Moon Shines At Night (LP)

 
Moon Shines At Night (LP) cover
$60.00 Out of Stock
6+ weeks
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Djivan Gasparyan
Moon Shines At Night (LP)

[ All Saints / LP ]

Release Date: Saturday 1 January 2022

This item is currently out of stock. It may take 6 or more weeks to obtain from when you place your order as this is a specialist product.

Moon Shines at Night is a rich but simple collection of Middle Eastern songs performed by Djivan Gasparyan on the duduk (a reed-like Egyptian clarinet) with two supporting musicians. The structure for most of these songs is similar in nature, with the duduk soloing over the accompanying "drone" or foundation. Frequent Eno collaborator and guitar pioneer Michael Brook takes production credit for this release, doing a sort of Peter Gabriel-style nod to world music. Brook does exactly the right thing by providing the right acoustical setting and not much else (reminiscent of the wonderful ECM producer Manfred Eicher). Gasparyan's playing produces an equal amount of sadness and sweetness in every note, every phrase, and every song. "Sayat Nova" is especially forlorn, repeating a phrase of heavy sighs and burdened shoulders, and the ten-minute "Apricot Tree" is a contemplative pilgrimage through the desert at night. For a surprisingly subtle variation,Gasparyan substitutes vocals rather than his duduk on two tracks ("7th December 1988" and "Mother of Mine"); his vocal style is so similar to his playing that it's easy to blur the two in the ears. "Tonight" further breaks the mold by doubling up on the duduk (presumably with a studio overdub), and the harmonies are lovely to behold. Uninitiated ears may take a stronger liking to this one in particular (all three minutes of it), since it follows more Western parameters. It is unfortunate that the three other musicians aren't given credit for any particulars; there is a legitimate degree of it due here, owed in equal parts to Khandvat Tuner, Me Lotzazrue Intz, and Do Noritz Ekeles. These three take turns being the foundation that Gasparyan floats over so beautifully. Although Brook has less to do, his presence carries weight. This makes a noteworthy example of world music without being flamboyant or overly exotic. Simply graceful. ~ Glenn Swan, All Music Guide

Moon Shines at Night is a rich but simple collection of Middle Eastern songs performed by Djivan Gasparyan on the duduk (a reed-like Egyptian clarinet) with two supporting musicians. The structure for most of these songs is similar in nature, with the duduk soloing over the accompanying "drone" or foundation. Frequent Eno collaborator and guitar pioneer Michael Brook takes production credit for this release, doing a sort of Peter Gabriel-style nod to world music. Brook does exactly the right thing by providing the right acoustical setting and not much else (reminiscent of the wonderful ECM producer Manfred Eicher). Gasparyan's playing produces an equal amount of sadness and sweetness in every note, every phrase, and every song. "Sayat Nova" is especially forlorn, repeating a phrase of heavy sighs and burdened shoulders, and the ten-minute "Apricot Tree" is a contemplative pilgrimage through the desert at night. For a surprisingly subtle variation,Gasparyan substitutes vocals rather than his duduk on two tracks ("7th December 1988" and "Mother of Mine"); his vocal style is so similar to his playing that it's easy to blur the two in the ears. "Tonight" further breaks the mold by doubling up on the duduk (presumably with a studio overdub), and the harmonies are lovely to behold. Uninitiated ears may take a stronger liking to this one in particular (all three minutes of it), since it follows more Western parameters. It is unfortunate that the three other musicians aren't given credit for any particulars; there is a legitimate degree of it due here, owed in equal parts to Khandvat Tuner, Me Lotzazrue Intz, and Do Noritz Ekeles. These three take turns being the foundation that Gasparyan floats over so beautifully. Although Brook has less to do, his presence carries weight. This makes a noteworthy example of world music without being flamboyant or overly exotic. Simply graceful. ~ Glenn Swan, All Music Guide

Tracks:

A1 Lovely Spring
A2 Sayat Nova
A3 7th December 1988
A4 Don't Make Me Cry
A5 You Have to Come Back to Me
A6 Tonight

B1 They Took My Love Away
B2 Moon Shines at Night
B3 Apricot Tree
B4 Mother of Mine