The Dictator ‘Admiral General Aladeen’ features Oriental Music Soundtrack

Sacha Baron Cohen in 'The Dictator' at the World Premiere

Introduction to Oriental Music in North Africa

The northern part of Africa – the southern coast of the Mediterranean – with its desert and mountain surroundings is quite distinct from the rest of Africa. The region has been called ‘island of the west’ and ‘place of the sun’s setting’ by early Arab writers that saw the land as a divergent from rest of Africa, both ethnically and culturally. The four countries of the ‘Maghrib’ (North Africa) are Libya, Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco. They cover an area half the size of United States of America. I have explained the musical history in these areas in the past through my papers on oriental music and theories.

The most important impression of North Africa is the rich ethnic tapestry of complex and multifaceted musical history. It also include Spanish Muslims, more known as the “Andalusians” that moved to North African cities in the wake of Christian reconquests and particularly after the expulsion of 1609. The Spanish influences have enriched and vitalized many musical genres in the region. Similarly, the Maltese and Sicilians have historically also lived in close contact with North Africans through laborers and seafaring people that crossed the Mediterranean waters during the era of Aghlabite hegamony from 9th to 11th century.

(Note that Andalusian music of the Maghreb does not refer to the modern Spanish province of Andalucia, but to Al-Andalus, a medieval Muslim state.)

The Dictator – Music from the Motion Picture

I was pleasantly surprised when I heard the music in Sacha Baron Cohen’s latest blockbuster (I’d like to coin the new term ‘mockomedy’ for this type of flick). The first track of the 40 minute long movie soundtrack is a cover on Dr Dre’s ‘ The Next Episode‘ (listen) which features Aladeen, Mr Tibbz and Aiwa (Um, (un)known artists!?). The second track, ‘Ila Nzour Nebra‘  (listenby Jalal Hamdaoui is an Moroccan song from the 80’s by Reda Bouchnak more known as a member of the Bouchnak brothers where he played bass and sang the chorus lines. They’re one of the pioneering bands in classic Raï music that evolved oriental and contemporary music, such as Spanish (see above), Ma’luf, Al-Andalus and Malhun. The youngest band member, Hamid Bouchnak which was the lead singer, drummer and keyboard player is actively producing in the industry as of date.

A few other famous covers include ‘Everybody Hurts‘ originally by REM, but now sung by the Tunisian MC Rai. A few other more familiar cover songs included in the soundtrack is the old Dolly Parton song ‘9 to 5‘ and Marvin Gaye’s ‘Let Get It On‘.

‘Goulou L’Mama’ has a middle eastern beat that goes along the same line as ‘Ila Nzour Nebra’ which reminds me of Pop music fused with modern Raï. Interestingly, the word Raï means opinion, something the dictator is constantly portraying through something much compared to an absurd visual leitmotif in a fictional cartoon. The music is just a mirror of the movie. It spans from meh, great and terrible. The two lacking cornerstones (musical training and tradition) in the “modern-day” raï (post-1980’s) caused impromptu and improvisational clichés from reggae, pop, rock and other musical genres. That’s basically what has been characterized as Cheb Raï, thus many artists calling themselves Cheb (Khaled, Mami, Khada, Zahouani etc). Nevertheless, the culmination of raï is flimsily represented in Mr Cohen’s motion picture soundtrack, and I am glad that he went extreme with the intertextuality of so many musical genres and dispersed the artistic norms. But the most important question remains: What will be Sacha Baron Cohen’s next project?

Listen to the songs from ‘The Dictator’ either on Amazon or through the following direct link on Spotify.

Roland Corporation Turn 40 Thanks to Ikutaro Kakehashi

Roland Corporation 1972

Ikutaro Kakehashi was born in Osaka, Japan on February 7, 1930. The name might not ring a bell to most of you reading this blog post. But this man is the founder of the Roland Corporation, that brought us the first touch-sensitive electronic piano (Roland EP-30) in the world and the space echo machine (Roland RE-201). His company was one of the first to utilize a microprocessor in a digital sequencer (Roland MC-8), as well as the first to introduce MIDI in a drum machine (TR-909) which used digital sample playback along with analogue sound synthesis. Not to forget that the drum kits in the Roland TR-909 are still being used in studio productions around the world. Most musicians have interacted with some kind of Roland gear over the years.

There is a wide range of musical equipment that Roland has developed and shipped to musicians around the globe. Some of these instruments have been seen in my personal collection over the years, going back to the E-20 Synthesizer in the late 1980’s followed by the RC-7 MIDI module, MC303 Groovebox, (BOSS) SP303 Dr. Sampler, Roland SH-32 Synthesizer, Roland D2 Groovebox and a few other that I cannot recall at the moment. Thank you very much for your hard work, Roland!

Congratulations Roland! 40 years!

'I Believe in Music': The inspiring and heartfelt memoir of Ikutaro Kakehashi


The History of Roland Corp.

Interview with Ikutaro Kakehashi

Chromeo doing a ‘Business Casual’ South America tour in May

Chromeo 'Business Casual' tour flyerMy favorite electrofunk duo is jamming their way through the South American territory on the ‘Business Casual Tour’ which started off on May 11 in São Paulo at Sónar a.k.a the “International Festival of Advanced Music and New Media Art”. Last time I wrote about Chromeo, they had just got back in the studio after a 18 month long tour around the globe, where they had nearly 50 tour dates.

On May 12 they played at Circo Voador in Rio de Janeiro followed by a few days of recreational slacking and hunting for Brazilian Caquis ‘Persimmon’ (see photo proof below). The ‘Tenderoni’ stage legs were there as well, of course!  The duo has since played in Buenos Aires, Argentina and Santiago, Chile. The tour ends with a gig in Bogota, Colombia on May 19th. Dave-1 and P-Thugg have shared a few photos from the tour on Instagram (along with a bunch of fan photos). Below are a few pictures that I have randomly Statigram’d for your pleasure. Let us see what’s going on When The Night Falls. Heh.

Chromeo

Make sure to check out their albums ‘Business Casual‘ and ‘Fancy Footwork‘. They’re awesome!

EP28 Electric Daisy Beats 2012: The Warm-up Mixtape

A Musical Mimesis of the Altai-Sayan region in context of Electric Daisy Carnival

Tuva is a republic within the Russian Federation that lies approximately 2,500 miles east of Moscow, in a sparsely settled land surrounded by forests and grassland. The Tuvans are in fact Turkic people. The Tuvan population is 300,000 occupying an area that extends roughly 500 miles east to west and 300 miles north to south. Tuvan herders have traditionally been animists, which means that they typically ascribe spiritual power to natural phenomena and pray to the spirits. The echo that results from singing close to a cliff, and the interactions of a human voice with the gurgling water of a brook or the swishing air currents of a strong wind, may be imbued with spiritual power.

Living creatures, no less than inanimate places or landscapes, manifest spiritual power through sound. The iconic imitation of natural sounds among Tuvans underscore the importance of sound as a physical stimulus and a mimesis of movement or physical expression, such as dance. Now, Tuvans don’t possess electronic music equipment such as a Pioneer CDJ-players or Traktor controllers hooked up to a MacBook. Instead, they rely on throat-singing which require a heck-load of laryngal tension and nasal resonance, much like an electronic phaser and cutoff filter — musically speaking, of course. [Skipping my shortlist of various styles such as sygyt ‘whistle’ (Tuvan word) and other weird-sounding onomatopoeic words.]

In the early 1990’s, Tuvan music began to reach an audience beyond Tuva itself through recordings and concert tours. Their ensembles capitalized on widespread interest in “world music”; jazz, techno and other avant-garde appropriations. The Tuvan territory, sitting in the mind-blowing Altai-Sayan region of Siberia, has a (nearly) identical land area of Nevada where Electric Daisy Carnival is taking place. The music in Tuva is one of many musical roots depicted in modern music, and yet another indispensable piece of musical history that has caused ethnic intermingling.

Below is my uzun yry ‘long song’ contribution to EDC 2012, with the New York (NJ MetLife Stadium) event on May 19-20 slowly approaching, and the main EDC summer event in Las Vegas lurking…

Tracklist:

Peter Dundov & Gregor Tresher – Duo Tone
Aril Brikha – Glaciär/For Minou (Original Mix)
Aril Brikha – Palma (Original Mix)
Tony Kairom – Minimal Flute (Original Mix)
TJ Kong – Perfect 11 (Original Mix)
Kellerkind – Backflash (Original Mix)
Nicky Romero – Tension (Vocal Mix)
Rene Amesz & Ruell – Hope (Original Club Mix)
Beltek – Party Voice (Original Mix)
Chromeo – Needy Girl (Oscillator Z Remix)
Umek & Beltek – Firewalk (Original Club Mix)
Laidback Luke ft. Daniele Petronelli – I Need Your Loving (Daniele Petronelli Remix)

Download EP28 Electric Daisy Beats 2012
[96 MB | 70 min]

Full Artist Lineup for Electric Daisy Carnival at MetLife Stadium

With Coachella halfway through its festiveness, the Insomniac EDC spirit is oozing through the vein of the EDM fans all around the nation. Well, good news is that we now have a confirmed list of DJ’s that will perform at the first leg of the carnival: US East Coast.

This is the fully confirmed artist lineup for Electric Daisy Carnival at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on May 18-20, 2012. The tri-state EDC event was announced in February and the first line of artists were confirmed in early March as we were told that A-list artists such as Steve Angello (Swedish House Mafia), John Digweed (Renaissance and Global Underground), Afrojack and Avicii were going to perform. You can also read about the first part of the artist lineup for EDC Las Vegas 2012 in this blog post.

“It was a testament to the strength of our brands, and electronic music in general” says Eddie Dean, co-owner of Pacha New York who partnered with Insomniac to produce the event. “New Yorkers are a tough crowd to please, but they could hardly contain their excitement for a chance to experience EDC at home.”

“We felt a buzz coming from East Coast fans and decided that New York, with the right venue, would be the perfect stop for EDC,” said Pasquale Rotella, founder and CEO of Insomniac Events. “We’re excited to bring Insomniac’s unique multisensory festival experiento the New York area, a kind of production I have yet to see delivered in this market” Continue reading