The London Nobody Sings project is now complete. It was a year long exercise in collecting and sharing songs related to London in some way. The only criteria was that the songs had to be great (subjective I know) and not blindingly obvious. I certainly learnt a lot along the way, and ended up in some unexpected places. The site will remain active to allow people to explore the findings which were posted on a daily basis over the course of a year. Do please tell your loved ones about The London Nobody Sings ... and to celebrate the end of the project here is Mary Margaret O'Hara with an appropriate number ...
Saturday, 26 June 2010
Thursday, 24 June 2010
Mo' Persian Pearls
Why not pay a visit to our Anywhere Else But Here Today project where we are delighted to be able to share another selection of Persian pearls. This mixtape has been put together by Martijn Busink, and it is a real treasure trove of Persian pop songs. So grab your copy of Pomegranates Vol. 2 - an unofficial sequel and tribute to the excellent and essential compilation issued by Finders Keepers. And if you would like a taster for what's in store then enjoy this ...
Saturday, 5 June 2010
Sketches of Iran
As part of the Anywhere Else But Here project we are delighted to present a special mixtape, Sketches of Iran Volume 1: Googoosh, complete with another gorgeous cover designed by PC.
I first became aware of the possibilities of Persian pop through a fantastic mix on the excellent Jazzman site where Mahssa and Sheila spun some dusty 7s, including some wonderful old Iranian sides among the Brazilian, Turkish, French, Japanese, US and even English treasures.
It seems reasonable to assume that this is the same Mahssa Taghinia who has put together the essential Finders Keepers/B Music compilation Pomegranates, a collection of “Persian pop, funk, folk and psych of the 60s and 70s”.
Somewhere along the way my curiosity was piqued by the occasional post of crackly Persian pop on one of my favourite blogs Snap, Crackle and Pop, and by a piece from one of my heroes Egon (of Stones Throw etc) where he described the lengths he had been going to in his quest for Iranian funk and psych sounds.
Naturally the YouTube factor played a huge part in stimulating my fascination with pre-revolutionary Iranian ‘70s music. As part of a recurring pattern, there are loads of fantastic clips (and I don’t just mean audio ones) of performances from TV and films posted by ‘patriots’ who have somehow preserved or salvaged these priceless pieces of film against ridiculous odds. It is touching too to read the comments about how much these clips mean to those in exile. For the inveterate, the universal pop seekers like us, it all fits perfectly into an emerging portrait about the enduring power of pop music.
If the global response to funk and psychedelia was the point of entry for an interest in Persian pop then as the passion developed so it has changed. For, as wonderful as say Googoosh’s takes on numbers like Respect, I Want To Take You Higher and Want Ads may be, they don’t touch on the true beauty of the music being made in the Iran of the 1970s up until the revolution.
Our mixtape, Volume One of Sketches of Iran, focuses on Googoosh. Her presence and significance within the story of Persian pop is remarkable. It’s like Francoise Hardy or Mina times two hundred. And it has been striking as the Anywhere Else ... project has evolved to note how the power, creativity, daring and symbolism of figures like Lili Ivanova in Bulgaria, Kovacs Kati in Hungary, Josipa Lisac in the former Yugoslavia, Marta Kubisova in Czechoslovakia, really matters.
Rather than just collecting funky impressions, hopefully this Googoosh collection highlights the astonishing mix of influences swirling around in Persian pop. Among what I assume are traditional folk and classical elements (and certainly not just from Iran) there seem to be flamenco flourishes, latin touches, spy movie soundtrack dramatics, traces of Bacharach bossa and jazzy arrangements.
My own favourite Googoosh moments are less about the dancefloor and more to do with glorious sad ballads with swooping, syrupy strings and that amazing quivery, heartbreaking voice. As ever this mix comes with a huge health warning. These are songs I have stumbled across, ones I have fallen in love with. I have no way of telling how representative they are, but I think they are amazing. There will be many who know much more about these things ...
I first became aware of the possibilities of Persian pop through a fantastic mix on the excellent Jazzman site where Mahssa and Sheila spun some dusty 7s, including some wonderful old Iranian sides among the Brazilian, Turkish, French, Japanese, US and even English treasures.
It seems reasonable to assume that this is the same Mahssa Taghinia who has put together the essential Finders Keepers/B Music compilation Pomegranates, a collection of “Persian pop, funk, folk and psych of the 60s and 70s”.
Somewhere along the way my curiosity was piqued by the occasional post of crackly Persian pop on one of my favourite blogs Snap, Crackle and Pop, and by a piece from one of my heroes Egon (of Stones Throw etc) where he described the lengths he had been going to in his quest for Iranian funk and psych sounds.
Naturally the YouTube factor played a huge part in stimulating my fascination with pre-revolutionary Iranian ‘70s music. As part of a recurring pattern, there are loads of fantastic clips (and I don’t just mean audio ones) of performances from TV and films posted by ‘patriots’ who have somehow preserved or salvaged these priceless pieces of film against ridiculous odds. It is touching too to read the comments about how much these clips mean to those in exile. For the inveterate, the universal pop seekers like us, it all fits perfectly into an emerging portrait about the enduring power of pop music.
If the global response to funk and psychedelia was the point of entry for an interest in Persian pop then as the passion developed so it has changed. For, as wonderful as say Googoosh’s takes on numbers like Respect, I Want To Take You Higher and Want Ads may be, they don’t touch on the true beauty of the music being made in the Iran of the 1970s up until the revolution.
Our mixtape, Volume One of Sketches of Iran, focuses on Googoosh. Her presence and significance within the story of Persian pop is remarkable. It’s like Francoise Hardy or Mina times two hundred. And it has been striking as the Anywhere Else ... project has evolved to note how the power, creativity, daring and symbolism of figures like Lili Ivanova in Bulgaria, Kovacs Kati in Hungary, Josipa Lisac in the former Yugoslavia, Marta Kubisova in Czechoslovakia, really matters.
Rather than just collecting funky impressions, hopefully this Googoosh collection highlights the astonishing mix of influences swirling around in Persian pop. Among what I assume are traditional folk and classical elements (and certainly not just from Iran) there seem to be flamenco flourishes, latin touches, spy movie soundtrack dramatics, traces of Bacharach bossa and jazzy arrangements.
My own favourite Googoosh moments are less about the dancefloor and more to do with glorious sad ballads with swooping, syrupy strings and that amazing quivery, heartbreaking voice. As ever this mix comes with a huge health warning. These are songs I have stumbled across, ones I have fallen in love with. I have no way of telling how representative they are, but I think they are amazing. There will be many who know much more about these things ...
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