v/a - the travelling archive - folk music from bengal: field recordings from bangladesh, india and the bengali diaspora - sublime frequencies - vinyl
SF 092LP - 79932 - uslp - €26.99New Copy
Genre: World - Misc
1. In the marketplace (Ambient Recording)
2. Jhumur [Amulya Kumar (voice and harmonium), Abinash Kalindi (table)]
3. Solo Dotara [Ibrahim Boyati]
4. Boatman's Song [Idris Majhi]
5. ong to Goddess Kali [Renuka Acharya]
6. Wedding Song [Anurupa Roy and Mini Roy (voice), Shopon Kumar Das (dotara)]
7. Murshidi song [Ahmed Moyez]
8. Baul song of from Kushtia, Bangladesh [Nazrul Fokir]
9. Baul song from West Bengal, India [Shanti Babaji (voice and khamak or variable tension chordophone), Malay Bhattacharya (violin), Nitai Das (dubki), Tarak Khepa (dotara), Tarun Chowdhury (bamboo flute)
10. Songs from a Tea Garden [Shobha Minja, Deunishia Tirki, Prishaka Kindo, Miristila Tirki and Aruna Pappa (voice)]
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Sublime Frequencies presents a wide variety of folk music of the Bengali people including Baul music - field recordings from Bengal Province, India and the lowlands of Bangladesh - recorded and researched by Moushumi Bhowmik and Sukanta Majumdar. Limited edition LP comes in a tip-on jacket with a two-sided insert with liner notes and photos. Check
The Travelling Archive is a journey through the folk music of Bengal. It is run by Calcutta-based Bengali singer, writer and researcher, Moushumi Bhowmik, and sound recordist and sound designer, Sukanta Majumdar. They have been making field recordings of songs and stories across Bangladesh and eastern India, even the Bengali diaspora in East London, since 2003; documenting and disseminating their research through archives, presentation-performances, art works, and their own independent record label and web site. Moushumi and Sukanta get out there, travel all over, become friends and live with the musicians, record them in their homes and villages, on their rivers, in their tea shops and work fields. Bengal, which includes Calcutta, India, Dhaka, Bangladesh, and more than 250 million people, is an amazingly diverse yet unique region, home to some of the largest cities in the world and plenty of uncategorizable and diverse folk music, including those wandering minstrels, the Bauls.
The music and instrumentation presented on this LP features solo voice and chorus vocals, harmonium, dotara (four-string fretless lute), ektara (traditional one-string drone instrument), dugi (small kettle drum), bamboo flute, violin, and even an empty popcorn tub played like a drum. This is a diverse and magnificent sampling of what remains a massive archive of folk music from this region and Sublime Frequencies hopes to continue to release additional volumes in the future. Produced for Sublime Frequencies by Robert Millis, this limited edition LP comes in a tip-on heavy jacket with insert containing liner notes and photos.