ali kuru - egzotik - leng - vinyl
LENGLP 011 - 97934 - uk2lp - €29.99New Copy
Genre: Disco - Cosmic/Balearic
1. Bazaar
2. Tangerine Dream
3. Zorba The Greek
4. Mirage
5. Return To Paradise
6. Le Voyage De Space
7. Hiyar
8. The Catcher In The Rye
9. Ashoka
10. Mount Damavand
11. Sacred Valley
12. Love
13. Jungle Flower
14. Lost Bedouin
15. Adios
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Ali Kuru is one of those rare producers whose music sounds like nothing else around. The Istanbul-based artist has spent the best part of a decade honing his trademark style – a fragrant and intoxicating aural brew that combines a myriad of influences with atmospheric field recordings and snaking, mind-altering Middle Eastern instrumentation – via releases for the likes of Luxa Flex, Kalisah, Sound Architecture and, most recently, Leng.
.
It’s to the latter label that the publicity-shy producer returns with his latest album, Egzotik. From start to finish, it feels like a humid, sweat-soaked saunter through the winding streets of Istanbul in the company of a musician who draws more inspiration than most from his immediate surroundings.
Those surroundings come to the fore on opener “Bazaarâ€, where tipsy horns and gently strummed electric guitar passages slowly rise above the sound of a harbourside market.
They’re present, too, within the souk rhythms and cascading pianos of “Zorba The Greekâ€, beneath the gentle throb of “Lost Bedouinâ€, inside the spaced-out, stargazing pulse of “Hiyarâ€, and around the chiming melodies and mournful strings of hushed ambient closer “Adiosâ€.
Kuru’s genius lies in his ability to take familiar musical tropes and twist them into unique, Ottoman-inspired shapes. So, while “Tangerine Dream†doffs a cap to the stretched-out hypnotism of the legendary krautrock band of the same name, its reliance on backwards drum hits, locked-in grooves and psychedelic sample loops is a far more contemporary proposition.
Some may hear the influence of Detroit beatdown in the slow and dubby house grooves of “Le Voyage De Spaceâ€, while others could describe the drowsy “Ashoka†as being Weatherall-esque. Yet none of these tracks, layered as they are with traditional Balkan, Persian and Arabic instrumentation, sound like anything other than Ali Kuru productions.
The result is an album that surprises and enthralls in equal measure. Highlights come thick and fast, from the bubbling, dub-house psychedelia of “Mount Damavand†and haunting deep techno humidity of “Sacred Vallleyâ€, to the Augustus Pablo-in-Ankara shuffle of “Jungle Flower†and potent hookah hit of “Return to Paradiseâ€, where sampled voices rise above a typically tactile groove.
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