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Rabih Abou-Khalil|Tarab

Tarab

Rabih Abou-Khalil

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Tarab is an unusual album for the great Lebanese jazz composer and oud player in that it features no Western instruments or musicians, except for Glen Moore on the acoustic bass. The melody instruments are the nay (Arabic flute) played by the Syrian veteran Selim Kusur and, as always, Abou-Khalil on oud or Arabic lute (which more or less functions like the piano in a standard jazz quartet). Rounding out the group are Nabil Khaiat on frame drums and percussion, and Rameesh Shotham on South Indian drums and other percussion. Everyone but Kusur has worked at least semi-regularly with Abou-Khalil. (Kusur did play on Abou-Khalil's Roots & Sprouts, an earlier instance of an album with no Western instruments.) The lack of Western instrumentalists gives Tarab a less jazzy, more Arabic feeling than Abou-Khalil's other albums. Abou-Khalil builds his albums around his guest instrumentalists, so Tarab features the nay prominently, but even more, this is an album for the oud and for showing off the rhythm section. For example, on "In Search of the Well" there is actually a bass solo. And there are a few other pleasant surprises scattered throughout the album. On "Awakening," someone -- just who is not credited -- lets forth a string of bol singing, that rapid-fire, tongue-twisting Indian chant made famous in the West by Sheila Chandra. And on "Arabian Waltz," a jaw harp appears out of the blue , presumably played by Shotham, who plays it on Between Dusk and Dawn, accenting the fast-paced original version of what later became the more lush title track of the album Arabian Waltz. This last song is especially welcome for its strong melody, standing out on an album that certainly does not lack for atmosphere, but which would have benefited from greater tunefulness. Still, a very worthy effort, though not the best place to start one's Rabih Abou-Khalil collection, especially if one is coming from a jazz background.

© Kurt Keefner /TiVo

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Tarab

Rabih Abou-Khalil

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1
Bushman In The Desert
00:08:00

Rabih Abou-Khalil, Performer

1993 Edition MAWI 1993 2006 ENJA RECORDS M. Winckelmann GmbH

2
After Dinner
00:05:52

Rabih Abou-Khalil, Performer

1993 Edition MAWI 1993 2006 ENJA RECORDS M. Winckelmann GmbH

3
Awakening
00:08:06

Rabih Abou-Khalil, Performer

1993 Edition MAWI 1993 2006 ENJA RECORDS M. Winckelmann GmbH

4
Haneen Wa Hanaan
00:08:07

Rabih Abou-Khalil, Performer

1993 Edition MAWI 1993 2006 ENJA RECORDS M. Winckelmann GmbH

5
Lost Centuries
00:07:10

Rabih Abou-Khalil, Performer

1993 Edition MAWI 1993 2006 ENJA RECORDS M. Winckelmann GmbH

6
In Search Of The Well
00:03:37

Rabih Abou-Khalil, Performer

1993 Edition MAWI 1993 2006 ENJA RECORDS M. Winckelmann GmbH

7
Orange Fields
00:09:38

Rabih Abou-Khalil, Performer

1993 Edition MAWI 1993 2006 ENJA RECORDS M. Winckelmann GmbH

8
A Tooth Lost
00:05:20

Rabih Abou-Khalil, Performer

1993 Edition MAWI 1993 2006 ENJA RECORDS M. Winckelmann GmbH

9
Arabian Waltz
00:04:58

Rabih Abou-Khalil, Performer

1993 Edition MAWI 1993 2006 ENJA RECORDS M. Winckelmann GmbH

Chronique

Tarab is an unusual album for the great Lebanese jazz composer and oud player in that it features no Western instruments or musicians, except for Glen Moore on the acoustic bass. The melody instruments are the nay (Arabic flute) played by the Syrian veteran Selim Kusur and, as always, Abou-Khalil on oud or Arabic lute (which more or less functions like the piano in a standard jazz quartet). Rounding out the group are Nabil Khaiat on frame drums and percussion, and Rameesh Shotham on South Indian drums and other percussion. Everyone but Kusur has worked at least semi-regularly with Abou-Khalil. (Kusur did play on Abou-Khalil's Roots & Sprouts, an earlier instance of an album with no Western instruments.) The lack of Western instrumentalists gives Tarab a less jazzy, more Arabic feeling than Abou-Khalil's other albums. Abou-Khalil builds his albums around his guest instrumentalists, so Tarab features the nay prominently, but even more, this is an album for the oud and for showing off the rhythm section. For example, on "In Search of the Well" there is actually a bass solo. And there are a few other pleasant surprises scattered throughout the album. On "Awakening," someone -- just who is not credited -- lets forth a string of bol singing, that rapid-fire, tongue-twisting Indian chant made famous in the West by Sheila Chandra. And on "Arabian Waltz," a jaw harp appears out of the blue , presumably played by Shotham, who plays it on Between Dusk and Dawn, accenting the fast-paced original version of what later became the more lush title track of the album Arabian Waltz. This last song is especially welcome for its strong melody, standing out on an album that certainly does not lack for atmosphere, but which would have benefited from greater tunefulness. Still, a very worthy effort, though not the best place to start one's Rabih Abou-Khalil collection, especially if one is coming from a jazz background.

© Kurt Keefner /TiVo

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