In review--It's a small world after all

Rahim Alhaj
Little Earth (2-CDs)
UR Music


Miraculous, one of a dozen adjectives describes Iraqi oud player/composer Rahim Alhaj’s Little Earth. I say miraculous because musicians from mostly western musical traditions join the exiled composer on such instruments as accordion, guitar, Native American flute, and orchestral arrangements performing microtonal compositions with exotic rhythms foreign to most western listeners’ ears. And as the title of the recording suggests, the coming together of musicians from South America, the American southwest (Robert Mirabel), US, China, Cape Verde, Iran, Brazil, and Iraq certainly portrays a small world after all, (quoting the Disney classic song).


On the track, Missing You/Mae Querida, Cape Verdean Maria de Barros marries a mourna (Cape Verdean lament) to Alhaj’s maqam (Arabic mode/structure), and in contrast to this composition about loss, the guitar-oud duo (Morning In Hyattsville), with jazz musician Bill Frisell takes on the playful demeanor of a mockingbird. Equally spunky, include Fly Away which features the virtuoso guitars of Santa Fe Guitar Quartet married to Alhaj’s oud and sweet Athens to Baghdad that includes the guitar work of R.E.M.’s Peter Buck.


Serious global classical fusions take flight on Little Earth too, including compositions performed by pipa player (Chinese lute) Liu Fang, Rocio, featuring Roshan Jamal Bhartiya on sitar, and The Other Time featuring Yacouba Sissoko on the west African harp, kora. Most of the songs either have melancholic and fragile qualities or act as flights of fancy. I chose not to listen to Qaasim featuring didjeridu player Stephen Kent, not because it would lack beauty, but the gravity of the subject matter (death, lament, war), doesn’t appeal to my current stress level.


Brilliant musical performances, heartfelt moments, and a feeling of solidarity grace Little Earth. Rahim Alhaj is a man with a peaceful mission through the sharing of music. But more than that, his virtuosic performances, and gorgeous compositions, not to mention his openness to include musicians from other disciplines in the studio with him, provide some of the most moving music I have heard in a long while. Alhaj composes and performs from the depths of his soul and intense life experiences. His story of exile and rebuilding a music community in New Mexico alone provide a compelling memoir. And his music speaks for itself—miraculous, yes. Could this lead to peace between all nations and ethnic groups? I hope so.

http://www.rahimalhaj.com and http://www.rockpaperscissors.biz

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