TheSlowMusicMovement
With its 40 piece ensemble, clarity of vision & unrelenting intensity the Outernational Indo Jazz of restless souls, Go: Organic Orchestra & Brooklyn Raga Massive
is an epic global jazz fusion spectacle that can stand tall next to the best of the '70s.
Peter Tush
This might be Adam Rudolph's greatest release - and I think I have all of them. If you love electric Don Cherry, Codona, the electric Indian fusion of Miles Davis, you must get this. Ambitious, orchestral, spooky, grooving. It is the whole package. A must have!
3LP 130 gram Classic Black vinyl LP (cut and pressed by Leandro Gonzalez at Stereodisk) packaged in a full color swinging gatefold jacket with artwork by Nancy Jackson
Over 2 hours of music mastered across 6 sides ensures maximum audio fidelity, this is a strictly limited, onetime pressing. Don't miss out on this historical collaboration!
Each record is a hand-stamped limited edition of only 500 units pressed.
Includes unlimited streaming of Ragmala: A Garland of Ragas
via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
ships out within 3 days
$35USDor more
Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album
Beautifully packaged 2CD in a full color, 6-panel digipak with 16-page booklet
Includes unlimited streaming of Ragmala: A Garland of Ragas
via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
ships out within 3 days
$20USDor more
Streaming + Download
Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
On the remarkable new album Ragmala – A Garland of Ragas, Rudolph’s Go: Organic Orchestra and Brooklyn Raga Massive form a singular ensemble that vibrantly bridges musical and cultural distinctions. The result is a breathtaking set of music that carves an egalitarian and communal way forward while reverberating with echoes of the recent and ancient past. Drawing parallels with another ground-breaking and singular epic, Ragmala has already been referred to as a Bitches Brew for the 21st century (Ahmet Ali Arslan of Açık Radyo Istanbul).
The members of the adventurous BRM collective are deeply steeped in the traditions of Indian classical music. They refuse, however, to be restricted by it; the idea behind the collective, birthed in 2012 in a Prospect Heights bar, is to open the often rigid and hierarchical culture of the music to experimentation and cross-cultural collaboration. This collaboration marks the collective’s most ambitious effort to date in the musical movement that the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and New Yorker have recognized as a “Raga Renaissance.”
“This album feels like the culmination of everything I’ve been reaching for throughout my career,” says Rudolph, no small claim from someone who’s been a pioneering voice in jazz and world music for more than 40 years. “Through my music I want to hear the humanity of all these different musicians shine through, and with their voices bring forth something that’s never existed before.”
According to BRM guitarist David Ellenbogen, who co-produced Ragmala, the possibilities offered by Rudolph’s music scratched the very itch that led many of them into BRM’s more exploratory fold to begin with. “I always had a theory that Indian Classical, jazz, West African music and so on could have a synergistic relationship,” Ellenbogen says. “But after spending decades looking through record libraries, I found very few recordings lived up to the potential of these great traditions. I've spoken to other musicians on this album and they said the same thing when they heard these tracks: This is the music we've been searching for.”
credits
released October 19, 2019
Jay Ghandi - bansuri
Arun Ramamurthy - violin
Trina Basu - violin
Samarth Nagarkar - vocal
Neel Murgai - rhythm sitar, overtone singing
Sameer Gupta - tabla
David Ellenbogen - electric rhythm guitar
Abhik Mukherjee - sitar
Bala Skandan - mridangam
Mari Tanaka - tampura
Kaoru Watanabe - c flute, fue, noh kan
Michel Gentile - c flute
Sylvain Leroux - chromatic tambin, tambin, c flute
Ze Luis - c and alto flute
Mariano Gil - bass flute
Avram Fefer - tenor saxophone, bass clarinet
Sean Sonderegger - bass and contrabass clarinet, soprano saxophone
Sara Schoenbeck - bassoon
Ivan Barenboim - b flat clarinet
Charles Burnham - violin
Julianne Carney-Chung - violin
Sana Nagano - violin
Gwen Laster - violin
Richard Carr - violin
Stephanie Griffin - viola
Leco Reis - contrabass
Graham Haynes - cornet, flugelhorn, kudu horn, bamboo vaccine
Stephen Haynes - cornet, flugelhorn, solo alto, pocket trumpet, didgeridoo, conch, kudu horn
Peter Zummo - trombone, didgeridoo, conch, kudu horn
Libby Schwartz - french horn
Mia Theodoratus - harp
Marco Cappelli - electric and acoustic guitars
Alexis Marcelo - keyboards
Damon Banks - electric bass
Music composed and improvisationally conducted by Adam Rudolph (Migration Music BMI)
Mousa Azure and Chakawali by Hassan Hakmoun and Adam Rudolph (Hakmoun Music BMI, Migration Music BMI)
Signal Rhythms arranged for Bata ensemble by Adam Rudolph and Harris Eisenstadt.
All music organically arranged and orchestrated by Adam Rudolph.
Recorded December 2018 at Orange Music Studio, New Jersey.
Recording, mix and mastering by James Dellatacoma.
Studio assistant - Mas Yamagata
Design by Sylvain Leroux.
Paintings by Nancy Jackson.
Cosmogram score materials by Adam Rudolph.
Sanskrit calligraphy by Subrata Basu.
Produced by Adam Rudolph, Mas Yamagata and David Ellenbogen.
Special thanks to Bill Laswell, C. Daniel Dawson, Michael Lucio Sternbach, Tim, Dawn and Elke at The Rubin Museum of Art and Gabe, Justin and the team at Pioneer Works.
Dedicated to our families: Those here, those gone, and those still to come.
We are grateful to Yusef Lateef and Don Cherry who opened the doors to the world for us all.
supported by 40 fans who also own “Ragmala: A Garland of Ragas”
After a precision liftoff in Tabasco and setting a course to travel the space ways from planet to planet, the album peels away through a wormhole just past Saturn in the eponymous track Mayan Space Station to journey through time and space in Canyons of Light. eric F
Former member of Fela Kuti’s Egypt 80 unveils a rich, swinging new record that pulls from jazz and soul in its high-wattage songs. Bandcamp New & Notable Apr 24, 2024
supported by 39 fans who also own “Ragmala: A Garland of Ragas”
I was brought here after listening to a live performance of Makaya's on you tube. I instantly loved the song Holy Lands so much that I had to see if the album version was the same rendition as the live one. Then I listened to the whole album! Universal Beings is a just a groove... It's a mix of traditional and something new, very nice. pandr1900