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Sitar Secrets

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (9 ratings)
Sitar Secrets album cover
01
I Got Vilayat Khan's Blessing
4:11 $0.99
02
Raga Ahir Bhairav Alaap
6:06 $0.99
03
Raga Ahir Bhairav Gat
6:13 $0.99
04
Raga Sarasvati
14:08
05
PB's Bombay Club
2:36 $0.99
06
A Bageswari Poem
3:21 $0.99
07
A Tantric Song
2:26 $0.99
08
Raga Tilak Kamod
5:37 $0.99
09
Caru Caru
3:16 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 47:54

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Be Careful!

me

This is indeed one of Khan's best, but has been offered on eMusic before as "INDIAN MUSIC II: TEA-TIME RAGAS". If you already have the prior offering then you don't need to download this. They are identical. On the other hand, if you didn't download the prior offering, then this is highly recommended.

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quickly becoming a favorite

hoytler

'Sitar Secrets' is another quality release from Al Gromer Khan and quickly becoming my favorite even as a long time listener. This particular album focuses much more strongly on Gromer Khan's Sitar compositions and demonstrates why he's a source of inspiration for all Ambient/New Age artists.

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They Say All Music Guide

If it’s Indian classical music you’re looking for, you’ll want to look elsewhere. However, unlike the many Western dilettantes who have picked up the sitar over the years, Al Gromer Khan doesn’t just approach the instrument as an exotic novelty or a facile way to hint at spiritual depth. On the unfortunately titled Sitar Secrets he creates original compositions that refer to classical forms without being bound by them, and that convey a sense of contemplative wonder without pretending to any goal more transcendent than that. The opening track bears the wry (one hopes) title “I Got Vilayat Khan’s Blessing” and features what is either a very convincing synthesized vocal track or an uncredited female singer who breathily accompanies his gently meandering sitar and sparse hand percussion. Two sections of “Raga Ahir Bhairav” are given a quite traditional treatment, with tabla and hand drums, but “PB’s Bombay Club” is quiet, spare, and rather eerie, an impressionistic cloud of very soft percussion with faint intrusions of sitar. “Caru Caru” combines sitar with Bill Nelson-style synthesizer washes, to very pretty effect. It’s very difficult to carry off this sort of project without succumbing either to cultural condescension or vapid new ageyness, and Al Gromer Khan’s achievement on this album is very impressive. – Rick Anderson

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