The Syrian style definitely seems to be in between Turkish and Egyptian, this makes sense considering the Geography.
Aleppo in particular has maintained the wasla (fasil in Turkish) style.
This is very good also!
Where is this from? charlie oud - 11-10-2011 at 12:51 PM
Iyad Haimour is a wonderful player, was about to post a clip of his but found this in our archives, click on the site name to hear more. For me he is
one of those players whose style is expressed through the colours of his intonation, it almost does'nt matter 'what' he plays, its all in his delivery
and movement from note to note. Delicious!!!!littleseb - 11-10-2011 at 02:59 PM
I like it. He has somehow a turkish style...
Listen to this takaseem:
[url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKtgbGopBPk&feature=related
[/url]
both very, very nice! Ararat66 - 11-11-2011 at 02:02 PM
Both of those are wonderful - the second one is just sublime - is this the same guy? (I don't read Arabic). The first has a much drier sound and more
of what I would clumsily call a North African groove ... but with Turkish carpma throughout.
The second one is very sweet sounding and utterly magical ... nuf sed ... is this on a cd?
Thanks for posting
LeonMasel - 2-25-2012 at 12:50 AM
The second video is by Nazih abu al-RIsh. I don't know who the woman in the photo is...
Here is a taqasim of his in ajam http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lE-0VBf0A2s&feature=related
if you see the username "bourish66", I assume it is him. You can see many other videos by him.
I haven't heard him before, but I like his playing alot.