God Rest Ye 3 Kings Christmas Mashup (Music Video)

John Kruth – penny whistle, sitar, mandocello, vocal; Jeff Greene – yayli tambor, sarod, morsing (Jews harp), vocal; Todd Isler -Pakistani gaval, uduboo, lap drum, bells, drum kit; Chris Morrow – trombone, vocal

Produced by John Kruth & Jeff Greene; Recorded at Park West Studio, Brooklyn, November 2011; Engineered by Jim Clouse; Arrangement by John Kruth/Sonic Kruth/BMI 2011; Video by Erik Spink

Uzbeki musicians play the song “Tanovar” in Samarkand

Uzbeki musicians play the song “Tanovar” in their instrument store in Samarkand, Uzbekistan.

Dolan Muqam with Dancing in Xinjiang, China

Uyghur dolan muqam with dancing in the village of Makit, Xinjiang, China.

Saddadin Gulov playing the Uzbek Tambor in Bukhara

Saddadin Gulov playing the tambor at the Shashmaqam Music Conservatory in Bukhara, Uzbekistan.

Mugham Recital in Baku, Azerbaijan

The following is a student recital of Mugham music, performed for us at the Youth Conservatory in Baku, Azerbaijan, July 2010. The female singer, a 17-year old refugee, is singing about her lost homeland in Nagorno, Karabakh.

Mugam also known as Azerbaijani Mugham (Azerbaijani: Muğam) is one of the many styles of folk musics from Azerbaijan. Mugam draws on Iranian-Arabic-Turkish Maqam. It is a highly complex art form that weds classical poetry and musical improvisation in specific local modes.

Georgian Folk Music from Sighnaghi

Spontaneous singing at a barbecue in Sighnaghi, Georgia. Schmagi Pirtskhelani on Panduri with his 3 year old son on Dholi, and his wife and brother, Shergil, singing.

This video was shot by Jeff during one of his musical research adventures to Georgia.

Traditional Uzbek Music from Bukhara

Uzbeki musicians performing a traditional song from Uzbekistan in their home in Bukhara. Jeff filmed this clip on his musical research adventure to Uzbekistan.

The Ravanhattha from Rajasthan, India

In this video Tribecastan’s Jeff Green talks about and plays the Ravanhattha, a folk instrument from Rajasthan, India. For more music and info, please visit us on the web at www.tribecastan.tv

The Rawanhatta consists of half a coconut shell resonator covered with membrane, bound to it with the help of cotton cords, a two feet long bamboo stick fixed to the resonator with two main strings, one of horse tail and other of steel. In addition to these are sympathetic steel strings varying between three to thirteen, passing over a bridge and than directly to the wooden pegs fixed to the sides of the stick. It is played with a curved bow of horse tail hair drawn across the strings with rhythmic jerks, the small brass bells attached to it providing the jingling stress on the beats. It is held by the left hand, the resonator resting on the left side of the chest. The dexterity lies in playing each successive note, which is clear, detached and synchronizing with singing, changing the rhythm and displacing the normal beats and accents, whenever it is required, depending upon the musical situation.

It is used by religious singers called Bhopa to accompany the epic tales of Pabuji, a fourteenth century hero. The instrument itself is made by these tribal people.

The Uyghur Tambur

In 2010, Jeff travelled to Eastern Turkistan (Xinjiang) in search of the Dolan Muqam and brought home this gorgeous instrument. The word tambur comes from the Arabic ‘tunbur’, and it is widely believed that this comes from the Sumerian word ‘pantur’, a semispherical stringed instrument with a long stem.

The Uyghur are a Turkic ethnic group living in Eastern and Central Asia. Today, Uyghurs live primarily in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in the People’s Republic of China.

Starry Stari Grad (Video)

Here’s a lovely and soulful music video, filmed and directed by Max Strebel. The film features the haunting, old-country- waltz “Starry Stari Grad,” from TriBeCaStan’s upcoming album “5 Star Cave.”

All Music Guide Review for 5 Star Cave

“It’s probably fair to call TriBeCaStan strange. They’ve developed their own cosmology and music style…”