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Na?ssam Jalal: Un autre monde
By
Michel Edelin
flute
Magic Malik
flute
Eve Risser
pianob.1982

Naïssam Jalal
fluteA flautist needs good sonic allies to embed flute sounds in and/or a strong groove to fly on. Na?ssam Jalal, the Franco-Syrian flautist, has both to a high degree as part of her greater talents as composer and arranger. She has a broad cross-cultural musical background and more than ten years' experience with her group Rhythms of Resistancecomprising Franco-Moroccan saxophonist/percussionist Mehdi Cha?b, Franco-German cellist/guitarist
Karsten Hochapfel
celloDamien Varaillon
bass, acoustic
Arnaud Dolmen
drumsb.1985
The seven pieces on the studio recording show consistent fanning out and rich dynamics, from the alluring "Buleria Sarkhat Al Ard / Scream of the Earth Buleria" to the super drive of the bouncy and passionate "D'ailleurs nous sommes d'ici / Anyways, We Are from Here" with its hip-hop undertow. Jalal's flute is deeply embedded in the ensemble sound from the onset. She reflects and reformulates the heritage of the African-Arabic era of Al Andalusian culture on the Iberian Peninsula. It is the groundwork that enables her to stand out with both her flute playing and singing. Flute and voice are in Jalal's case two sides of the same coin. That's how she gives Mother Earth a climaxing expressive voice in this opening piece. The subsequent "Hymne à la noix / Hymn to the night" opens with wordless vocals and proceeds to an astonishing merged flute-saxophone line. The music then alternates between full ensemble sound and outstanding, economic and sophisticated solo moments. "Un sourir au Coeu r/ A Smile to The Heart" with its soft and sparse introduction, its superb phrasing of the singing and flute-playing and its beguiling ostinato turns out as a conjuring prayer, as it were Naissam Jalal's intriguing variation on

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
"Samaa? Al Andalus" fuels this feeling. Jalal plays nay here in a dynamic and authentic way. It is carried by Hochapfel's bowed cello before passing into another flute-sax passage. Proceeding in the Arabic 10-beat Samai rhythm, it starts andante, accelerates, is superimposed on binary and ternary grooves, and ends up almost celebrational with a rotating, whirling dance feel. "Promenade au bord du rêve" houses a vigorous spirit. After having traversed different energy fields the piece brings the musicians and instruments close to each other in unison. It ultimately dives into present day topicality with "D'ailleurs nous sommes d'ici"/ "Anyways, We Are From Here."
The seven pieces of the first part of the album form a coherent suite with clear musical-thematic steps, connections and progression. Notably, the utopian pilgrimage sequence of tracks 4-7 is preceded by the suggestively entitled "Un sourire au Coeur / A Smile to The Heart," illuminating the leading human feel. The musical form of movement and coloring of the sequence has a clear relationship with emotions you can connect to.
What about the second, orchestral part of the album? Three pieces from the first part are bookended by two extended new pieces, the initial "Paysage de notre destin/Landscapes of Our Destiny" summoning the utopian spirits of the first part and the concluding haunting lament "Almot Wala Almazala" / "Death No Humiliation," the title piece of the 2016 Rhythms of Resistance album dedicated to the victims of the Syrian uprising. After Jalal's passionate multiphonic introduction the piece is orchestrally magnified in slow movements and ends in a fiery percussive outburst mingled with loud and determined human voices. It is the counterpoint to the initial piece, "Paysage de notre destin/Landscapes of Our Destiny." The music in that piece has a

Gil Evans
composer / conductor1912 - 1988
Un Autre Monde turns out as a masterful lucky strike that convincingly connects a series of different dimensions and forces: resistance and fighting for freedom, fighting for equality and diversity, heightening awareness for the decline of our environment, imagining a world beyond thatoverall, the struggle to arrive at a healthier and more balanced way of using our resources. On the musical side, the album presents a convincing and impressive synthesis of different musical cultures very much in the line recently formulated by US-American-Iraqi musician Amir El Saffar.After all, through her dedicated real expedition from Paris through Bamako, Beirut, Damascus and Cairo, Jalal has absorbed Arabic modes (with Abdo Dagher, Fathy Salama and the group Om Al Agayeb) next to the western classical ways, jazz approaches manifested in her trio Quest Of The Invisible with bassist
Claude Tchamitchian
bass, acoustic
Leonardo Montana
pianoTrack Listing
CD1: Studio album: Buleria Sarkhat Al Ard; Hymne à la noix; Un sourire au c?ur; Un monde neuf; Samaa? Al Andalus; Promenade au bord du rêve; D’ailleurs nous sommes d’ici. CD2: Live: Paysages de notre destin; Un sourire au c?ur; Un monde neuf; Samaa? Al Andalus; Almot Wala Almazala.
Personnel
Na?ssam Jalal
fluteMehdi Cha?b
saxophone, sopranoKarsten Hochapfel
celloDamien Varaillon
bass, acousticArnaud Dolmen
drumsAdditional Instrumentation
Na?saam Jalal: voice; Karsten Hochapfel: guitar; Mehdi Cha?b: tenor saxophone, percussion
Album information
Title: Un autre monde | Year Released: 2021 | Record Label: Les Couleurs du Son
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Na?ssam Jalal Concerts

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Carte Blanche à Naïssam Jalal
38 RivParis, France

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