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Sufi Dhafer Youssef: Electric Sufi

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Download links and information about Sufi Dhafer Youssef: Electric Sufi by Dhafer Youssef. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Jazz, World Music genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 01:07:17 minutes.

Artist: Dhafer Youssef
Release date: 2001
Genre: Jazz, World Music
Tracks: 13
Duration: 01:07:17
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Mandakini (featuring Doug Wimbish, Wolfgang Muthspiel, Dieter Ilg, Markus Stockhausen, Mino Cinelu) 5:09
2. Yabay (featuring Wolfgang Muthspiel) 3:16
3. Electric Sufi (featuring Deepak Ram, Doug Wimbish, Will Calhoun, Wolfgang Muthspiel) 4:56
4. Oil on Water 2:45
5. La Priere de l'Absent (featuring Doug Wimbish, Will Calhoun, Wolfgang Muthspiel, Dieter Ilg, Markus Stockhausen) 6:44
6. Man of Wool (featuring Doug Wimbish, Will Calhoun, Dieter Ilg, Markus Stockhausen) 7:04
7. La Nuit Sacree (featuring Deepak Ram, Markus Stockhausen) 6:26
8. Nouba (featuring Wolfgang Muthspiel, Dieter Ilg, Markus Stockhausen, Mino Cinelu) 6:47
9. Farha (featuring Wolfgang Muthspiel, Dieter Ilg, Markus Stockhausen, Mino Cinelu) 5:35
10. Nafha (featuring Wolfgang Muthspiel, Dieter Ilg, Mino Cinelu) 5:26
11. Al-Hallaj (featuring Wolfgang Muthspiel, Mino Cinelu) 3:20
12. Suraj (featuring Doug Wimbish, Will Calhoun, Wolfgang Muthspiel, Dieter Ilg, Markus Stockhausen) 6:16
13. Langue Muette (featuring Deepak Ram) 3:33

Details

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Tunisian-born oud performer/vocalist Dhafer Youssef attains a happy medium while integrating the oud (an Arabic lute instrument) with jazzy grooves and wide-ranging improvisational forums. On this outing, the artist crafts an appealing worldbeat/jazz scenario partly due to his nimble plucking and mood-evoking unison choruses with trumpeter Markus Stockhausen. There's also a drum'n'bass element here, as the leader utilizes the talents of ex-Living Colour rhythmic aces Will Calhoun (drums) and Doug Wimbish (bass). Jazz guitarist Wolfgang Muthspiel adds textural patterns to many of these pieces while embarking on a pleasant mainstream jazz-based solo passage on the piece entitled "Farha." Youssef also displays a multi-octave vocal range on several tracks — as he renders wordless vocals that often conjure up notions of religiously inclined mantras. A good portion of this affair features lightly rumbling percussion vamps intertwined with North African modalities and alternating dialogue among the soloists. A nice effort that ages well upon repeated spins.