#anatolian rock
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Tracklist:
Rattlesnake âą Melting âą Open Water âą Sleep Drifter âą Billabong Valley âą Anoxia âą Doom City âą Nuclear Fusion âą Flying Microtonal Banana
Spotify âȘ Bandcamp âȘ YouTube
#hyltta-polls#polls#artist: king gizzard & the lizard wizard#language: english#decade: 2010s#Psychedelic Rock#Garage Rock#Anatolian Rock#Acid Rock#Krautrock
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Kit Sebastian - 'Bul Bul Bul'
#kit sebastian#bul bul bul#merve erdem#kit martin#garage pop#psychedelic pop#anatolian rock#bossa nova#chanson#pop#new internationale#2024#Youtube
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211: Erkin Koray // Arap Saçı
Arap Saçı Erkin Koray 2021, Pharaway Sounds
Pharaway Soundsâ Arap Saçı (Arab Hair) collects 24 Erkin Koray tracks originally issued as singles between 1968 and 1976. Koray is best known in the West for his groundbreaking fusion of Anatolian/Arabic folk and classical with crunching psychedelic rock on his 1974 debut LP Elektronik TĂŒrkĂŒler. However, as Angela Sawyerâs tart liner notes observe, Turkey was predominantly a singles market at the time, and back home Koray did most of his damage on 7â. The limitations of the format, and the preferences of Korayâs record company, preclude the kind of long-form acid voyages he undertook on Elektronik TĂŒrkĂŒler, but he's able to generate plenty of smoke on these âpopâ singles.
Highlights abound. Arap Saçı kicks off with 1973âs âMesafalerâ (âDistancesâ), a scorching psych banger complete with cowbell that only stops rocking to periodically gawp and stare fixedly into space for 20 or 30 seconds at a time before shaking itself awake to get back to business. (Is there footage of a Turkish TV performance featuring liquid light art? You bet your hairy ass there is.)
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The waltzing, organ and hand drum-led âKomĆu Kızıâ (âGirl Nextdoorâ) is a classic melancholy Middle Eastern ballad that hides a wild, surprising drop two-thirds of the way through; Koray freaks âAĆka Ä°nanmıyorumâ (âI Do Not Believe in Loveâ) with his insinuating croon and serpentine guitar licks; âIstememâ (âI Do Not Wantâ) mixes a light-stepping folk beat with some stinging solos that arenât too far off what Uli Jon Roth would get up to in Germany with Scorpions a few years later. There really isnât a bum track to be found.
This new compilation covers much of the same ground as the â70s Erkin Koray (AKA Mesafaler) and Erkin Koray 2 (AKA ĆaĆkın) singles compilations, and Pharaway Sounds opts to follow their track sequencing as closely as possibleâa good choice, as they had a great flow, though a bit frustrating for those hoping to track Korayâs musical development chronologically. Regardless, we know that Koray was exposed to Western music as a young age, learning Occidental classical music on the piano as a child and discovering rock ânâ roll as a teen. According to the liners, Koray was performing songs by Elvis, Fats Domino, and Jerry Lee Lewis in the late â50s, and by the late â60s, when he began to emerge as a recording artist, heâd clearly imbibed industrial quantities of Hendrix, Cream, and the other usual psychonauts.
In a previous review, I briefly contrasted Koray with Egyptâs Omar Khorshid, a fellow guitar god and contemporary pioneer in electrified Arabic music. Khorshid had some familiarity with Western pop music, but he was working with the top stars in Arab folk and classical, using electric instruments to push traditional Eastern music forward rather than to fuse it with rock. Koray on the other hand was a long-haired freak who claims to have fought in the streets with a knife and joined Anglo-American-inspired combos with names like Mustard (Hardal) and Sweat (Ter). By the late â60s rock had become popular in Turkey, as had Arabesk music, which Sawyer describes as âa purposely uncouth⊠appropriation of Arabic pop and folk, popular with rural or marginalized folks who were suddenly encountering pockets of urbanized Europe in their backyard.â Koray intuitively crossbred the invasive genre (rock) with the reactionary one (Arabesk) and found himself one of the fathers of a powerful new mongrel breed of psych music.
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By reissuing both Elektronik TĂŒrkĂŒler and these essential singles, Pharaway Sounds has done a real service to psych and non-Western rock aficionados. Koray makes a great gateway to the other masters of â70s Anatolian folk-rock, including Selda, MoÄollar, and BarÄ±Ć Manço, a loose affiliation of artists that has been one of my most prized discoveries of recent years.
211/365
#erkin koray#turkish music#turkish rock#turkish psych#anatolian rock#anatolian psych#anatolian music#psych rock#heavy psych#psychedelia#'70s music#'60s music#pharaway sounds#music review#vinyl record#arab hair
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Gaye Su Akyol - Love Buzz
Gaye Su Akyol is a singer, painter, and anthropologist from Istanbul, Turkey. Her two new, self-produced tracks for the Singles Club fuse hard rock, surf, and electronic music to push at the boundaries of rock and Anatolian psychedelic music (see New York Times Dec. 2019 feature). Their single leads with a cover of âLove Buzz,â originally by the Dutch psych band Shocking Blue, and famously covered by Nirvana on their 1988 debut single. It is a fitting tribute to the huge impact Nirvana had on Akyol in at a young age. The B-side, ââBöyle Olur Mu,â breathes new life into the song with hard-to-forget electro baglama, thick bass riffs, heroic guitars, and dark beats.
Her US tour starts on Saturday:
SEP 09 Bryant Park, New York City, NY SEP 11 City Winery Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA SEP 12 Jammin Java, Vienna, VA SEP 13 City Winery Boston, Boston, MA SEP 15 Drom, New York City, NY SEP 17 Los Globos, Los Angeles, CA SEP 19 Rickshaw Stop, San Francisco, CA SEP 20 Nectar Lounge, Seattle, WA
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Selda - TĂŒrkĂŒlerimiz 2 The Middle East and Anatolia will always have a special place in my heart, and amongst all the special things and people from the region, the music, specifically, is always something special. And from all the music out of the regions that I love, Selda has to be one of my all time favorites. If you're not familiar with music from Turkey or the Middle East, then this is a wonderful place to start. Heartfelt and beautiful.
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2024 Favorites Part 3 January 1, 2025
6 mummers mumming
another favorites of 2024 fill-in show, that's all! listen to the show
Carole King - Pleasant Valley Sunday (Demo) Alvilda - Angoisse
DJ speaks over I Think Like Midnight - Sound Flower
Subdued - Deserve Anarchy Benzin - Zeichen der Zeit Street Eaters - Expensive Dog (Total Control) Madalitso Band - Lenisa Kosmetika - Fish Cran - Les lumiĂšres du soir Dollhouse - Nobody's Favorite
Eggs - Catch Peace De RĂ©sistance - Coddle the Rich Class Tourists - HUMANITY EATS ITSELF Artificial Go - Pay Phone Song People - Cicada Song Mope Grooves - Forever Is a Long Time Dead Hero - Por Siempre Energia 80 - STRESSZRABSZOLGâĂâK
Imago - Tomorrow Never Knows Faux Depart - Toujours lĂ Dr Sure's Unusual Practice - Last Guy At The Disco Koridor - OĆĄtrica Abe and the Shits - éąäżăȘăă Mirage - Testa Piena di Crani Life In a Blender - Fountains of Bellagio Plexi Stad - Your Parade
Caution - Connection Beth Anderson - I Can't Stand It Tube Alloys - Evil Angels Assistert SjĂžlmord - Eget Gasskammer Cyril Cyril & Syndicat du futur - La Meteo Rotura - Te Escape Warm Exit - Ultra Violence Sintesis - Vacaciones En Tel Aviv Dogs - Maureen
Artificial Go - On Off Parsnip - Papier Mache Five Bucks - H82W8 FREAK GENES - Insect Politics Derya Yildirim & Grup Simsek - Darıldım Darıldım Positronix - Sarah KIĂGETT FĂLD - SZĆNYEGBOMBĂZĂST BUDAPESTNEK
Rotary Club - Safety Line Naked Roommate - Bus E.V.A.. - El Oro IRKED - Move Cimitero - Mausoleo Marcel Wave - Peg
Gurs - Bihotz nekea Bzdet - MGĆA X2000 - Azul Culpa Cosey Mueller - Trotzstadt
EXO - Butterfly
#radio#community radio#punk#music#new music#playlist#post punk#wprb#new wave#hardcore punk#garage rock#anatolian rock#dance punk#synth punk#favorites of 2024#best of 2024#egg punk#indie pop
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The feeling when I hit absolute rock bottom and downloaded character ai specifically to ask Baris Manço what that weird slinky shaker thing is in the Hal Hal music video / if those two woodwind players were actually musicians or if they were hired to look pretty / why was he dressed like a 70s Turkish wizard
#rock bottom#turkish american#first generation#Baris Manço#Anatolian rock#Who tf put Baris Manço in character ai
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BarÄ±Ć Manço
DoÄum gĂŒnĂŒn kutlu olsun, Tosun Yusuf Mehmet BarÄ±Ć Manço!
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Merhaba.
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61. Altın GĂŒn | AĆk
đłđ± Pays-Bas & đčđ· Turquie | Glitterbeat | 40 minutes | 10 morceaux
Le groupe amstellodamois aux racines turques renoue magnifiquement avec lâinspiration vibrante de ses deux premiers albums, aprĂšs deux autres opus assez dĂ©cevants. On retrouve sur Ask toute la vitalitĂ© et tout le caractĂšre irrĂ©sistible de leur musique chaleureuse et bigarrĂ©e, revisitant lâanatolian rock avec un panache et un enthousiasme diablement communicatifs.
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Erkin Koray - ĂöpĂ§ĂŒler (Live @ Jolly Joker Ankara, 2013)
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28: Selda // Vurulduk Ey Halkim Unutma Bizi
Vurulduk Ey Halkim Unutma Bizi Selda 1976, TĂŒrkĂŒola
The western thirst for vintage psych rock is unquenchable, which has led to a ton of great reissues in the past decade from far-flung psychedelic hotbeds like Zambia, Japan, and Turkeyâthe latter home of the great Selda BaÄcan. Seldaâs â70s folk rock recordings are as galvanizing as any punk, by turns as warlike and ecstatic as the leftist poetry and Islamic scales that give life to the songs. 1976âs Vurulduk Ey Halkim Unutma Bizi (We Were Shot, My People, Donât Let Us Forget) isnât as fuzz-drenched as the self-titled LP that proceeded it earlier in the same year, but it is equally fiery.
Iâve always found that folk music from around the Mediterranean Sea has a swashbuckling quality, the interplay of string players like two perfectly matched fencers thrusting and parrying atop a long dining table. The crossed guitar and baglama illustrated on Vurulduk Ey Halkim Unutma Biziâs back cover comes across as a statement of purpose. Itâs music that gets the blood pumping, for dance or protest alike, and Selda matches it vocally. Sheâs the heartfelt call to the snaky electric baglama and organâs response on âKaraoglanâ; the frosty embodiment of a woman finally pushed to close a door forever on âBundan Sonraâ; the mountain wind on the forlorn âMaden Dagi.â
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Itâs not surprising that Turkeyâs far right authorities found Seldaâs music threatening enough to harass her for most of the following decadeâitâs heady stuff even without the help of intelligible words. Online translation butchers the lyrics included on the sleeve, yet the imagery in the fragments is powerful:
We bled, we became soil, We withdrew, we became a flag, We became leaves, we came to this day We made the bread abundant, We made the pain honey. (from âAciyi Bal Eyledikâ [âWe Turned the Pain Into Honeyâ])
In âBundan Sonraâ (âAfter Thisâ), describing some unknown, unforgiveable betrayal:
Quran, Bible, if you were a psalm I would not open you from now on, If you were the juice of the river of paradise I would not drink you from now on. [âŠ] Is my death your wish? Your word has worked for meâ If you were heavenâs line I wouldnât cross you from now on.
Imagery of Lorca-esque purity:
They burned their last cigarette like a lamp in their mouths They lit their last cigarette They lit their last cigarette like a lamp in their mouths And they sat Under the dry-leaved cannon tree. (from âMaden Iscileriâ [âMinersâ])
As with Victor Jara and other politically militant bards of the South American nueva cancion movement, itâs possible to have a rich and fulfilling experience with Seldaâs music on its purely sonic merits. But for me anyway, understanding its connections to movements for the rights of working people deepens my appreciation. Vurulduk Ey Halkim Unutma Bizi is a great one.
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#Selda#selda baÄcan#pharaway sounds#turkish music#anatolian rock#'70s#vinyl records#music review#'70s music
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Mustafa Erkin Koray
24 June 1941 â 7 August 2023
A pioneering figure in Turkish Psych and âFather of Turkish Rock,â Koray blended traditional Turkish melodies with Western Rock elements in bands as early as the 50s. His first solo single âAnma ArkadaĆâ was released in 1967 followed by a self-titled album in 1973. His 1974 album âElektronik TĂŒrkĂŒlerâ is considered a groundbreaking work, fusing Anatolian Folk music with Psychedelic Rock.
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KostnatÄnĂ - Ăpal
(2023, full album)
[Black Metal, Avant-Garde Metal, Anatolian Rock]
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