A Thousand Suns - GuruGanesha Band CD

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150 kr
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Art.nr:
SPV1123
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A Thousand Suns - GuruGanesha Band CD
A Thousand Suns is the debut album from the GuruGanesha Band with composer and guitarist Guru Ganesha Singh with gifted singer Paloma Devi. Together, they make this album shine brighter than “A Thousand Suns”.

Helmed by mantra music patriarch, guitarist, vocalist and songwriter GuruGanesha, A Thousand Suns features the debut of the supremely gifted vocalist Paloma Devi, along with a dazzlingly accomplished ensemble of musicians including bowed-string wizard Hans Christian and keyboard/production polymath Thomas Barquee. What they’ve forged together is nothing short of breathtaking.
Coming from a long and successful run with singer Snatam Kaur and a much-beloved string of solo albums, GuruGanesha is no stranger to the mantra idiom. But A Thousand Suns may well be his finest hour, a crowning achievement.

But for all its moments of solo guitar grandeur, A Thousand Suns is definitely an ensemble effort. Instrumentally, GuruGanesha is well matched by the polychrome genius of Hans Christian, whose masterfully handled cello, saranghi, nyckelharpa, sitara and other stringed instruments alternate and intertwine with GuruGanesha’s guitar leads in gloriously crafted antiphony and harmony. Vocally as well, the album is solidly grounded in the give-and-take heartplay of call-and-response Kirtan chanting, setting GuruGanesha’s baritone in yin yang contrapoise to the beguiling voice of Paloma Devi.

Paloma Devi is clearly poised to become the next star of mantra music, ready to take her place alongside the genre’s other great female singers. She is gifted with a voice that drips with the sweet perfume of devotion — her voice speaks directly to your heart in a language so intimate and tender as if was your own soul singing to you. The crystalline purity of her singing is embossed with glints of contemporary R&B, Salsa and Pop. This is a voice for the ages, but also a voice for right now — multicultural, compassionately engaged, a balm for our troubled times. It quivers like the softly beating breast of a heavenward ascendant dove. It shimmers like the finest, gossamer cloth-of-gold. It leaves the listener defenseless and enraptured.

The album’s six lavishly-produced tracks offer a generous range of musical styles, reflecting the artists’ diverse gifts and sensibilities. The title track, co-written by GuruGanesha and Paloma, is a meditative ballad with gospel/folk overtones—voices, guitar and cello calling to one another across vast oceans of devotion. “Sri Ram” unfolds with the courtly exoticism of a suite by Ravel or Rimsky-Korsakov, transporting the listener via magic carpet to a starlit night amongst the Gopis. Up until now, GuruGanesha has mainly worked with texts from Sikh tradition, so it’s a delight to hear him lend his talents to one of the quintessential Hindu mantras.

The jaunty, retro-pop of Thy Will Be Done gets down into GuruGanesha’s rock and roll roots. His reverb-drenched leads and Paloma’s wailing vocal descants sound like they could have come right off Haight Street, circa 1967, touching on the Yoga movement’s psychedelic roots. Meanwhile, Paloma’s Cuban heart shines through radiantly on the Latin-inflected “Waho Waho Gobind Singh” with its supple rhythmic sway, heartfelt vocal in Español and Guajarati, Euro-cafe fiddle and Santana-esque six-string fire.

Mayray Meet Gurudev gracefully balances on artfully wrought lattices of filigreed guitar work, keening Saranghi and sparkling Piano. The composition’s compelling refrain packs the heady upward thrust of the titular thousand solar orbs. And the closing track, the raga-based Mayra Piara wafts us homeward with a hypnotic mantra set to a simple, almost folkloric melody and set amidst fugue-like instrumental adornments that draw us ever deeper into the essence of these sacred syllables.

Tracks:
1. A Thousand Suns (06:36)
2. Thy Will Be Done (04:04)
3. Mayray Meet Gurdayv (10:53)
4. Sri Ram (05:41)
5. Waho Waho Gobind Singh (05:16)
6..Mayra Piara (11:16)