03 ConfluenciasConfluencias
Melon Jimenez; Lara Wong
Scatcat Music (larawong.com/melonlara)

Confluencias contains hauntingly atmospheric oceans of music that are likely to fill your listening room. Both the music of the flute of Lara Wong and the guitar of Melón Jiménez (with contrabass and percussion and judiciously added electronics as well) combine to make it so. 

Wong is a virtuoso concert flutist and turns on the most seductive charm every time she puts the instruments to her lips, sculpting extraordinary melodic phrases and lines. But when she exchanges that flute for the hollowed-out bamboo of the Indian bansuri she unleashes an exponentially bewitching charm that will hold you in irresistible – and willing – bondage. 

Jiménez is no less a virtuoso. He puts this to work to bring to life his flamenco roots. He evokes memories of the great province of Andalusia that is home of the greatest of flamenco practitioners including José Miguel Carmona Niño, Juan José Carmona Amaya El Camborio, Paco de Lucía, Pepe Habichuela, and others. 

Jiménez’s flawless technique is employed through picados and rasgueados (flamenco strumming) with great sensitivity. He’s playing to bring to life what Federico García Lorca called the “Dark sounds of duende – that mysterious force that everyone feels, and no philosopher has explained. The duende is not in the throat: the duende surges up, inside, from the soles of the feet.”

Two songs on this riveting album that will leave you breathless are Kalima and Pardo Perdío.

01 StradivatangoStradivatango
Denis Plante; Stephane Tetrault
ATMA ACD2 2886 (atmaclassique.com/en/product/stradivatango)

The Canadian duo of bandoneonist/composer/arranger Denis Plante and cellist Stéphane Tétreault are back with memorable tango performances. The title Stradivatango is a contraction of the words Stradivarius and tango, the cello Tétreault plays and the music style the duo performs, respectively. Their close collaboration since 2018 makes for beautiful, tightly performed, colourful sounds that expand the sonic world of tango.

Plante’s composition Stradivatango is an eight-movement work influenced by baroque, classical and tango elements. The first movement, Le prince écarlate is Plante’s self-described tribute to Antonio Vivaldi, with both styles’ repeated notes, accents, melodic conversations and descending cello lines. There are more baroque theme and variations references with tangos in ChaconneLa camarde is a rhythmic dance with bandoneon opening and cello backdrop. A higher pitched bandoneon solo is even more tango flavoured, with close back and forth with the cello.

There are inspirational performances of Plante arrangements of “classic” tangos by Piazzolla, Gardel, Pugliese and Villoldo. Plante reorchestrates three of Piazzolla’s popular works including Libertango which has a bright and light cello melody with a nicely percussive bandoneon backup. Plante’s original Tango romance is a slower sombre piece with subtle tango feel in the rhythmic groove and colourful virtuosic melodic embellishments on the bandoneon. 

Plante and Tétreault’s continued dedication to the development of the tango style, and their intelligent moving musicianship is inspirational.

Listen to 'Stradivatango' Now in the Listening Room

02 Amir Amiri EnsembleAjdad – Ancestors | Echoes of Persia
Amir Amiri Ensemble
Fifth House FH-101 (amiramiriensemble.bandcamp.com/album/ancestors-ajdad)

Amir Amiri Ensemble’s latest recording project is nothing short of masterful. Sadly, this celebration of Iranian/Persian culture could never have been manifested under Iran’s current theocratic, repressive regime. Amiri, an icon of the santur, and his gifted collaborators, Reza Abaee (ghaychak), Omar Abu Afach (viola), Abdul-Wahab Kayyali (oud) and Hamin Honari (tombak, dayereh and daf) have gifted us with 12 original compositions that explore the ancient connections between Persian and other Middle Eastern musics – relationships that were obliterated following Iran’s 1979 cultural and political upheaval. 

Amiri wears several hats here, as performer, producer, arranger and composer, and the project is rife with musical complexities rendered on primarily traditional instruments by his coterie of skilled musicians. This CD is an emotional journey framed by a series of original compositions. In particular Baran (Rain) contains diatonic descending lines intertwined with unison motifs, invoking the cleansing, healing rain, woven into a fabric of melancholy. Amiri and Afach shine here, with stunning, facile technique. Another delight is Raghseh Choobi (Dance of the Wooden Sticks), which clearly and harmonically illustrates the joy of the unfettered Iranian and other Middle Eastern peoples. Also stunning is the melancholy Sarzamineh Madaran (Towards My Motherland) – a moving lament that will resonate with every newcomer and ex-patriot. Afach is featured in a solo viola sequence here, filled with sonorous, motifs of lament and longing.

Kayyali displays breathtaking technique in his solo sequence, Sarzamin (Spirit of Our Land) on a stringed instrument that pre-dates the Western Lute, and the ensemble unites on the rousing Raghseh Sama (Sama Dance) utilizing dynamics and incendiary percussion to flame the excitement. This gorgeous disc closes with the title track, an ode to the ensemble’s ancestors – brave, courageous and artistic, whose unique DNA lives on in the Iranian people.

04 Farnaz OhadiBreath | Ah |Aliento
Farnaz Ohadi
AIR Music Group (Farnazohadi.com)

Persia and Spain seem too geographically apart for the musical traditions to collide. But ancient travel does throw up incredible surprises, such as when the Persian scholar Zaryab established a conservatoire in Cordoba 1000 years ago. Persia’s music also bears the influence of Mughal North India. Afghan, Azeri traditions are also intertwined with Persian ones as are those of Andalusia that might have come via Arabia. 

The Canadian-created double-CD Breath owes its magical veritas to Farnaz Ohadi who “blends” Persian maqam (modes) seamlessly with the flamenco guitar of Gaspar Rodríguez. 

Listening to Farsi lyrics sung, mystically, Sufi-style by the smoky-voiced Ohadi is quite eye-popping and spectacular. Moreover, the flamenco-style strumming and dark chords by Rodríguez makes for a very unusual, but spectacular encounter with Ohadi’s vocals. 

Ohadi’s and Rodríguez’s musical ingenuity goes a step further by orchestrating the music incorporating Lebanese or Phoenician traditions. This provides a brilliant new fluid dynamics, making everything fit like a velvet glove.

Both discs are superb. Disc one’s Anda jaleo – the bulerias flamenco – is exquisite, providing much freedom for improvisation, and variable metre. The song Oriyan, a hypnotic solea, and Resurrection, which melds the chanted seguidillas rhythms to close out the disc, are superb. After three eloquent vocal songs – especially the Persian folk song, Yar – disc two closes out with five instrumentals. Of these, the song Erev and the instrumental rendition of Oriyan are truly spectacular.

05 Emad ArmoushDistilled Extractions
Emad Armoush’s Rayhan
Afterday AA2401 (afterday.bandcamp.com/album/distilled-extractions)

Bringing together the ensemble Rayhan for Distilled Extractions becomes a stroke of genius when paired with Emad Armoush’s lineup of traditional Arabic songs and original compositions. The ensemble – all veteran Canadian improvisors – have both the skill and the chemistry to explore beyond the basic songs to bring an evolutionary vision to the album. The result is simply beautiful.

Armoush’s oud, ney, and vocals lead the ensemble through these pieces but leave space for the group to expand with improvisations and occasional electronics, giving the album a modern feel but never losing the essence of the traditional tunes. Rayhan, comprising clarinetist François Houle, Jesse Zubot on violin and effects, JP Carter on trumpet, Kenton Loewen on drums (and Marina Hassleberg guesting on cello) is exquisite in their delicate balance and chemistry, but much could be also be praised for Houle’s perfectly balanced and creative mastering ensuring the primary focus and authenticity remains with the traditional songs.

The entire album flows seamlessly, enriched by the group’s improvisations, electronic explorations and occasional jazz influences, and I loved every track. From the opening improvisation of El Helwa Di, to Lahza, beginning with a breathtaking trumpet and effects solo before evolving into a rhythmic groove, to Zourouni, starting with a free improvisation featuring Houle’s clarinet at the forefront, the album effortlessly blends traditional and contemporary elements, eventually gathering the entire ensemble and bringing the album to a conclusion that left me seeking out where this group will be performing next.

Listen to 'Distilled Extractions' Now in the Listening Room

06 Yosl and the YinglesZikhroynes / זכרונות
Yosl and the Yingles
(josephlandau.com/yosl-and-the-yingels)

It’s not often an EP of original Yiddish songs lands in one’s inbox; rarer, still, for it to be reviewed in The WholeNote. Well, that’s exactly what has transpired with Zikhroynes, “Memories,” the lovely debut by Yosl and the Yingels.

Led by Toronto-based singer-songwriter and accordionist, Joseph Landau, this Yiddish swing and folk band arose out of a busking project during the pandemic. For Zikhroynes, Landau, one of only a few Canadian composers currently penning songs in Yiddish, chose four of his favourites (from the dozens he has written), each embodying classic aspects of Klezmer instrumentation, form and style, and the familiar Yiddish musical theatre themes of nostalgia and yearning. 

Mayn Haymshtetele, “My Hometown,” evokes the longing for the shtetl (think “Anatevka” from Fiddler) or in Landau’s case, his childhood Jewish enclave in Thornhill, just north of Toronto. Blimele, “Little Flower,” is a beautiful, lilting waltz, reminiscent of Tumbalalaika. Listen for the spectacular clarinet solo by the always-astonishing Jacob Gorzhaltsan in Lomir Freylekh Zayn, “Let’s Be Happy.” And the Yiddish swing era of the Barry Sisters is perfectly captured in Shternbild, “Constellation.” 

Enjoyment of this enchanting gem is greatly enhanced by the essential, highly informative “Lyric Explainers” found on Landau’s YouTube channel: youtube.com/@josephdavidlandau/videos.

01 Lenka LichtenbergFeel With Blood – Echoes of Theresienstadt
Lenka Lichtenberg
Six Degrees (open.spotify.com/album/6Dj5Uf3eCSgVNUCOePO6fr)

This album of songs is a continuation of the experiences of Anna Hana Friesová (1901-1987), and of Lenka Lichtenberg, her granddaughter. These stories of Friesová’s life in a concentration camp were first sung in the Czech language on Thieves of Dreams (2022) by Lichtenberg, an artist with a gorgeously spellbinding and agile soprano that sometimes swoops down into a dark lower register, eminently suited to bringing the elemental sadness of Friesová’s poetry to life. 

The crimson-coloured outer package is the first sign that what you are about to hear are especially heartbreaking songs based on Friesová’s diaries that documented life during the Holocaust. In Feel With Blood, Lichtenberg has grown to deeply inhabit more than just her grandmother’s character, but her very life. She sings with great feeling and intensity and an always vivid response to the text documented in Friesová’s diaries. Lichtenberg’s voice is sharp as a knife, penetrating the depth of life and poetry with each beauteously soft – sung or recited – phrase. The vocalist often employs chilling chest tones as she draws us into Friesová’s world, making her Holocaust life leap off the page. 

The superb song poetry features matchless depictions of Friesová’s loneliness and suffering. Lichtenberg displays sublime artistry, with an uncanny ability to make the North Indian tabla and its polyrhythms perfectly suited to the ululations of a voice soaked in Czech folk melodies on this wonderfully orchestrated recording.

02 AzadiAzadi
Tamar Ilana & Ventanas
Lula World Records LWR04551A (lulaworldrecords.ca/product-page/azadi-by-tamar-ilana-ventanas-cd)

Toronto-based multilingual singer and dancer Tamar Ilana, of Jewish, Indigenous, Romanian and Scottish descent, grew up on the road learning from and performing with her ethnomusicologist mother Dr. Judith Cohen. 

In three well-received previous albums Ilana’s world music band Ventanas (“windows” in Spanish), drew on her multiple roots and those of her Toronto bandmates. Their new studio album Azadi vividly extends the group’s musical purview, effectively mixing highly contrasting vocal and instrumental numbers over 12 tracks. As well as showcasing traditional Flamenco, Sephardic, Balkan and Brazilian songs in inventive arrangements, compositions by Ventanas members contribute contemporary themes. Ilana renders the lyrics in an impressive range of languages: Spanish, Ladino, French, Urdu, Greek, Portuguese and Bulgarian. 

Meaning “freedom” in Urdu and Farsi, the album’s title track was inspired by the women’s freedom movement in Iran opening with the uplifting lines, “Sun breaks through the darkened and cloudy skies / Shining bright on open and peaceful eyes / Moving free with liberty…” As for the song Ventanas Altas, within the charm of its vocal melody lies a secret earworm power. I was compelled to listen to it several times. This old wedding-courtship song, popular among Sephardic Jews of Salonika Greece, was collected by Cohen in Montréal. Ilana’s unaffected light soprano sounds just right.

Ilana shares that she’s “always struggled with my multiple identities, both cultural and genetic. As the world also struggles with these issues on multiple fronts, this album is a deep reflection of these questions, and a musical response in the form of peace, collaboration and acceptance.” I’m feeling it too.

01 Howard GladstoneCrazy Talk
Howard Gladstone
Sonic Peace Music SP000221 (howardgladstone.bandcamp.com/album/crazy-talk)

Toronto-based singer-songwriter Howard Gladstone’s eighth release is a 12-track recording showcasing his mature clear vocals, poetic storytelling lyrics in jazz to world to folk to rock music. He is joined by his core band members bassist Bob Cohen and guitarist/co-composer/co-producer Tony Quarrington, frequent pianist/vocalist Laura Fernandez and six other musicians.

Title track Crazy Talk, co-written with Quarrington, is a subtle tribute to Patsy Cline, the Beatles and Robbie Robertson. This lighthearted, jazzy country tune features a Quarrington guitar solo, Cohen bass solo, Fernandez back up vocals and Gladstone singing his witty lyrics like “That’s crazy talk… but then again, I’m crazy too.”  

Latin/world music references resonate in Little Bird where Jacob Gorzhaltsan’s birdlike flute trills, tweets and high pitched melodies accompany Gladstone. Oh, the Waters is multi-section with colourful guitar and accordion echoing. Irish Rain is a rollicking Irish drinking song held together by drum taps and Gladstone’s classic vocals. 

Longtime fans and new listeners alike should enjoy this hopeful, timeless Gladstone release.

Listen to 'Crazy Talk' Now in the Listening Room

02 Jay DanleyDigno, Sophisticado Y Elegante
Jay Danley
Independent (jaydanley.bandcamp.com/album/digno-sophisticado-y-elegante)

Canadian composer and musician Jay Danley is a multi-instrumentalist with a passion for Cuban music. He has performed with Jane Bunnett, members of Buena Vista Social Club, and can be heard on recordings by Hilario Duran.

On Digno, Sophisticado Y Elegante, Danley takes you in spirit to eastern Cuba, where 19th century Spanish and African-influenced music and dance come together in a collection of original compositions that feature the tres, a three-course string instrument central to the Son Cubano tradition. On this ambitious self-produced instrumental recording Danley plays all the instruments.

 In the slow dance opening track, Adiós Al Ayer (Goodbye to Yesterday) the delicate sound of the tres almost whispers as it recalls times past, and is reminiscent of the ache felt when listening to Duran’s interpretation of Mirame Así (Look at Me Like This), on which Danley plays. El Pasado Seacabo (The Past Is Over) takes us further into rural Cuba charming us with its graceful melody. This is small-setting music that is never rushed nor calls attention to itself. 

On Guapachou Danley exceeds expectations by featuring the tres with a jazz improviser’s virtuosity. The tres follows multiple lines flying chromatically over the slow-moving chords. The single take tres solo is masterful. At the same time, amidst all this music mastery, one is left nostalgic for a time when the limitations of sampled horns and multitrack home recording was not required to bring engaging new music to the world.

03 KanzufulaKanzafula – Afro Iraqi Sufi Music
Ahmed Moneka
Lula World Records LWR042A (ahmedmoneka.com)

Since being forced to flee Baghdad as a refugee after acting in a gay rights film in 2015, Iraqi actor and artist Ahmed Moneka has continued to share his bright light in film, art and music. His first album Kanzafula reflects his African, Iraqi-Arabic history to his eventual landing in Toronto, using poetic lyrics to describe his journey through three wars in Iraq and his continued activism. With his smokey, expressive vocals, Moneka gives his all to these songs, a flavourful collection of Arabic melodies infused with Afro grooves, soul, jazz and rock. The album wishes for love and peace during the often-fraught experiences from home countries at war, but even with the heaviness of some of the lyrics, the album remains joyous and uplifting. 

The song Aman opens the album with a rock/funk vibe, asking us to keep safety and connection to our hearts, and to spread hope and love. Chil Mali Wali is a traditional Iraqi song in a melodic maqam, a protest song of British colonization from the 1920s. The song Sea is inspired by Afro-Arabic rhythm that defies sitting still. Khitar: ‘The Guest’ is a song dedicated to Indigenous Canadians and features Moneka’s silky bass vocals and jazz-flavoured chorus and solos from the band. 90 Days shares Moneka’s love of his home Iraq when he returns for a short period to work and is a gem of solo voice and instrumental. Oh Mother is a great blend of Maqam and rock and feels like party music, where Treed Trooh? is a funky slow meditation on separation. The album closes with Sidi Mansure, a traditional Tunisian ecstatic trance song that really drives one to dance. 

Each track of the album is captivating, even without the lyrics, but the reward of reading the translations only deepens their reach, and solos from the top-notch band really bring them home.

04 Michael Cloud DuguayMichael Cloud Duguay – Succeeder
MC Duguay; Various Artists
Watch That Ends the Night (michaelcloudduguay.bandcamp.com/album/succeeder)

Glorious and gorgeous, Succeeder lives up to its name as it includes a community of musicians to make Michael Cloud Duguay’s songwriting and compositions explode in sonic splendour. The liner notes on Bandcamp (and on the artist’s website) provide a fascinating history of these songs and Duguay’s musical and life journey and I will not attempt a summary except to say it all makes for a rich and diverse background to this unique production. 

A Very Fine Start begins the album with the rhythm section and a warm pedal steel providing a beautiful backdrop along with a female background singer. Amidst the lyrics about family and circumstances instruments are added, including a fine baritone sax solo, over the evocative soundscapes. Someone Else’s Blues has a funkier and soulful up-tempo beat with a horn section and harmony vocalists. Port Hope begins more delicately with a tremolo guitar, pedal steel and arpeggiated piano backing things up. There are 17 performers listed and the instruments include drums, bass, piano, vocalists, pedal steel, saxophones, percussion, guitar, flutes, jaw harp, accordion, hurdy-gurdy and pocket trumpet to list only a few. I would like the vocals to be mixed more clearly, but it is also fascinating how they blend into the orchestration and emerge as spots of insight. 

The artist’s website declares “the album continues to mine the sumptuous, expansive rootsiness of Duguay’s earlier albums, yet also gestures toward the more outward experimentation of several of his upcoming projects through its careful, yearning ambiences.” I cannot improve on that description because the feeling of Succeeder with its evocative ambiences, its blending of folk, jazz and experimental idioms, and the joy of the Peterborough musicians who helped create this work are all important to its expansiveness. Please sit in a quiet place and let this album embrace you for a sumptuous 45 minutes.

05 Ron KorbGlobal Canvas
Ron Korb
Humbledragon Entertainment HD2024 (ronkorb.com/globalcanvas-cd)

Flutist, Ron Korb, has made a brilliant career, performing on not only the usual Boehm flute but also on an array of flutes and related instruments from other cultures, which is what makes him such an extraordinary musician. I can say without exaggeration that he has mastered an extraordinary number of instruments, all of which are of the flute family, but which are all different and present unique problems. In addition to the usual flute and bass flute, which figures prominently on this recording, Ron plays an oriental bamboo flute and several other oriental instruments.

Korb is joined by 19 musicians playing an assortment of western and oriental instruments, which add an extensive and highly unusual orchestration in which contrast has a striking role, as in track eight (Kindness), which begins with Ron playing the melody on the bawu, a side-blown Chinese reed instrument that sounds a bit like a clarinet, after which this same melody is repeated on the erhu, a 2- string Chinese bowed string instrument. In track three, (Desire), Korb begins with a contemplative melody on the bass flute and is joined unexpectedly by the tabla (Indian drum). He even delves into the absence of orchestration in track 16 (Peace Flute), an unaccompanied bass flute solo, in which the resonant bass sonority provides all that is needed.

Also featured are several Latin jazz tracks on which Korb uses a Boehm flute and to which Cuban-Canadian pianist Hilario Duran makes significant contributions.

06 Confluence Raga GuitarsConfluence of Raga Guitars
Joel Veena; Matthew Grasso
Independent (bit.ly/ragaguitars)

It’s probable the guitar was first introduced to South Asia in the 16th century via the Portuguese colony of Goa. The next guitar wave to arrive there was the Hawaiian (lap steel) guitar, a key sound in the commercially successful and influential touring Hawaiian music and dance troupes of the 1920s and later decades. In the 1960s Brij Bhushan Kabra adapted the guitar to play Hindustani (North Indian) classical music, lap steel style. Performing concerts and releasing numerous LPs, Kabra and his students’ innovations have long been accepted by the Hindustani music world. 

Confluence of Raga Guitars showcases the latest evolution of Indian guitar construction and its related raga-based music performance practice. Eloquently played by Matthew Grasso (Tantrakari guitar) and Joel “Veena” Eisenkramer (Indian slide guitar), two American guitarists who have dedicated themselves to playing in the Hindustani classical tradition, the album explores three ragas. 

Their presentation has several novel features. While the ragas are rendered in a traditional way, each focuses on an alaap (where the outline of the raga is melodically explored without meter), and jor (where melodies pick up speed and rhythmic activity). Typically, the following section is the gat (bandish) which introduces a theme within a tala, usually accompanied by tabla. Interestingly, however, the musicians have chosen not to include a gat section. This keeps the listener’s attention tightly focused on the dialogue between the two guitars, highlighting their distinctive approaches to melody, tone production and timbral diversity. For example, Grasso’s Tantrakari guitar uses nylon strings, plus steel sympathetic strings and a specially tuned fingerboard. On the other hand, Eisenkramer’s new Indian slide guitar is an evolution of the instrument design long ago adopted into Hindustani music. His glissando microtonal ornaments and expressive affect contrast markedly with Grasso’s more Spanish guitar-sounding fingerstyle approach, dramatically enlivening the album’s dialectical duet (jugalbandi).

Listen to 'Confluence of Raga Guitars' Now in the Listening Room

01 RaagaverseJaya
Raagaverse
Rhea Records (raagaverse.bandcamp.com/album/jaya)

I have the pleasure of reviewing two albums from Canada’s West Coast this month, and it’s always a treat as a Toronto-based writer to explore the musical happenings elsewhere in the country. Jaya is an exciting debut album from Vancouver collective Raagaverse, led by its vocalist Shruti Ramani. Admittedly Ramani was the member of the group I was least familiar with prior to exploring this recording, but her reputation precedes her in contemporary musical circles nation-wide. 

Jaya’s album design alludes to the Indian origins of its contents, eschewing the often-drab layouts and artwork that enclose many Canadian jazz discs. Rhea Records features artists from the jazz/improvised music realm, and while Raagaverse’s core quartet instrumentation might be right at home performing originals and standards, this album uniquely evades categorization. 

Pianist Noah Franche-Nolan and drummer Nick Bracewell have recently become common names in Vancouver’s creative music scene, and they bring both youthful energy and mature restraint to their playing in Raagaverse. Jodi Proznick is a coveted bassist locally and internationally who shines throughout this album, notably with an energetic solo on Parindey. Ramani’s use of Indian syllables when improvising was of particular interest to me, offering a unique approach compared to wordless vocalising. 

There was an “Indo-Jazz” trend some years ago that led to interesting music at its best, and some strange appropriation when less successful. Raagaverse manages to enter this domain in the most organic and exciting way possible, while simultaneously existing in a realm of its own divorced from labelling. If you’re a fan of jazz, Indian music, contemporary improvisation or all of the above, I highly recommend Jaya. And even if you’re not inclined in any of those directions, I expect you’ll still find a favourite track or two.

02 Nastasia YKyiv Soul
Nastasia Y
Lula World Records (nastasiay.com)

Innovative vocalist/keyboardist/creator Nastasia Y has just released a dynamic and thought-provoking recording which has been informed by her remarkable journey… growing up in Kyiv while being surrounded by her late activist father’s folk songs, to eventually joining the global indie jazz coterie of Toronto’s explosive world music/independent music scene. Nastasia’s potent material is really a fusion of folk songs, or as Nastasia says “Ukrainian Blues,” with a liberal dash of jazz and funk. On this unique project, she has assembled a gifted complement, while celebrating the proud legacy of resistance and Ukrainian patriotism of her late, heroic father, Kost’ Yerofeyev. The recording also explores the depths of Slavic ancestral magic and the incredible fortitude and bravery of the Ukrainian resistance, as well as the nature of war and the nature of love. 

The repertoire here has all been composed/adapted by Nastasia, including Salgir River, a traditional Crimean song of the nearly obliterated Tatar people, re-imagined with ancient, powerful and stirring vocals and face-melting contiguous guitar/synth lines. A true stand-out is Kupalo, a contemporary twist on the mystical Ukrainian summer solstice celebration and a fine guitar solo by KC Roberts is the icing on the pagan cake!! 

Also superb is the Carpathian ballad, Pod Oblachkom, which dives deep into the nature of infatuation. Nastasia’s crystalline, pitch pure soprano inveigles the listener into the magical, mysterious depths of passion. And the incendiary closer, Bez Vas, is a contemporary Ukrainian power ballad, not only embracing President Zelenskyy’s vision, but musically highlighting the eternal cultural identity of Ukrainians and of their sovereign nation.

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