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THE MANGANYAR SEDUCTION

"Incandescent Sufi voices that incite ecstasy" - Songlines

From obscure villages around Jaisalmer and Jodhpur and Barmer in western Rajasthan, comes a musical tradition that has digested and belted out melodies from everywhere between Persia and the Punjab for several centuries. This is the music of The Manganiyars: a community of Muslim court musicians whose royal patrons may have disappeared because of circumstances of history, but whose music lives because its practitioners cannot live without it.

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The Manganiyars, as the roots of the name suggests, asked for alms in lieu of entertainment, performing at marriages, deaths and births: something they continue doing today. They converted to Islam some 400 years ago, an event that only enriched the already entrenched folk tradition of Rajasthan and Sindh with the import of words and tunes and instruments (like the the kamancha, a three-stringed ancestor of the violin, which has a bowl shaped resonating chamber covered by goat skin) from as far away as Azerbaijan.

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Their music is complex and secular, its roots spread wide, though chiefly in Hindustani classical music. But its delivery isn’t bound by the set rules of this tradition. The Manganiyar splits notes into improbable fractions, keeps beat with his eyes, shifts tempo as suddenly and effortlessly as a gust of desert wind moves a dune.

PRESS

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Featured on BBC Asian Network, BBC Hindi, BBC World Service programming in 2015/16

 

"Latitudes: The Global Music You Must Hear In June"  - NPR Music, June 30, 2015

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"Maximum groove with minimal means" 

      - MixedWorldMusic.com, May 2015

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​“4 Stars! Incandescent Sufi voices that incite ecstasy” - Simon Broughton, Songlines

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“Barmer Boys steal the show” - IBNLive NH7Weekender Festival, Nov 2014

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“Mangey Khan’s voice needs to be heard to be believed” - Hindustan Times, Feb 2012

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"The music rose above the repetitive tunes we hear in today’s clamorous folk market and was like a whiff of fresh air" - Indian Express, Nov 2012

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"Definitely near the top of my list of personal all-time favorite radio sessions" - Robert Weisberg, Transpacific Sound Paradise, WFMU 91.1FM

DID YOU KNOW?

  • Barmer Boys played at Roskilde Festival 2014, between sets by Outkast and The Rolling Stones (video)

  • Manga, vocalist and harmonium player with Barmer Boys, does not have a last name!

  • Rais Khan, master percussionist, learnt beatboxing by trading morchang lessons

  • Their debut album 'At Home' was recorded in Barmer, Rajasthan in 43 degree C temperature that destroyed plastic and batteries (listen here)

  • Barmer Boys are Sufi Muslims who sing songs in praise of Hindu gods & goddesses

  • 'Kesariya Balm' released in 2017 debuted on the Top 40 Transglobal World Music Charts. It does not include the popular Rajasthani song Kesariya Balam!

  • Barmer Boys have shared the stage with leading international artists including Bombino, Fatoumata Diawara, Vieux Farka Tourè, BaBa ZuLa, Khaled...

  • They featured on MTV Coke Studio with Bollywood director Clinton Cerejo - 2 million+ views

  • Rais Khan has collaborated on music recordings/performed with Grammy winning artists A.R. Rehman, The Gipsy Kings, Mumford and Sons

A number of instruments are employed in a performance such as the one on this record. The rounded kamancha; the sarangi, arguably the most difficult Indian instrument to master, it has upto 40 strings, most of which hum as they are caressed by the bow while the three main strings are guided towards notes by the fingernails of the player; there is the algoza or double flute; the tiny, but potent, morchang, held delicately in the performer’s mouth, its taut reed is plucked to produce twangs that talk; then there is the khartal, just two smooth pieces of wood, held in each hand, that are made to converse in the intricate language of claps by gravity and the magic in the palms that hold them.

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It is with these, and raw, free voices, that the Manganiyar’s have enthralled audiences at important cultural venues across the world. Yet they are rooted in a very different reality. They return to parched villages that are barely lit by electricity, often unconnected by motorable roads. They depend on subsistence farming to live--and play. Some of the finest instrument-makers in the region have long become a part of the seasonal migration to cities, to find work making furniture. There just isn’t enough business. These realities, and the compelling music that cloaks them, are the underlying motivations for setting up Amarrass Society, a not-for-profit initiative of Amarrass Records, to enable the reinvestment of a fair share of profits from the sale of this and other albums back into the community.


The Manganiyars are:

  • Conductor: Daevo Khan

  • Vocals: Mame Khan, Jamil Khan, Jalal Khan, Hakam Khan Kisola, Jame Khan, Talab Khan, Barkat Khan, Gulu Khan, Mula Khan, Buta Khan, Kheta Khan, Mushtaq Khan, Bagga Khan, Deu Ram

  • Kamancha: Dhara Khan, Hakkam Khan, Kanwaru Khan, Kode Khan, Ghamsu Khan, Bakse Khan

  • Dholak: Mansoor Khan, Roshan Khan, Bugra Khan, Butta Khan, Rahmat Khan

  • Murli: Achar Khan, Chuge Khan

  • Khartal: Daewo Khan,Shokat Khan, Ameen Khan, Bhugda Khan

  • Sarangi: Shamsuddin Khan, Habib Khan

  • Morchang & Bapang: Kutla Khan

  • Algoza: Habib Khan

  • Dhol: Joga Khan, Babu Khan, Sattar Khan, Swaroop Khan

 

 

List of major performances:

Nuits De Fourviere, Lyon, France June 2009; Holland Festival, Amsterdam June 2009; Ulster Bank Dublin Theatre Festival, September-2009 (Opening Show); Sydney Festival, York Theatre Seymour Center, January 2010 (Opening Show); BITE Festival, Barbican Center, London UK, March 2010; Singapore Arts Festival, Esplanade Theater, May 2010; The Lincoln Center White Light Festival, Rose Theater, New York November 2010; Purana Qila (Old Fort), November 2010; Perth International Arts Festival, Australia March 2011; Auckland Arts Festival, New Zealand, March 2011; Kennedy Center, Washington DC, March 2011, NH7 Weekender Festival 2013, US Tour 2013

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