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<atom:feed xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><atom:id>http://calabashmusic.com/</atom:id><atom:title>New Music From Andrew Cronshaw on Calabash Music</atom:title><atom:updated>2008-09-06T10:40:45Z</atom:updated><atom:link href="http://calabashmusic.com//world/publisher/artistView/action/getfeed/item_id/65044/feedtype/102/output/feed/atom.xml" rel="self"/><atom:author><atom:name>The Calabash Music Team</atom:name><atom:email>support@calabashmusic.com</atom:email></atom:author><atom:entry><atom:title>Ochre</atom:title><atom:id>http://andrewcronshaw.calabashmusic.com/#album_65116</atom:id><atom:updated>2006-12-12T07:40:55Z</atom:updated><atom:link href="http://andrewcronshaw.calabashmusic.com/#album_65116"/><atom:summary>Music from Ochre</atom:summary><atom:content type="html"><![CDATA[<img src='http://files.calabashmusic.com/images/65116/ochre.jpg'>It&rsquo;s relatively common to hear British musicians investigating foreign traditions; indeed Andrew Cronshaw himself explored Finnish music with his last album, On The Shoulders Of The Great Bear, made in Finland&rsquo;s traditional music heartland. But for his new one, Ochre, it&rsquo;s back to Britain, and the view is reversed - musicians from the traditions of the Middle East, Greece and Wales react to and build on music exotic to them &ndash; that of England.<br /><br />The result, with each of the seven tracks using as its starting point a song melody from English tradition, is inventive, image-rich and voluptuous. The team that gathered at Dreamworld studio, in the green rolling countryside near the south-west tip of Wales, comprises Syrian qanun and oud virtuoso Abdullah Chhadeh, the great Welsh triple-harpist Llio Rhydderch, Arabic vocal diva Natacha Atlas, Pontic lyra virtuoso Matthaios Tsahourides from northern Greece, multi-talented Australia-resident Brit Ian Blake on bass clarinet, clarinet, soprano sax and prepared piano, Irish double bassist Bernard O&rsquo;Neill, and Cronshaw himself on electric zither, the 6 foot long Slovakian flute fujara, Chinese brass-reeded ba-wu and other irregular instruments from the shelf marked &ldquo;what&rsquo;s that?&rdquo;]]></atom:content></atom:entry><atom:entry><atom:title>On The Shoulders Of The Great Bear</atom:title><atom:id>http://andrewcronshaw.calabashmusic.com/#album_65131</atom:id><atom:updated>2006-12-12T07:40:55Z</atom:updated><atom:link href="http://andrewcronshaw.calabashmusic.com/#album_65131"/><atom:summary>Music from On The Shoulders Of The Great Bear</atom:summary><atom:content type="html"><![CDATA[<img src='http://files.calabashmusic.com/images/65131/on_the_shoulders_of_the_great_bear.jpg'>On The Shoulders Of The Great Bear is built on sixteen traditional tunes. Twelve are from three territories with Finno-Ugrian languages - Finland, Ingria and Estonia - one is from the Siberian Ob-Ugrian Vogul/Mansi people of the north-east Urals, and three are from the Scottish Gaelic-speaking tradition. In all these traditions are to be found aspects of a musical world much older than, and very different from, the rhyming song forms, couple-dance musics and western classical harmony which spread across most of Europe in the last two or three centuries.]]></atom:content></atom:entry></atom:feed>
