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Floods Of Pakistan
SWAM Bari and Bansuri, ISymphonic flutes, 9x Microsonic, and 4x Cubasis drums.
Comments
Wow!! I wish I knew more about Pakistan but I certainly saw me in a boat ride in the Nile river, while listening to this!
Such a good vibe I had to jam along to it with my geoflute. I love how you mixed kind of a 1950s cool jazz vibe in with the modal jam. Do you have the bass clarinet swam? It would fit right in here.
Could you post your Cubasis project to Dropbox? I would really like to tinker with the midi on this one.
Thanks for listening and commenting, @magnusovi. I appreciate it very much.
@Wrlds2ndBstGeoshredr, sure, I’ll Dropbox you a link.
The Nile doesn’t run through Pakistan. It doesn’t even run through the same continent.
Very unlike what I am used to hearing from you. Great piece of work!
https://www.dropbox.com/s/dt8pavds76xxs6n/Floods Of Pakistan.cbp?dl=0
There you go @Wrlds2ndBstGeoshredr
Yeah, that’s why I said I wish I knew more about Pakistan to make the connection, instead my limited knowledge only allowed me to make a a different connection, one to Egypt, albeit having nothing to do with the name.
Definitely Pakistan music and I am being transported to Karachi, a place I had visited in 1987.
Your music is very magical, and has the sense of great storytelling.
This would be a great musical background to a Pakistan exodus movie.
Well done.
Rene
Hey Rene. What would you say are some of the features of Pakistani music that would distinguish it from other middle eastern and North African music?
Hi magnusovi,
I am not an expert of middle eastern and N African music by any stretch, and I could not tell you the names of the instruments they use.
All I can say is that the feeling I get from the music presented and the title of the song, definitely transported me to a time and place in my memory bank, which I have never been back in that memory state since 1987.
Which speaks loudly of the musical genius and creativity of LinearLineman.
I can add that part of my memory (at least in my mind when I listened to "Floods of Pakistan"), is a pictorial scene os a snake charmer, playing his "flute", and trying to get the cobra in a pot to awake and dance.
Maybe, too m much information.
Thanks for the nice question.
Rene
I am starting to expand my music knowledge so this was a great thread and post. I truthfully know nothing about Pakistan other than some current politics so thanks for all the info Rene!
Meanwhile, in Pakistan. Almost 1,400 dead in the floods. Very little western aid. Thousands homeless. Doctors with no medecine. A true tragedy.
@purpan2 and from what I understand, incredible as it sounds, 80% of arable land destroyed. Could that be true?
Yes, I was thinking of the disaster as I listened to the finished track. Not getting much attention here. What a world we live in.
Thanks @ReneAsologuitar. These floods must get you thinking about your trip to Pakistan.
You might also add that on top of the little western “help” there is also a lack of acknowledgement of the responsibilities for the climate and weather changes that are affecting Pakistan. A country with such little carbon footprint….
Pakistani music is not like Middle Eastern or North African music. Indian and Pakistani music are related. They are as different from middle eastern music as middle eastern music is from European. Different instruments. Different scales. Different forms.
On YouTube, you will be able to find good examples. The musical tradition is deep and varied.
I will do some research! Thanks!
This guy rocks hard; amazing chops:
@Wrlds2ndBstGeoshredr i know of Ali Kahn. It’s interesting, as they get into it you can hear vocalizations that made their way into Spanish music from the Moorish occupation.