Rock the Tabla
Download links and information about Rock the Tabla by Hossam Ramzy. This album was released in 2011 and it belongs to Jazz, World Music genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 52:56 minutes.
Artist: | Hossam Ramzy |
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Release date: | 2011 |
Genre: | Jazz, World Music |
Tracks: | 11 |
Duration: | 52:56 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Arabantana (featuring Manu Katché / Manu Katche) | 5:07 |
2. | Cairo to India (featuring A. R. Rahman) | 5:50 |
3. | Six Teens (featuring Billy Cobham) | 4:30 |
4. | Ancient Love Affair (featuring Jimmy Waldo) | 5:29 |
5. | Shukran Arigato (featuring Joji Hirota) | 3:52 |
6. | Bluesy Flusey (featuring Phil Thornton) | 5:04 |
7. | Billy Dancing (featuring Billy Cobham) | 4:32 |
8. | Sawagy (featuring Tim Pierce, Houda El Sombaty) | 4:03 |
9. | Dom and Doumbia (featuring Nahini Doumbia) | 3:02 |
10. | Rock the Tabla (featuring Ömar Faruk Tekbilek / Omar Faruk Tekbilek) | 5:33 |
11. | This Could Lead to Dancing (Chaz Kkoshi Re-mix) (featuring A. R. Rahman) | 5:54 |
Details
[Edit]After countless albums under his own name and guesting on other people's, the Egyptian percussionist comes out with something very high profile indeed. With people like jazz drummer Billy Cobham, Bollywood composer A. R. Rahman, and Turkey's Omar Tekbilek on board, it couldn't be anything less than stellar, and Ramzy has pulled out all the stops here. Although Egypt is at the core of everything, Rock the Tabla glides musically into many corners of the world, as on "Cairo to India," which brings two countries together quite naturally (as does the bonus cut, "This Could Lead to Dancing," which goes out on a glorious swirl of strings). In between, there's some stellar jazz-inflected material in "Six Teens," where Cobham offers a reminder of why he's so lauded, a pair of percussion duets (Egypt meets Japanese taiko drums and Egypt goes to Mali), and some Maghrebi pop on "Sawagy." The true highlight, however, is the title track, one of the best pieces of Arab rock to ever come out of a pair of speakers, with Tekbilek bringing the mizmar and a carefully unnamed guitarist who sounds suspiciously like a '70s icon (Ramzy worked on Page & Plant's Unledded), giving the tune some hard electric lines that really power it, and which might just be Ramzy's best composition to date. Unsurprisingly, all the percussion is mixed high, but not at the expense of everything else, and listening to the players is like attending a master class in musicality. It's certainly Ramzy's most inspired release in years. He's working with people he admires and who push him hard. The joy is hearing him — and everyone else — deliver.