/>
musicOMH
home / features / albums / live / classical / blog
Facebook Twitter
search:

Albert Kuvezin & Yat-Kha - Re-Covers (Yat Ka)

UK release date: 20 June 2005
Albert Kuvezin & Yat-Kha  - Re-Covers

buy this title


track listing

1. When The Levee Breaks
2. Man Machine
3. Ramblin' Man
4. In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida
5. Love Will Tear Us Apart
6. Her Eyes Are A Blue Million Miles
7. A Song About A Giraffe
8. Orgasmatron
9. Will You Go, Lassie, Go?
10. Toccata
11. Black Magic Woman
12. Exodus
13. Play With Fire
14. The Song Of Mergen

Hello, another covers album of old rock songs. Hang on though. H��mii singing? That's throat-singing, as practised in the mountainous lands of Tuva, Siberia and Mongolia. Chances are, if you've heard this musical form, then you've heard Albert Kuvezin, late of Huun-Huur-Tu and now of Yat-Kha. And you can probably still vividly recall the vibrations in your feet and stomach.

If you're oblivious - well, throat-singing involves holding long bass notes in your mouth while supplying harmony through the nose. The human voice has surely never been recorded in a lower frequency without the aid of studio gadgetry. It really is like nothing you've ever heard. This music is so far out there, it feels like there's no way back.

Albert Kuvezin was part of a generation that - to the dismay of the Tuvan Communist Party - sought out Western rock'n'roll records from Moscow (three days' travelling from the Russian capital - and that's before you go anyplace else - you could say Tuva is a pretty remote place). Several international tours later, Yat-Kha revisit those songs that first inspired them. Joy Division, Led Zeppelin, Bob Marley, Kraftwerk, Hank Williams and Mot�rhead, to name a few. It's an eclectic selection, delivered in spare arrangements using stringed instruments like the igil and the morinhuur (a Mongolian harp), with rhythms that are beautifully spare and uncluttered.

Musicians have been delving into 'alien' territory for years - everyone from the Bad Livers and Hayseed Dixie to Alexander Balanescu and Laibach, they've all had a go at knocking round pegs into square holes, tongues planted varying degrees into cheek. There's no question that Yat-Kha's intentions are entirely genuine, but how far exactly can you take this thing?

Well, admittedly not everything sticks. Hearing Love Will Tear Us Apart - a song that's already been mangled and abused by all manner of tin-eared clods - shorn of its original dynamic and delivered in a bear-like growling monotone, rather destabilises its emotional core. It's merely a weird thing to behold. On the other hand, Led Zeppelin's When the Levee Breaks (a track from a band never shy of looking East for a few ideas) reveals the universal pull of blues, and makes perfect sense.

A remarkably faithful rendering of a Rolling Stones B-side elevates the lyric to places it never imagined: "So don't play with me, �cos you're playing with fire". Brrrrrr...you'd better believe it. Hop it, Mick. Even better is the percussive and positively funky take on Captain Beefheart's Her Eyes are a Blue Million Miles, complete with Sailyk Ommun's wonderfully contrasting female backing vocals. In an imaginary world without Crazy Frogs, this could be number one.

This is an extraordinary record, in a time of so many mundane and unimaginative re-hashings. If you're looking for something 'different' (the word seems somehow inadequate), then buy this now. And then get Huun-Huur-Tu's 1996 collaboration with the Bulgarian Voices, Fly, Fly My Sadness, and try standing upright. You'll believe there's magic in those mountains.


Comments



out this week
Gotye - Making Mirrors Field Music - Plumb Tennis - Young & Old Emeli Sandé - Our Version Of Events
Ital - Hive Mind Speech Debelle - Freedom Of Speech Azari & III - Azari & III Maribel - Reveries
coming soon
Shearwater - Animal Joy Young Magic - Melt Demi Lovato - Unbroken Xiu Xiu - Always
recent releases
Mark Lanegan Band - Blues Funeral Lindstrøm - Six Cups Of Rebel Blondes - Blondes John Talabot - fIN
The Twilight Sad - No One Can Ever Know Maverick Sabre - Lonely Are The Brave Cloud Nothings - Attack On Memory Beth Jeans Houghton - Yours Truly, Cellophane Nose
Leonard Cohen - Old Ideas Lana Del Rey - Born To Die Portico Quartet - Portico Quartet Errors - Have Some Faith In Magic
Django Django - Django Django The 2 Bears - Be Strong Darren Hayman - January Songs Barry Adamson - I Will Set You Free
First Aid Kit - The Lion's Roar Pulled Apart By Horses - Tough Love DJ Food - The Search Engine Chairlift - Something
Kathleen Edwards - Voyageur Leila - U&I Gonjasufi - MU.ZZ.LE Alog - Unemployment
  1. more album reviews

TOP ARTICLES NOW
Field Music
INTERVIEW
Field Music

David Brewis on the band's latest album Plumb and side projects.
Errors
Q&A
Errors

Steev Livingstone on unexpected tweets and Mogwai connections.
other articles on
Albert Kuvezin & Yat-Kha
NONE AVAILABLE

EXTERNAL LINKS
Yat-Kha



  more album reviews...



musicOMH
about us
contact
copyright
home
elsewhere
Twitter
Facebook
Mixcloud
Soundcloud
Last.fm

© 1999-2012 OMH