- A1: It's About Time
- A2: Running Away 06 29
- A3: Can't Be A Fool
- A4: Lost Until I Want To Be Found
- B1: Reasons To Love
- B2: Can't Give Up On This Feeling
- B3: In Time We'll Love Again
- B4: This Is Your World
- C1: Changes In Me
- C2: Like Fire In The Rain
- C3: (Your Lovin' Is) Everywhere
- C4: Zahra Smiles
- D1: Strangers Become Friends
- D2: Sweet Enough
- D3: Rain On A Hot Tin Roof
- D4: Late Night On The Subway
- D5: Music. Magic. Ironic
quête:zahra
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- A1: Collage - Halb Sirp (Bad Sickle)
- A2: Manfred Ludwig - Sextett
- A3: Krzysztof Komeda - Crazy Girl
- A4: Polish Jazz Quartet - Promenade Through Empty Streets
- A5: Vagif Mustafa-Zade - Caucasus
- B1: Quartet &Quot;Jazz Focus-65&Quot; - Monday Morning
- B2: Theo Schumman Combo - Karawane
- B3: Vaclav Zahradnik - Podzimní Slunce
- B4: Karel Velebny - Lori
- C1: Sevil - Mugam
- C2: Focus &Apos;65 - Autumn Sun
- C3: Golstain-Nosov Quintet - Rosinent In Toledo
- D1: Yu All Stars 1977 - Kosmet
- D2: Michael Fritzen Quartett - Rien
- D3: Dan Mindrila - Sonet
- 01: Grotesque (Chapter 2)
- 02: Duo + 1
- 03: Night Out (Theme From Early Snow In Munich)
- 04: Paraphrase Sw (Theme For Stevie Wonder)
- 05: Feat. Zdenka Kovacicek - Peep Show (Theme From Early Snow In Munich)
- 06: Love Experiment (End Credits From Whatever You Can Spare)
- 07: Video Games (Theme From Early Snow In Munich)
- 08: Whatever You Can Spare (Orchestral Version)
- 09: Early Snow In Munich (Opening Credits)
- 10: The Forrest Date (Theme From Whatever You Can Spare)
- 11: The Graduates (Theme From The Graduates)
- 12: Oberhausen (Theme From Way To Your Neighbour)
- 13: Winter's Wish (Theme From Winter's Wish)
A new release from Fox & His Friends Records, Chapters (Screen & Stage Dancefloor Jazz from Yugoslavia 1971-1984) by Ozren Depolo brings to light a trove of previously unreleased music spanning more than a decade of his work in film, theater and television. This gatefold audiophile 180g LP, including a 12-page booklet with archival photos and detailed liner notes, offers for the first time a full album composed exclusively of Depolo's own authorship, drawn from master tapes held in private and institutional archives. Mastering and cutting was done by Frank Merritt from The Carvery Ozren Depolo rarely pursued opportunities to record original material, in part due to a general lack of interest among local publishers in jazz discography. Yet he was more than a gifted composer: he was also an accomplished saxophonist, clarinettist, flutist, pianist, arranger and occasionally, a jazz journalist who contributed articles to specialized programs on Radio Zagreb. Depolo also played in international big bands alongside jazz greats such as Clark Terry, Oliver Nelson and Gerry Mulligan, as well as in formations led by Bosko Petrovic, including the Nonconvertible All Stars and the B.P. Convention Big Band. He was a member of ensembles including The Alfi Kabiljo Orchestra, The Dragutin Diklic Ensemble, Jugoslovenska Pop Selekcija, The Stipica Kalogjera Octet, Vaclav Zahradnik & His East All Stars Band and the Zagreb Jazz Quintet. As both composer and arranger, he produced a significant body of work for large jazz orchestras and small ensembles. He was deeply engaged in jazz improvisation and avant-garde classical music, recording numerous chamber pieces for saxophone. A long-standing member of Acezantez, Zagreb's renowned contemporary music ensemble, he also collaborated with international figures such as Ted Curson, John Lewis, Johnny Griffin, Art Farmer, Leo Wright, Art Taylor, Slide Hampton and Lucky Thompson. This selection also includes his collaboration with Igor Savin and jazz vocalist Zdenka Kovacicek who were played on Karl Lagerfeld's fashion shows. The release demonstrates how Depolo was able to shift fluidly between idioms: from driving big-band passages to intimate chamber-like arrangements, from funk-tinged motifs to lyrical, impressionistic soundscapes. This stylistic breadth, always anchored in his deep jazz and funk sensibility, gave his music an adaptability perfectly suited to the hybrid world of stage and screen. The LP highlights that versatility while also presenting the coherence of his artistic voice, one that had gone unrecognized precisely because it was dispersed across so many contexts.
Growing up with and influenced by the sounds of TR-909 or TR-808 which surrounds you, then you would recognize Adham Zahran's signature sound and his unique skills when he plays with rhythms and catchy melodies, especially on this 'Grain Galaxy'. He also brings us tracks such as 'Ocean Falls' and 'Synth Funk Suit 1' full of pleasant dreamy vibrations that would sound amazing at your local venue, as
well as if you just let the decks play at home for your own listening session. Head of Umanuto Records Javas remixed the original 'Grain Galaxy' as a classic house leg warmer to get it moving on the dance floor.
- A1: The End*
- A2: Superhero - Faith No More
- A3: In Slow Motion*
- A4: Blood On The Wall*
- A5: Anonymous Club - Courtney Barnett
- A6: Dreaming In The Rain*
- A7: Suicide*
- B1: The Bronze - Queens Of The Stone Age
- B2: Dead Man Walking*
- B3: The Blues - Hindi Zahra
- B4: I Knew*
- B5: The Chase*
- B6: I Know Places - Lykke Li
- B7: End Credits*
WPH label boss Red D has always considered Adham Zahran to be the Moodymann/Theo Parrish of Egypt, so it is only fitting that for his second release on the label Adham joins the WPH U.S. Series ranks. His deep dusty house sound oozes soul and groove and this release is no exception.
Opening track ‘Flowing Green’ kicks off the E.P. with shining chords that will go down like a treat on any house dancefloor in the hands of the right DJ. ‘No Sorrow’ takes things more heady, but make no mistake, it kicks like the proverbial mule if you let it roam free. On the B-side we first have Detroit’s mainstay Brian Kage on remix duties for the final track ‘Picture Of The Tree’, providing that extra motor city funk we all love. The original finishes the proceedings in – dare we say it – deepest fashion to round off another quality outing from the WPH camp.
New album from the Parisian producer.
Label say:
Because, at La Creme Garcia Club, a private circle of discerning smokers in Barcelona, Blundetto was in heavy rotation in the playlists. So heavy that these people of good taste for legal activity on this side of the Pyrenees yet prohibited from profits, had the idea of becoming the privileged partners of a new album. Without scrutiny, without intervention in the artistic, but with a single watchword: let Blundetto return to his first love of world sound.
The result is a stereo trip illustrated by Mossy Giant's artwork. A trip around the world without leaving your couch.
An offer that cannot be refused.
Ten years had passed since Bad Bad Things; it was the occasion to celebrate this decade by reviving its state of mind. The one who mixes collaborations, atmospheres, and styles. Exiled to the green, in musical autarky from several albums, Blundetto has therefore returned to the rhythm of city life and studios. He has changed his way of operating, opened his repertoire, and invited friends to new titles that he had written for them.
The circle of intimates already present on Bad Bad Things (Hindi Zahra, General Electric, Chico Mann) has widened to include regular accomplices (Biga Ranx) and to extend to artists with whom Blundetto felt an obvious connection (Crime Apple, Leonardo Marques). Guided by this roadmap written by Blundetto, all succeeded in painting with their colors and spreading their musical soul in the project, either taking the rhythmic direction of Brazil, Africa, or Latin America, getting dizzy in Jamaican fumes or chopping at the salient angles of hip hop.
Dive into the new openings of Clément Petit’s arrangements, now more sophisticated than those on which Blundetto evolved, and now capable of bringing an orchestral dimension made of strings and brass, creating a direct opening on the emotions, an automatic generator of images to accompany the soundtrack by the producer Blackjoy.
Whatever the orientation, each guest becomes a unique and essential part while Blundetto remains the common thread, the cement and the final varnish of a musical mosaic called Good Good Things.
- A1: Girls Of Iskandariah
- A2: Night Entertainer (Azef El Layl) (Azef El Layl)
- A3: The Joy Of Lina (Farha) (Farha)
- B1: Dance Of Tenderness
- B2: Jamileh
- C1: A New Candle
- C2: Once A Year (Zourouni) (Zourouni)
- D1: A Flower Of My Imagination (Ya Zahraren) (Ya Zahraren)
- D2: A Night At The Station (Leylet Al Mahatta) (Leylet Al Mahatta)
- D3: Love Of Laura (Ya Laure Houbbouki) (Ya Laure Houbbouki)
The first release in Ernesto Chahoud’s ‘Middle Eastern Heavens’ reissue series for BBE Music, we are delighted to present Lebanese maestro Ihsan Al-Munzer’s 1979 album ‘Belly Dance Disco’.
In late 70's and early 80's Beirut, Lebanese organist, composer and arranger Ihsan Al-Munzer made a series of pioneering synth-driven fusion albums that reimagined Middle Eastern music. The records came at a pivotal time in Lebanon’s musical history of avant garde experimentation that was blossoming, just as the country’s 15-year civil war took hold.
Ihsan Al-Munzer’s first release as a solo artist, ‘Belly Dance Disco’ aimed to fuse ‘Western’ modern music and bellydance to make it more accessible to the local audience in the late 1970s. “I wanted to put a mixture of European beat with Arabic percussion, but I made the European rhythm and harmony very easy to listen to for the Arabic ear – soft and understandable” says Al- Munzer.
Today, the composer’s music has made the return journey back to the West; with tracks on the album featured by hip hop artists such as Mos Def, who sampled Al-Munzer’s composition ‘Joy of Lina’ on his 2009 song ‘The Embassy’.
The 10-track album was released in 1979 on the legendary Voix De L’Orient label, which was also home to pioneering Lebanese composers The Rahbani Brothers. One of the earliest artists to introduce the synthesizer to Middle Eastern music, Al-Munzer leads the band, playing the main melody lines on the Kawai Organ and Solina String Synthesizer. Three of his original compositions feature on the album, alongside creative re-imaginings of Turkish and Arabic folklore and modern classics, pushing the boundaries of bellydance music to chime with the international scene.
Al-Munzer’s five titles from the 1970's and 1980's are part of BBE’s ‘Middle Eastern Heavens’ reissue series, a collection of groundbreaking productions from Lebanon, curated by Lebanese DJ, compiler and music researcher Ernesto Chahoud.
Notes by Natalie Shooter, a music journalist and researcher based in Beirut, edited by Will Sumsuch.
- A1: Sanarjiou
- A2: Ya Roubaou'a Biladi
- A3: Zahrat El Mada'en
- A4: El Kods Al Atika
- A5: Sayfonfal Youch'har
- B1: Ghaba Naharon
- B2: Yaffa
- B3: Bissan
- B4: Sanarjiou
- B5: Sayfonfal Youch'har
Superb, deep arabic orchestral tones and female vocals
On his debut E.P. for WPH Adham Zahran presents two pieces of divine house music that ooze soul and musicianship. 'The Midnight Tower' will go straight to your hips with it infectious piano hook whereas 'Disco Infinite' is a subtle discofied bass affair that would sit well next to classic Theo Parrish or Moodymann stuff. High praise, but just listen and you'll know it's well-deserved!
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