MOMENTAN AUSVERKAUFT

Tales of Kings by Neon Egypt (CD, 2004)

Über dieses Produkt

Product Identifiers

Record LabelCD Baby, Cdb
UPC0634479048487
eBay Product ID (ePID)10046073109

Product Key Features

Release Year2004
FormatCD
GenreJazz
ArtistNeon Egypt
Release TitleTales of Kings

Dimensions

Item Height0.37 in
Item Weight0.16 lb
Item Length5.66 in
Item Width4.92 in

Additional Product Features

Number of Tracks12
Number of Discs1
Tracks1.1 Third Cataract 1.2 Nejd 1.3 Allure 1.4 In Purdah 1.5 Passage to Djibouti 1.6 Night of the Lotus 1.7 Triamorous 1.8 Phaedra 1.9 A Clockwork Sphinx 1.10 Tales of Kings 1.11 Cairo Bazaar 1.12 Alluvium
NotesWhether called Meditative Jazz, World Jazz, or World Fusion, Neon Egypt's offering is decidedly unique. Expressive, free-flowing jazz saxophone melodies float gracefully over an enchanting and exotic foundation of Taiko-like melodic drum music, featuring the one-of-a-kind Shendai Ceremonial Drums. All of Neon Egypt's selections are 'first takes' of spontaneously improvised intuitive music, recorded live. None of their pieces have a predetermined form or concept, a title, or even a key or time signature before play is begun - each is truly a product of the moment. Yet each piece has clear musicality, satisfying coherence and unmistakable structure. The unique foundation of melodic drum and percussion music created by Steven Miller's Shendai Ceremonial Drums allows master jazz saxophone soloist Harrison Goldberg freedom to weave an artful musical offering in real time. The result... well, you are invited to listen for yourself! Tales Of Kings has been diversely used as Tai Chi and Yoga meditation music, modern dance music, and as background for Egyptian travel and history seminars. It is also featured in the art documentary film 'Journey of the Dream Warrior' from Dream Power International of Seattle, Washington. This unusual CD makes a great gift and collector's album. Excerpt from 'Tales Of Kings' Liner Notes: 'The album's whole personifies a timeless river tumbling over ancient stones, or the early a.m. negotiations of a big city's streets, as if mood indigo resided in civilization's crucible. It possesses azure meditations, scarlet musings, golden speculations, each aspiring to discovery in a world of slate gray-green melancholy. It wears textures velvet to worn corduroy. It exudes an allure of rhythm that manifests the seduction of danger... It is being within non-being: a place where one senses, even at the end, that the music never stopped.' --Sandy Thompson, Northern California freelance writer and art critic.