Added: Mar 29, 2007

From: porest

Duration: 3:22

Track 1 from the Sublime Frequencies CD, "Omar Souleyman- Highway to Hassake: Folk and Pop Sounds of Syria" An excerpt from the track "Leh Jani" taken from cassette. Featuring: Omar Souleyman - vocals Rizan Sa'id - Keyboard/Rhythms Mahmoud Harbi - Poetry And an unknown saz player Recorded in SYRIA. Filmed on location in Syria and edited by Mark Gergis with additional footage from various VCD video clips representing 10 years of Omar Souleyman video clips and footage. Omar Souleyman is a Syrian musical legend. Since 1994, he and his musicians have emerged as a staple of folk-pop throughout Syria, but until now they have remained little known outside of the country. To date, they have issued more than five-hundred studio and live- recorded cassette albums which are easily spotted in the shops of any Syrian city. Born in rural Northeastern Syria, he began his musical career in 1994 with a small group of local collaborators that remain with him today. The myriad musical traditions of the region are evident in their music. Here, classical Arabic mawal-style vocalization gives way to high-octane Syrian Dabke (the regional folkloric dance and party music), Iraqi Choubi and a host of Arabic, Kurdish and Turkish styles, among others. This amalgamation is truly the sound of Syria. The music often has an overdriven sound consisting of phase-shifted Arabic keyboard solos and frantic rhythms. At breakneck speeds, these shrill Syrian electronics play out like forbidden morse-code, but the moods swing from coarse and urgent to dirgy and contemplative in the rugged anthems that comprise Souleyman's repertoire. Oud, reeds, baglama saz, accompanying vocals and percussion fill out the sound from track to track. Mahmoud Harbi is a long-time collaborator and the man responsible for much of the poetry sung by Souleyman. Together, they commonly perform the Ataba, a traditional form of folk poetry used in Dabke. On stage, Harbi chain smokes cigarettes while standing shoulder to shoulder with Souleyman, periodically leaning over to whisper the material into his ear. Acting as a conduit, Souleyman struts into the audience with urgency, vocalizing the prose in song before returning for the next verse. Souleyman's first hit in Syria was "Jani" (1996) which gained cassette-kiosk infamy and brought him recognition throughout the country. Over the years, his popularity has risen steadily and the group tirelessly performs concerts throughout Syria and has accepted invitations to perform abroad in Saudi Arabia, Dubai and Lebanon. Omar Souleyman is a man of hospitality and striking integrity who describes his style as his own and prides himself on not being an imitator or a sellout. Sublime Frequencies is honored to present the Western debut of Omar Souleyman with this retrospective disc of studio and live recordings spanning 12 years of his career, culled from cassettes recorded between 1994 and 2006. This collection offers a rare glimpse into Syrian street-level folk-pop and Dabke-- a phenomena seldom heard in the West, not previously deemed serious enough for export by the Syrians and rarely, if ever, included on the import agenda of worldwide academic musical committees. CD available at: www.sublimefrequencies.com

Channel: Music

Tags: arabic  city  dabke  damascus  debka  debke  frequencies  gergis  girl  music  porest  soleiman  sublime  suleyman  suliman  sun  syria 


Rating: 4.65 (232 ratings)    Views: 259624' favoriteCount='695    Comments: 25

dejentrification Says:

Sep 7, 2008 - This is so strong! I want my Omar Souleyman VINYL! L.P now!I am playing this tonight somewhere in Phoenix Arizona,or this week I dont care HOW I get a hold of It! Big Ups Senor Souleyman!

dejentrification Says:

Sep 7, 2008 - Omar Souleyman, Strong stuff..NO vinyl.too new...I would look too!BE playing this in Phoenix this week!Bump d bump!Good drums good tones strong voice tripped out lyrical accomplice.I heard the guys telling him stuff in his ear is whispering words from his poems and its a collabarating thing going on..

kellefeni1 Says:

Sep 8, 2008 - LEEEHH JAANII HAHA its so funny

jojomaniakos Says:

Sep 30, 2008 - omar souleyman is like an arab michael jackson in kurdistan... check out vassilis saleas a greek avant-garde clurinet player.

solarnoise Says:

Oct 13, 2008 - well, pardon me.. truthfully i don't understand what he sings even a bit and know anything about him at all neither. i am fully aware that those two are of different ethnic groups though. hope u weren't offended?

moha5008 Says:

Oct 13, 2008 - omar suley man is from syrian and not kurdistan !!!

superjules Says:

Oct 15, 2008 - Money and Bitches!

ChloeAmiaIsabelleX Says:

Oct 16, 2008 - what a tune. this could make a wicked dnb remix... someone make one. love

ruwebeats Says:

Oct 21, 2008 - thanks for uploading this, great !!

donthakiller Says:

Oct 24, 2008 - this sounds more like a Kurdish song than arab

atsweethome Says:

Oct 24, 2008 - itz arab

fathihaki Says:

Oct 27, 2008 - ARAB KURDISH TURKISH? why do you care ? we live in the same area we shared music culture ..im an arab who loves turkish.. iranian kurdish and arab music.listen to shahram singing pharisi and kurdish song and you will understand.

ford909090 Says:

Oct 30, 2008 - بااااااااااااااااااااايخه

yasser350z Says:

Nov 5, 2008 - omar souleyman is arab syrian from ras alean- alhasske. i met him this summer in syria because i am his biggest fan in the world.

ali2404ali Says:

Nov 11, 2008 - arab

xSheepz Says:

Nov 17, 2008 - nicely put mate ^^.

Kmeshoo Says:

Nov 21, 2008 - مسكين والله اعمى ويغني .. الحمدلله

music95190 Says:

Nov 26, 2008 - CEY DU KURD IRAKIEN !

DEANaLEAN Says:

Nov 26, 2008 - What do the lyrics translate in to English?

Jagoda23 Says:

Nov 27, 2008 - obergeil!allah bruder!

dabkawi Says:

Nov 29, 2008 - تلحس بيضاتي..انت البايخ في احد يقول على ابو ماهر بايخ يا ظراط

TheRaginTiger Says:

Nov 30, 2008 - WTF?

andymcchef Says:

Dec 2, 2008 - awsome tune!!! what a legend!! rock on my friend x

stockton26 Says:

Dec 3, 2008 - yehki abdul kader

smellyinda Says:

Dec 4, 2008 - o yah!