| Mustt Mustt |  | Artist: Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan Label: Real World Category: Music
List Price: $16.98 Buy New: $12.98 as of 3/19/2010 08:38 EDT details You Save: $4.00 (24%)
In Stock

New (6) Used (15) from $4.00
Seller: newtownvideos Rating: 23 reviews Sales Rank: 132,441
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 62314 UPC: 017046231428 EAN: 0017046231428 ASIN: B000000HOB
Release Date: March 26, 1993 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Tell A Friend Add to Wishlist Add to Wedding Registry Add to Baby Registry
| |
| Tracks:
| | Mustt Mustt (Lost in His Work) | | | Nothing Without You (Tery Bina) | | | Tracery | | | Game | | | Taa Deem | | | Sea of Vapours | | | Fault Lines | | | Tana Dery Na | | | Shadow | | | Avenue | | | Mustt Mustt [Massive Attack Remix] |
|
| Similar Items:
| |
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com The late, great Pakistani Qawwali singer's first collaboration with producer/guitarist Michael Brook took the passionate, gymnastic tenor out of tradition and into trip-hop nation. Recorded at Peter Gabriel's expansive Real World Studios, the album combines ethnic percussion, programmed beats (some by Gabriel himself), Brook's atmospheric and infinite guitar swells, and loop-based motifs with Khan's complex, ornamented vocal delivery and devotional lyrics. On the later Night Song, Brook and Khan perfected their cross-cultural dialogue, though Mustt, with its fiery vocal runs and funky, ethereal production, has become an important touchstone in the ethno-techno movement that includes Transglobal Underground and Loop Guru. --James Rotondi
|
| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 23
New take on qawwali by the master? May 7, 1998 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
This CD is interesting, thought maybe not a great introduction to Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and qawwali. Many of the tracks are experimental versions of NFAK classics-- such as the title work "Mustt Mustt". The cadances are different from much of his other work and the instrumentation is interesting- lots of electric instruments and sound effects. If you are interested in mixing the contemporary music of the west with contemporary qawwali this would be a good choice. If instead you want an accessible, yet fairly authentic introduction to the style that made Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan famous, get "Akhian".
* MASTERWORK * May 30, 2003 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
One thing I find puzzling from some of the reviewers of this music is the failure to understand that this is not Qawwali music,is not under any pretence that it is and quite clearly,is a collaboration of differing influences. Why criticise it from a Qawwali viewpoint afterall he did this knowing full well what he was doing and what's more he did it twice!Does that tell you something? Is it possible that some western Qawaali fans have decided that since discovering this music they have also discovered myopia(you can't touch my)dddegeneration.Now that's off my chest I would like to recommend some of the finest music to hit my ears.It's strange how it came about but I purchased Night Song well before I acquired Mustt Mustt and found that recording to be,as good as it is,(especially My Comfort Remains)quite different.As another reviewer pointed out Night Song has a more ambient feel and the influences appear to come at different levels .You can see Nusrat's intelligence through a willingness to explore on both of these recordings and as a result has created in my opinion truly great music, not forgetting Micheal Brook and Peter Gabriel etc.As for Mustt Musst as soon as I had the chance to listen a few times I felt that this is my favourite of the two.It seems to be richer in instrumentation especially percussion with more things happening and definitely more upbeat than the latter Night Song.At least that is how I felt.It should be realised the importance in bringing the extraordinary talents of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan closer to many more people who otherwise would not have had the benefit of experiencing (including myself) and I suspect a defining influence in how some music is approached these days.Like many no doubt, I find it sad that the man has passed on but fortunately he left us this along with his Qawwali.
Great example of Eastern/Western musical fusion January 10, 2002 Brent A. Anthonisen (Alpharetta, GA, USA) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
This is the first of two (three, if you count the collection of techno remixes released at the time of the artist's death) collaborations between one of the most amazing vocalists this world has heard within the last century and Canadian guitarist/composer Michael Brook, the 2nd being 1996's "Night Song". > Both are fantastic recordings, though this collection retains a bit more of the traditional central Asian sound heard in Nusrat's older recordings, and for that reason I prefer "Mustt Mustt". The sounds are evenly represented...some tracks include more Western "augmentation" than others (and in the case of the Massive Attack remix, a still-further Western deviation from an already very hip-sounding groove). > If the score from "Dead Man Walking" whetted your appetite for further examples of this great qawwali master's talent, I can't suggest a better starting point than this CD. "Night Song" is great as well, but I rate it a great ambient recording that owes more to Michael Brook's handiwork than the talent of the singer, who is given more of the center stage here.
Very medioce stuff from a master singer January 19, 2002 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
This CD presents the magnificent voice of the late Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and some of his regular musical family playing with Western musicians, and treated to the "enhancements" of studio technicians and DJs. For those unfamiliar with him this may well be a knock-your-socks-off experience. However, for those who have been followers of Nusrat's career this is watered down stuff indeed. It is ironic that after the usual diddling/remixing which seems a necessary part of pop music recording today that the result should be such a limp product compared to his "old fashion" performances. Clearly producer Michael Brook simply wasnt up to dealing with the incandescent power of the real Nusrat. If you think this slick production is great stuff - listen to his untampered with qawwali recordings and have your heart medication handy, 'cause you ain't heard nothin yet!
some sublime moments, marred by too much experimentation. October 2, 1999 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
Some of the songs, like Mustt Mustt and especially Tere Bina are magnificent, but Brook seems unsure of how to treat Nusrat, and some of the ambient experiments in the latter half of the album just don't work out. Everything came together for the two in the awesome follow-up to this, Night Song, which was far more mellow and restrained and did not attempt too much - the bane of this album - but what Night Song did not have was Tere Bina... the greatest love song ever, in my opinion, Nusrat raising the love song to the level of devotional music. Completely mindblowing, and the cd's worth buying for that song alone.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 23
| In Stock

|
|
|
CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME. |
| |