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Jorge NasserThis Week on

Link TV


#117 debuts and it's a mixed bag. #117 is a "Mixed Bag" indeed, comprised of live performances, concept videos and great animations. And the music is just as varied, from Latin America, China, Europe, the Middle East and Central Asia. Jorge Nasser offers a meditation on an artist's life, while Hector Buitrago (of Aterciopelados) offers an animation that is a spiritual reverie. Aygun Baylar sings her heart (and tonsils) out at the Sharq Taronalari competition, and Iran's Mamak Khadem transforms a Sufi poem into a tribute to the fallen of the Iran-Iraq war.  Jarret, a Czech folk-rock group gives us a remarkably evocative animation using antique postcards, and we end with Sa Ding Ding's sumptuous epic about a bygone civilization, "Alive."

 

-Posted July 10, 2009 by Michal Shapiro, Director of Music Programming


World Music Blog

Crossing Borders with Rupa and the April Fishes

Rupa, who fronts the April Fishes is certainly a multi faceted creature. A doctor, a musician, a painter, a linguist, she is someone who doesn't just sing about life, she plunges in with both feet.  She spent quite a bit of time talking to me in New York about the various bandmembers and singing their praises (sorry Fishes, I didn't use that stuff --and readers, it IS an excellent band!) but eventually we got down to some of the subjects that drive her.

 

 


A documentary about the band's trip along the border between Mexico and the USA is in production.

On another note, there is a very moving video that while as commercial as it gets, cuts to the heart. It is an homage to Neda, and all the young people who have demonstrated and suffered during the recent government crackdown in Iran. The majority of people living in that country are now below the age of 30-- Possibly the largest demographic on earth of educated young people to be held back by their own government. These days we all know we are watching history when we watch Iran.

 

 

The ripples continue to spread outward.

 
 

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