worked in this vein, but the collaboration is rarely as seamless as it is here--and the resulting music as moving. Listen to "Beloved, do not let me be discouraged." You'll want more.

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