Monday, September 30, 2024

INDIA – INDE Ram Narayan – Plays Sarangi – Raga Asavar / Raga Des – Solomon's Mines – SME 4

INDIA – INDE
Ram Narayan – Plays Sarangi – Raga Asavar / Raga Des – Solomon's Mines – SME 4, released in 1955 (10 inch, 33 RPM)
#India #Inde #Hindustani #Ram Narayan #Ram Narain #sarangi #Rajasthan #solo instrumental #traditional music #Indian music #musique indienne #world music #vinyl #10 inch record #Solomon's Mines #Music Republic
#India #Inde #Hindustani #Ram Narayan #Ram Narain #sarangi #Rajasthan #solo instrumental #traditional music #Indian music #musique indienne #world music #vinyl #10 inch record #Solomon's Mines #Music Republic


Born near Udaipur, Rajasthan, in 1927, Ram Narayan (or Ram Narain) is India's most renowned sarangi player. Traditionally, this instrument was used exclusively for vocal accompaniment. However, he elevated its status to that of a solo instrument and became the first sarangi player to achieve global recognition for his abstract and sensuous flights with the bowed instrument’s rich earthy sonorities.

 

According to Narayan, “I began my professional career as a sarangi player, accompanying top musicians like Omkarnath Thakur, Pandit Krishna Rao, Shankar Pandit, among others, from 1944 onward. After a certain period, I realized that my role as an accompanying musician was restricted and limited, and if I was to grow as a musician it was essential for me to explore new possibilities. I felt that the sarangi definitely deserved solo concert status.”* Narayan decided to definitively abandon the role as accompanist in 1956 to become a solo concert artist, despite (initially) tepid interest from the orthodox musical milieu in India. But his utterly brilliant playing, magnificent albums, and the rapturous reception of his music in the West, established Narayan as one of the Hindustani greats.

 

This exquisite first long-play album released by Narayan in 1955 showcases his genius and awesome mastery of his instrument, which produces a full-bodied, spellbinding, almost celestial, sound. 

 

He is accompanied here by Abdul Karim on tabla.

 

Né en 1927 près d’Udaipur dans le Rajasthan, Ram Narayan (ou Ram Narain) est le plus célèbre joueur de sarangi, un instrument traditionnellement réservée à l’accompagnement des chanteurs qu’il a élevé au rang d'instrument solo. Il fut le premier joueur de sarangi à être mondialement reconnu grâce à ses envolées lyriques abstraites et sensuelles sur les riches sonorités caverneuses de la vièle à archet.

 

Selon Narayan, « J’ai commencé ma carrière professionnelle en 1944 en tant que joueur de sarangi aux côtés de chanteurs comme Omkarnath Thakur, Pandit Krishna Rao et Shankar Pandit. Après un certain temps, j’ai réalisé que le rôle de musicien accompagnateur était finalement limité et que pour grandir musicalement, il était essentiel pour moi d’explorer de nouvelles possibilités. Je sentais que le sarangi méritait le statut d’instrument de concert solo »*. En 1956, Narayan décida d'abandonner définitivement son rôle d'accompagnateur pour se consacrer à une carrière solo, en dépit de l'intérêt limité et du scepticisme initialement exprimé par le milieu musical orthodoxe en Inde. Mais son jeu brillantissime, ses magnifiques albums et l’accueil enthousiaste de sa musique en Occident finirent par établir Narayan comme l’un des plus grands musiciens d’Inde du nord.

 

Ce disque exquis publié en 1955 illustre parfaitement son génie et sa maîtrise époustouflante du sarangi, qui produit des sonorités riches, envoûtantes, quasi célestes. 

Il est accompagné ici par Abdul Karim aux tablas.
*August 11, 2012 Ram Narayan interview  here 


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Our other sarangi music posts:

Ram Narayan & Chatur Lal – HMV EPE 1212, 1961 here

Ram Narayan – HMV EASD 1340, 1969 here

Bundo Khan –  Sarangi Nawaz – LKDE 20004 here


Ram Narayan



Sarangi, Punjab, second half of the 19th century, from Gloire des Princes, Louange des Dieux  catalogue for the March-June 2003 Musée 

de la Musique exhibition in Paris:


MusicRepublic INDIA – INDE – Ram Narayan – Plays Sarangi – Raga Asavar / Raga Des – Solomon's Mines – SME 4


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Sunday, September 1, 2024

ROMANIA – ROUMANIE Ansamblul lui Sidor Andronicescu ensemble – The Traditional Folk Music Band: II Bucovina – Electrecord EPE 02164

ROMANIA – ROUMANIE

Ansamblul lui Sidor Andronicescu ensemble – The Traditional Folk Music Band: II Bucovina – Institutul de Cercetări Etnologie și Dialectologice – Electrecord EPE 02164 – recorded in 1936, 1954 and 1956, released in 1983 (LP)

#Romania #Roumanie #Bucovina #Bukovina #Sidor Andronicescu #violin #Ilie Cazacu #pipes # Institutul de Cercetări Etnologie și Dialectologi #Electrecord #folk music #traditional music #world music#Romanian music #hora dance #vinyl #MusicRepublic
#Romania #Roumanie #Bucovina #Bukovina #Sidor Andronicescu #violin #Ilie Cazacu #pipes # Institutul de Cercetări Etnologie și Dialectologi #Electrecord #folk music #traditional music #world music#Romanian music #hora dance #vinyl #MusicRepublic
#Romania #Roumanie #Bucovina #Bukovina #Sidor Andronicescu #violin #Ilie Cazacu #pipes # Institutul de Cercetări Etnologie și Dialectologi #Electrecord #folk music #traditional music #world music#Romanian music #hora dance #vinyl #MusicRepublic
#Romania #Roumanie #Bucovina #Bukovina #Sidor Andronicescu #violin #Ilie Cazacu #pipes # Institutul de Cercetări Etnologie și Dialectologi #Electrecord #folk music #traditional music #world music#Romanian music #hora dance #vinyl #MusicRepublic

I am pleased to present an album of the seminal eight LP series of Romanian regional folk music curated from the archives of the Institutul de Cercetări Etnologice și Dialectologice and released in the 1980s on the Electrecord label.

 

The 20 tracks on this album by the Ansamblul lui Sidor Andronicescu ensemble were recorded over two decades in 1936, 1954 and 1956 in the village of Fundul Moldovei in Bukovina, located in northeastern Romania at the border of Ukraine. 

 

The accomplished violinist Sidor Andronicescu founded the instrumental ensemble to perform at the village’s hora dances and weddings. Andronicescu on violin, Ilie Cazacu on pipes, Zenovia Țimpău on vocals (B3), Vasile Mîndrilă (A9 & A 10) and Fan Macovei (B9) on vocals [declaimers], along with unknown musicians weave fluid, lyrical and spirited sonorities that are at the heart of the region’s authentic time-honored rural culture. 

 

J'ai le plaisir de vous présenter un album de la série de huit disques de musique folklorique régionale roumaine tirée des archives de l'Institutul de Cercetări Etnologice și Dialectologice et publiée dans les années 1980 sur le label Electrecord.

 

Les 20 morceaux de cet album ont été enregistrés sur deux décennies, en 1936, 1954 et 1956, dans le village de Fundul Moldovei en Bucovine, situé dans le nord-est de la Roumanie, à la frontière de l'Ukraine. 

 

L’excellent violoniste Sidor Andronicescu fonda cet ensemble instrumental pour jouer lors de danses hora et de mariages au village. Sidor Andronicescu au violon, Ilie Cazacu à la cornemuse, Zenovia Țimpău au chant (B3), Vasile Mîndrilă (A9 & A 10) et Fan Macovei (B9) au chant [déclamateurs], ainsi que des musiciens inconnus, tissent des sonorités fluides, lyriques et pleines d'entrain qui sont au cœur de l'authentique culture rurale d’antan de la région. 


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Our other Romanian music posts:

Anthology of Romanian Folk Music Vol. I, record 1 – Electrecord EPD 78 here

Ion Matache – Electrecord EPD 1269 here

Mihály Halmágyi with Gizella Ádám – Gyimesi Népzene (Hungarian Folk Music from Gyimes) – Hungaroton here

Orient - Okzident – Musik Aus Südost-Europa – Museum Collection Berlin MC3 here



Vintage postcard of a ox-drawn carriage, Bukovina, Romania:

MusicRepublic ROMANIA – ROUMANIE Ansamblul lui Sidor Andronicescu ensemble – The Traditional Folk Music Band: II Bucovina – Electrecord EPE 02164


Vintage postcard of a bear trainer in the woods, Romania:

Historically, dancing bears were a common sight in Romania, Bulgaria and Serbia.  This tradition, which predates Christianity, involved bears dancing in front of houses to ward off evil spirits and to bring good fortune. In Romania the bears danced to songs accompanied by drums and wooden spoon percussion.


MusicRepublic ROMANIA – ROUMANIE Ansamblul lui Sidor Andronicescu ensemble – The Traditional Folk Music Band: II Bucovina – Electrecord EPE 02164

Please help me purchase important traditional records 

to pursue my global curation project and share the 

best finds with you on this blog: