Malek Jamshid

Malek Jamshid (King Jamshid) is twelfth studio album by Iranian singer-songwriter and guitarist Kourosh Yaghmaei. The album was released on June 10, 2016 by Now-Again in United States after banned in Iran.[2][3] The album is named after the king Jamshid[3] from Persian mythology, who was said to have ruled over the world over hundreds years and according to Shahnameh (1010) he was the fourth Shah of the Pishdadian dynasty of Persia.

Malek Jamshid
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 2016, 10 (10-06-2016)
GenrePsychedelic rock
Length44:37[1]
Label
  • Now-Again
ProducerKourosh Yaghmaei
Kourosh Yaghmaei chronology
Tofang-e daste Noghre
(2001)
Malek Jamshid
(2016)

Recording and released

The album was recorded between 2003 to 2006.[3][4] During this period for the restrictions Yaghmaei recorded this album in an ordinary room on his apartment without using acoustic system, sound engineering, professional microphones, amplifiers, and other necessary equipment.[3] It took two years to finish the album, but it took another 12 years to release. Yaghmaei struggled with the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance to obtain the required permit for releasing this album, bur he failed. In summer of 2016, the album was released in CD outside Iran from Now-Again, a Los Angeles based record label.[3]

Music and lyrics

Malek Jamshid starts with the opining track titled "Key To Miaei" ("When Do You Come?"), that sounds like the title theme to some imaginary late 1990s American sitcom, Seinfeld-ian digital slap bass and heavy-handed rock guitars.[3] The song "Ghatar" ("Train"), is a combination of Latin rhythm what makes the way for dramatic keyboards and Persian lyrics—like a Persian take on Carlos Santana and Rob Thomas's 1999 hit "Smooth."

Track listing

All music is composed by Kourosh Yaghmaei.

Side one
No.TitleEnglish titleLength
1."Key To Miaei?"When Do You Come?03:20
2."Harfaye Abi"The Blue Words05:41
3."Ghatar"Train05:44
4."Chamedoon"Suitcase03:09
5."Poshte Oun Dar"Behind That Door03:48
6."Panahandeh"Refugee04:58
7."Nowruz"Iranian New Year04:43
8."Safar"Journey05:41
9."Malek Jamshid"King Jamshid07:33
gollark: Actual implanted cybernetics are somewhat worrying because I don't really trust computers at this point, especially higher-performance ones.
gollark: All the cool people™ would run BrainLinux or something, and occasionally be blinded by incomprehensible driver problems.
gollark: You don't need *that*, just some method of projecting onto glasses in decent resolution without horrible focus problems, probably some way to blot out background too, and some kind of gesture control system (specialized gloves or radar maybe).
gollark: I imagine that phones will be replaced by AR glasses or something before an iPhone 47 ever happens, but who knows. Consumer AR stuff never seems to go anywhere.
gollark: It's entirely wireless.

References

  1. "Album: Malek Jamshid". ReggaeRecord. Retrieved January 21, 2020.
  2. "Kourosh Yaghmaei : The Resisting Psychedelic Rock Icon of Iran". Trip Magazine (1). April 2018.
  3. "KOUROSH YAGHAEI's album Malek Jamshid released in the west after censorship in Iran". Now-Again Records. June 10, 2016. Archived from the original on May 20, 2019. Retrieved January 21, 2020.
  4. Irfani, Faisal (February 23, 2019). "40 Tahun Revolusi Iran 1979: Geliat Musik Bawah Tanah Iran 40 Tahun Pasca-Revolusi" [40 Years of the 1979 Iranian Revolution: Twisted Iranian Underground Music 40 Years Post-Revolution] (in Indonesian). Retrieved January 21, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.