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Realize

Product ID : 23568626


Galleon Product ID 23568626
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About Realize

Product Description Karsh Kale (pronounced: Kursh Kah-lay), the leading U.S. figure in the Asian Massive movement infuses the traditional sounds of ancient India with post- millennial electronic dance styles such as trance and drum'n'bass. Blending sarangi, flutes and vocals with hypnotic electronica on Realize, his Six Degrees debut, Kale carves his own unique niche in pan-global music. Karsh Kale has previously collaborated with artists such as DJ Spooky, Herbie Hancock and acclaimed producer Bill Laswell, whose revolutionary Tabla Beat Science project featured Kale alongside tabla master Ustad Zakir Hussain. About the Artist Realize may be Karsh Kale's first full-length solo release, but the percussionist/songwriter has already established himself as one of the leaders of the Asian Massive movement. Karsh Kale (pronounced Kursh Kah-lay) cut his teeth playing tabla and electronic percussion and has since collaborated with America's renegade super-producer Bill Laswell on Tabla Beat Science which assured Kale's place in the burgeoning world dance scene. He leads one of New York's coolest ensembles, and his monthly spins at Paisley and Joe's Pub are some of the hottest tickets on the New York scene. Kale, who was born of Indian parents and grew up in the US, has long played Indian classical music on the tabla, the paired hand drums of northern India. On Realize, he comes up with an irresistible fusion of both East and West. "I don't think of them as two different worlds anymore," he explains. "This record expresses how they've become one world for me." With his trademark electronic tabla sound propelling the songs along, Kale weaves strands of Indian ragas through one of the most distinctive albums of electronica to come along since the legendary Anokha collection launched the career of his longtime colleague Talvin Singh and the Asian Underground. Kale does more than simply incorporate Indian folk and classical elements into electronica, he actually approaches the songs the way an Indian musician would. "The songs on the record were created to be performed," he says, "and we treat them the way Indian musicians traditionally do looking at the songs as a repertoire that can be reinterpreted. So a bhajan (a type of Indian folk song) can be a drum'n'bass tune and vice versa." The song "Saajana," for example, is written in the bhajan style and grooves along in a modern, electronically-enhanced re-creation of the trancey rhythms of Indian folk music. On it Indian singer Vishal Vaid spins a lovely tune with synthesizer, piano, and drum programming accompaniment. Like much of Realize, the song suggests that the same things that make a hit in Bengal make for a club fave in New York namely, a strong beat and a great melody. The first single from the album is the track "Distance," where Falguni Shah sings a graceful, understated melody while Karsh Kale proves beyond a reasonable doubt that the tabla is an instrument that is as ageless as it is ancient. An electronic tabla break halfway through the song drives the point home and further blurs the distinction between old and new, Eastern and Western. "Distance" has already been remixed four times, once by Kale himself and in a series of very different productions by English dancemaster Banco de Gaia and fellow Asian Massive producers Midival Punditz and Capt. Groove, both based in India. "That's my favorite part of the whole project," Kale says, "putting a song together over a period of months and then seeing it come back as something completely different." He likens it again to the way Indian musicians will approach songs in a classical raga performance. "It's all about someone reinterpreting your work. What I got back were not just remixes, they really re-made the song." On Realize, Kale brings together an international crew of musicians including some leading players of Indian classical music most notably the great Sultan Khan, the world's unchallenged master of the sarangi (a box-s