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Al-Hadiqat al-Adai´a

Posted By MiOd On Friday, December 18, 2009 Under ,
Andalusian Music & Poetry in the 12th and 13th Centuries
Ensemble Akrami, Capella de Ministrers, Mohamed Amin el Akrami, Carles Magraner

The Capella de Ministrers under the direction of their founder, Carles Magraner, are joined on this release by Ensemble Akrami, and together they present a programme of music demonstrating the influence of Arabic culture on early Andalusian music. As always this is carefully researched and well thought out programme proving why this group of musicians is regarded as one of the finest in the world when it comes to historical and early music.

As with the other schools Andalusian, female poetry Levantine lands would have accomplished poet and Amat al-Aziz al-Srifa al-Husayniyya (s. XII), Huseyn descendant of Prophet Mohammad's grandson, who will retain any his compositions sung in the context of the Andalusian musical tradition in the Maghrib, al-Abadiyya (XI century), slave and educated in Denia Mujaahid given to him by al-al-Mu `tadid of Seville (1042-1069), and Hind (twelfth century), the slave of Abu Muhammad al-Xativí b Maslama "The Xàtiva" who excelled in the field of poetry, song and instrumentation. The taste of the rulers and people to poetry and music that should help teachers and musicians incorporate some of these poems to their repertoire, being performed either in isolation or integrated into the corpus of the NAWBO-s (dialect: Nuba-s), regarded as the classical music whose origins goes back to the East, being the real architect of Ziryab encoding it in al-Andalus, through the process transmitter. In this transfer of knowledge from East to al-Andalus, considered worthy of dissemination work done by musicians, singers and slave-singers from eastern classical schools: Hijaz (Mecca and Medina), Umayyads (Damascus and Aleppo) and Abbasid (Baghdad, Samarra, Basra and Kufa), teachers who learned the Andalusians.
Ibn Jafáya
(Alzira, 1058-1139)
01 - Ai del meu al-Andalus [7:46]
02 - La meua terra d’Alzira [5:26]
03 - Oh València, tu no ets tu [3:36]

Amat al-Azíz al-Husayniyya
(Levante, ss. XII-XIII)
04 - Les vostres mirades [3:39]

Al-Rusáfi
(Ruzafa, Valencia, 1141-Málaga, 1177)
05 - La Russafa de València [2:57]
06 - El bany [5:42]

Ibn Labbána
(Valencia, m. 1113)
07 - Done la meua ànima [3:58]

Ibn al-Abbár
(Valencia, 1199-Túnez, 1260)
08 - La sénia [3:25]

Ibn al-Aríf
(Almería, 1088-Fez-Marrakech, 1141)
09 - Els enamorats [7:21]

Ibn Abi l-Rabi al-Xativi
(1189-1274)
10 - Cançó d'alba [5:41]

Ibn Záqqat
(Alcira, m. 1134)
11 - Epitafi d’un guerrer [4:12]
12 - Dia de tempestat [7:10]

ENSEMBLE AKRAMI
Mohamed Amin El Akrami

Abderrahim Abdelmoumen, veu
Mohamed Amin El Akrami, 'ud
Ibrahim El Idrissi, rebab
Mohamed Mostafa, darbuka

CAPELLA DE MINISTRERS
Carles Magraner

David Antich, flautes
Carles Magraner, rabel / viella
Efrén López, guiterna
Pau Ballester, percussió

Credits to "yerbas07"

FLAC (EAC Rip): 345 MB | MP3 - 320 kbs: 165 MB | Booklet Scans

Archives have 5% of the information for restoration

FLAC
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4

OR MP3 320 kbps
Part 1 | Part 2