Hindi Zahra –"Homeland" / VÖ: 10.04.2015

Hindi ZahraHindi Zahra's second album Homeland (release-date: 10.04.2015) is an ode to her
origins.

Hindi Zahra grew up in Morocco surrounded by music and dance. The whole family lived
in the same building where her grandmother listened to traditional Berber music and her
mother to Indian and Egyptian music, dancing with her aunts. Downstairs, in the
evening, the uncles played guitar intoxicated by psychedelic music, Led Zeppelin and
Marley. When Zahra (her real name) was about 12, her father moved the family to Paris
so that the children could be educated in France. This was the beginning of a new life for
Zahra which was soon to revolve around music, the beginning of a long trance. She first
went on stage when she was 17 during the Fête de la Musique (music festival). "I felt
liberated", she tells. Hindi Zahra went from live performances on to recording and disks.
First was the irresistible Beautiful Tango which she composed almost ten years ago now.
Radio Nova was already playing the demo in 2007. It was the prelude to her first album,
the aptly named Handmade which came out three years later. This first album which she
crafted herself from A to Z (like in Zahra) was produced by Blue Note. Her music was
already instilled with her personal vision, style and tempo. Hindi Zahra toured the world
for two and a half years with Handmade, giving 400 concerts. She played until she was
exhausted, spinning until she was dizzy - a quest for a trance-like state which took its
toll.

As soon as the tour was over, Hindi Zahra decided to move to Marrakesh for a year. She
settled there alone in a riad in the medina, like a cocoon open to the outside world, to
rest and find her music. «It was a real descent into solitude…a place to absorb a story
and tell it, to draws songs out of a trance, liberated. Sometimes I would buy provisions
and not go out for two weeks." Because trance is central to her music, she began to
explore rhythms with Rhani Krija, a world-renowned musician from Essaouira. « He
arrived with a van full of percussion instruments which he spread out on the riad's patio.
We selected, we mixed: Cuban rhythm with Moroccan percussions, Moroccan rhythm with
Indian percussions …" Then came the composition, the songs, the arrangements woven
over a year on a flying carpet of percussions.

Like in the musical building of her childhood, Hindi Zahra travelled to different levels. She
spent time in the caves between Essaouira and Agadir and in the mountains with the
Berber farmers scrutinizing the ocean. Hindi Zahra came out of her retreat when the
songs starting calling for her: to Cuba, Brazil (to be confirmed), Jordan, Andalusia, Egypt
and Italy. She played in two films: Tala Hadid's The Narrow frame of midnight and Fatih
Akin's La Blessure (she is the one being kissed in the film's poster). Her musical
influences include Miriam Makeba, Césaria Evora, Marvin Gaye and Nina Simone - Zahra
included a cover of Just Say I Love Him on a recent tribute album. Such diverse and
persistent musical passions fuse with these voyages and experiences, tracing the
climbing path to Homeland.

After this odyssey of discovery which lasted two and a half years, she finished recording
the album in Paris. For her audience, it is just the beginning of the voyage. Listening to
Homeland is like turning the pages of a travel diary, like hearing a life story. There is
something essential, elementary about this album - there is the warmth of the sun, the
sound of the ocean, the space. The songs move like the tide and the clouds. Many
different musical styles are recognizable but have become unidentifiable. They are all
blended together and carried along by a heady, swaying tempo which has become the
album's destination. Songs of an adventurer, resurging form the innermost depths to
dance on waves and wander across deserts. There is melancholy in Hindi Zahra's songs
but there is ecstasy in her voice which sends melismas spiralling around the world. The
destination is a progressive world soul music which gently, deeply liberates the body and
the heart.

Hindi Zahra – "Homeland" / VÖ: 10.04.2015
Parlophone Label Group ( LC: 30419) | im Vertrieb bei Warner

Quelle: http://www.qrious.de

Diesen Beitrag teilen, das Unterstützt uns, DANKE !

FacebookVZJappyDeliciousMister WongXingTwitterLinkedInPinterestDiggGoogle Plus

Drucken E-Mail

Wir nutzen Cookies auf unserer Website. Einige von ihnen sind essenziell für den Betrieb der Seite, während andere uns helfen, diese Website und die Nutzererfahrung zu verbessern (Tracking Cookies). Sie können selbst entscheiden, ob Sie die Cookies zulassen möchten. Bitte beachten Sie, dass bei einer Ablehnung womöglich nicht mehr alle Funktionalitäten der Seite zur Verfügung stehen.