Tekbileks newest project also draws on the sounds of Azerbaijani folksong, Persian mysticism and classical Arabian belly dancing. He even pays tribute, on the song Yalel, to the famed Egyptian singer Omm Kulthum. (Tekbilek himself is half Egyptian.) Working with many of the same musicians who have made such distinctive contributions to Tekbileks earlier albums, he creates a kind of global music - a music that acknowledges Greek, Indian and of course Turkish music and attempts to find a common ground between all of these. Perhaps his greatest achievement on Crescent Moon is that the album is more than the sum of its parts: it consistently evokes the ecstatic trance of the Sufi dervishes, the biting winds of the desert at night, the rich and exotic scents of an Oriental market and yet it does so without clearly staying in any one musical tradition.
Much of Crescent Moon is deeply personal. Yunnus is a medley of four Sufi tunes and reflects his longtime practice of this mystical branch of Islam. Adanali is the name both of a folksong and of the town where Tekbilek was born. The album itself is released as Tekbilek marks his 47th birthday - and he reports that both the numbers 4 and 7 have had recurring significance throughout his life. (He has 7 brothers; he was fourth in line; the street address of the house he grew up in was 47; and Crescent Moon is the fourth album he has made with longtime colleagues Arto Tuncboyaciyan, Ara Dinkjian and Hasan Isikkut.) Ironically, this most personal recording is also easily accessible to Western listeners. By following his own spiritual impulses and by ignoring geographic and cultural boundaries, Tekbilek has forged a panMiddle Eastern music. Crescent Moon is at once contemplative and exciting, full of lively rhythms and lovely melodies - timeless and yet very much of our time.
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