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As great as some of that material is, Kinsmen is arguably a more successful fusion of the two traditions since it blends them more equally. But both those projects were more firmly rooted in Indian music. Others have attempted a similar melding of traditions: John Handy and Ali Akbar Khan cut a couple records together and John McLaughlin had his original Shakti project around the same time (mid-'70s). Another interesting thing is the way instruments will sit out at times, creating a more intimate conversational space like between the sax and mridangam on "Kalyani," or the guitar/bass/mridangam and sax/drum kit sections of "Convergence (Kinsmen)." It's also really interesting to contrast the sax styles of Mahanthappa and Gopalnath (they're easy to tell apart) because they're coming to common ground from very different traditions. The tunes are written with excellent countermelodies and everyone takes full advantage of the ample solo space throughout the album while never losing sight of the melody. Abbasi's double-timing of the melody is great too. "Convergence (Kinsmen)" could well be the album highlight, with great soloing all around and, as on "Snake"!, some particularly hot drumming from royal hartigan. "Kalyani" is more contemplative with a really nice faux sitar solo from Rez Abbasi. "Snake!" has a very Carnatic sounding beginning with just violin, sax, and mridangam before giving way to an uptempo "snake" charmer vibe which opens into a jazzier guitar/sax conversation then back to "snake" charming. After Rudresh's alap ("Introspection"), the band charges out with the scorching "Ganesha." "Longing" is as languid and bittersweet as the title suggests. There are five main pieces, each with a solo instrumental introduction (known in Indian music as the alap) by a different player (OK, only four pieces get an alap, but one piece gets two of them).
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No, this is a jazz album and it swings mightily through most of the program.
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Kanyakumari, and the melodies are Indian inspired but the music only sounds purely Carnatic in spots. There is a strong Indian flavor to the soloing of both Gopalnath and his longtime violin player A. Guitar, bass, and drum kit are joined by violin and mridangam and the leaders' two saxophones meeting squarely between the two traditions.
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For Kinsmen, Rudresh Mahanthappa's fifth album as leader, he trades in his standard sax quartet for the hybrid American jazz/South Indian classical Dakshina Ensemble, co-led by Carnatic saxophone legend Kadri Gopalnath.
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