Prom 51: 'The Desert Blues', Tinariwen
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Heard this Prom yesterday. While Lopa Kothari mentioned titles to a few of the songs, there was no running roster of the titles of the selections played anywhere, not even now after the fact. So I can't archive the playlist, and I didn't know Tinariwen's work at all to be able to compile a list. With all that said, this was toe-tapping fun to listen to. Lopa K. mentioned the RAH being quite full, which seems rather unusual for a Late Night Prom, but the pictures from the Instagram feed would seem to confirm that impression:
225 likes, 3 comments - bbc_proms on August 29, 2024: "Last night’s Late Night Prom featured the utterly incredible @tinariwen ?? Combining Tuareg and African music with elements of Western rock and jazz, the packed out audience at the @royalalberthall were completely captivated ? ? Listen again on @bbcsounds ? Photos by Andy Paradise".
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI'd have been interested to hear a concert of traditional Tuareg music, but adding 'western rock and jazz' seems unwanted to me. I wouldn't want to hear English folk songs or Mozart treated that way.
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Coming in on the later stages I felt the rock element swamped the whole to the point of ethnic unidentifiability. In a more equal world would be OK; this to my ears was yet another example of cultural colonisation and expropriation by force of decimels. Jazz has been doing this sort of thing satisfactorily for more than a century demonstrating that there are other ways without "the western" on the one hand dominating while on the other being enriched.
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Originally posted by bluestateprommer View Post.. there was no running roster of the titles of the selections played anywhere, not even now after the fact.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostComing in on the later stages I felt the rock element swamped the whole to the point of ethnic unidentifiability. In a more equal world would be OK; this to my ears was yet another example of cultural colonisation and expropriation by force of decimels. Jazz has been doing this sort of thing satisfactorily for more than a century demonstrating that there are other ways without "the western" on the one hand dominating while on the other being enriched.
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