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WOW!!!! Nov 13, 2009 I was not sure I even ordered this CD but WOW! Let me just string out some words.........haunting, mysterious, beautiful, exotic, journey taking, entering other worlds, alluring, captivating, melodic, enchanting....I could go on and on with the help of [...] of course.
I found it! May 26, 2009 I've been slowly building my experience of Middle Eastern music for the last few years, and this album represents a sort of breakthrough for me, I think. I can see a point in the future when a significant part of my CD collection will be made up of Middle Eastern/Central Asian etc. music. Right now I only have a few recordings in this vein -- but some of my old CDs have given out, and I've been replacing them.
At any rate, I really like this album! I listened to Disc 1 a little while ago, and Disc 2 is playing right now. I like the rhythm, the (to western ears) unusual instruments, and Azam Ali's singing is remarkable. I really want to know more about this type of music, and this album does not dampen my enthusiasm!
I give it five stars, without reservation.
Beautiful album May 12, 2009 A wonderful, eclectic mix of Middle Eastern and Indian sounds, rhythms, and instruments. At times it sounds like the score of a movie. Very relaxing and evocative music. And the voice... Azam is amazing! Sensuous, sultry, and alluring. She is like a Middle Eastern Sade.
Awesome Mar 19, 2009 Unlike some of the other reviewers here I'm actually new to Niyaz, but I have to say that since this cd arrived it's not been out of my stero. This has to be the most hauntingly beautiful piece of music I own. It's almost completely different from the kind of thing I usually buy (afrobeat) but I cannot recommend it highly enough. I am familiar with Turkish and other Middle Eastern music, but this is just kind of transcendental. I am getting divorced right now, and it's actually doing wonders for relieving my stress levels. I'd recommend it for that alone! Listen and purchase - I really don't think that there's anyone who could be disappointed by this piece of work.
A Milestone Jan 10, 2009 Azam Ali, she of the haunting voice of the quasi Dead Can Dance group Vas, has been on a long musical journey that has at last reached a profoundly significant milestone with her new group Nayaz, in which she is teamed with Carman Rizzo, a electronics wizard, and Loga Ramin Torkian, who plays assorted traditional and modern string instruments. Although the first CD is electronic enhanced, it is far modest so, compared to a similar recording of Persian Sufi songs by Sussan Deyhim on Madman of God [Crammed Discs]. The recordings were beautifully mixed from the various instrumental layers by these musical trio: no mean feat. The songs originated in tranditional Turkish and Iranian mysticism but the sound is contemporary. To put it bluntly, these two CDs, semi-electronic and purely acoustic, deserve every honor [hello, gatekeepers], they are so remarkably good. Twenty-two other reviewers before me agree. I have recently immersed myself in Persian and Sufi music, and although the classical modes are rich and rewarding, these modern, more popular renditions are a breath of fresh air. The album succeeds in every way.
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