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Album Reviews: To What Strange Place

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  • Album Reviews: To What Strange Place

    ALBUM REVIEWS: TO WHAT STRANGE PLACE

    Scotsman
    http://news.scotsman.com/entertainment/Album-reviews-Charlie-Simpson-.6818653.jp
    Aug 15 2011
    UK

    By Scotsman critics

    Our critics take a look at some of this week's new releases....

    ...

    To What Strange Place: The Music of the Ottoman-American Diaspora
    1916-1929 Thompkins Square, £29.99 *****

    THE story of this fascinating triple-CD begins and ends with tears. It
    begins with the flight of Turkish-Armenians from Turkey in 1915, when
    hundreds of thousands were murdered or driven into exile; it ends when
    the 1929 Wall Street crash threw most of America's new immigrants onto
    the scrap-heap. In between, a remarkable musical culture flourished
    wherever Armenians, Turks, and Greeks were clustered together:
    here we encounter the unmistakeable sounds of all three cultures,
    fundamentally one and the same.

    Almost everything here was recorded in Manhattan. These musicians moved
    among the cafes of New York's Little Armenia and its Sephardic quarter,
    playing with and listening to each other, surrounded by men wearing
    fezes and smoking water-pipes. Many were also peddlers, or engravers,
    or waiters, or fruit-sellers; they played to recover their sense of
    identity, and to accompany their traditional dances.

    "Ah, I wish I had never gone, /Ah, I wish I had never seen/ Darling
    you, America," sings Achilleas Poulos from Anatolia in 1926: this was
    a very strong love-hate relationship. One of these CDs consists of
    American releases for Ottoman emigres of music by their compatriots
    back home: record companies made a killing this way, trading on the
    nostalgia market. The other two are of the genuine thing - emigre
    stars performing for their communities.

    Some of the recordings are very rough in quality, others surprisingly
    good, but two tracks stand out. The first is by the Greek singer Marika
    Papagika (1890-1943), one of the most popular immigrant singers in
    America. The other is by Armenag Chah-Mouradian, a blacksmith's son
    whose sweet rendition of a Komitas song literally tugs the heart.

    MICHAEL CHURCH


    From: Baghdasarian
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