From Night To The Edge Of Day

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From Night To The Edge Of Day album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 50:56

eMusic Review 0

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Chris Nickson

eMusic Contributor

04.02.11
Plaiting together the threads of the cultures in the joys and sorrows of motherhood
2011 | Label: Six Degrees

Lullabies are the first sounds of comfort. They soothe and connect mother and child, form bridges between the past and the future and help to keep the formless horrors of the dark at bay. On From Night to the Edge of Day Azam Ali — a lauded singer who's worked with Vas, Niyaz and others — brings together the strands of her own Middle Eastern past with the future — her son, who was born in 2008. There's a gentle, loving beauty in the songs she sings here, with a lush, pillowy depth. Even where there's an underlying sense of foreboding to the words, as on "Dandini" ("May god protect him from all the evil in the world/ May our pots always be coated with tin"), they still radiate the quiet comfort of a mother teaching her child about life to come. Ali draws from several traditions of lullabies, looking to Turkey, Azerbaijan, and especially her native Iran (as well as contemporary and original pieces), plaiting together the threads of the cultures in the joys and sorrows of motherhood.

Just like the lullabies themselves, the music on this album looks backward and forward, mixing traditional Middle Eastern instruments — saz,… read more »

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A real gem of an album

jbmetrics

Although immediate comparisons will be made to Lisa Gerrard and Sheila Chandra. The performance is very different and very authentic. Noor is an amazing piece in it own right and puts Azam rightfully in her own league. This is an album worth savoring

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They Say All Music Guide

If you think you detect a bittersweet edge to the songs brought together on this collection of lullabies performed by Niyaz vocalist Azam Ali, you’re right. Her interpretations of these melodies — which come from a variety of cultural traditions — are informed by her belief that lullabies are intended as much for the comfort of the adults who sing them as for the soothing of the infants and children to whom they are sung, and that they often communicate much about our attempts to deal with the harshness and sorrow of the world. None of this is to say that this album, which was conceived after the birth of her first child, is gloomy or difficult; it is somewhat dark at times, and to Western ears, it may frequently sound exotic and mysterious, but the songs are invariably tender and loving, even when they are simultaneously mesmerizing and mystical. When word got out among her friends that she was putting together this program, material came to her from several different directions: the great Palestinian oud player Naser Musa wrote the song “Faith” for her, and a friend shared with her the traditional Turkish song “Neni Desem.” Others led her to songs of the Iraqi Kurds (“Lai Lai”) and the Iranian Azeris (“Shirin”). Many of these songs have no regular rhythm, and most are accompanied by a motley assortment of strings, reed instruments, and percussion. None is less than lovely, and the variety of ways in which they are lovely is very impressive, as is Ali’s voice itself. – Rick Anderson

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