I really like this. Before hearing Lebanese singer
Mayssa Karaa's version of
Jefferson Airplane's
White Rabbit if you had asked me whether it was possible to cover the song and actually
add anything new or positive to it I probably would have just shrugged and said no way. The song is now too iconic and has become embedded in our minds as a kind of musical snapshot of late 60s hippiedom.
|
Mayssa Karaa |
However
Mayssa's new interpretation (recorded for the soundtrack of the film
American Hustle), and sung in Arabic, brings out something that was perhaps only latent in
the original. There were a lot of Arabic, Asian and Flamenco influences on
psychedelic rock in the mid 60s.
Ravi Shankar is perhaps the obvious example. The
Byrds listened to
John Coltrane's
Shankar inspired
India and made
Eight Miles High. As a result a thousand shimmering sitar drenched guitar solos were born. The stunning 12 minute
East/West instrumental on the
Paul Butterfield Band's 2nd album also explored similar territory. Then there was
Brian Jones Presents the Pipes of Pan at Joujouka which was a recording the
Rolling Stone made of Moroccan group the
Master Musicians of Joujouka playing live in 1968. In the 70s
Led Zeppelin probably did the best justice to this kind of "fusion" on
Kashmir from their 1975
Physical Graffiti album
.
|
The hookah-smoking caterpillar |
Musically White Rabbit is inspired by
Ravel's Bolero and more especially
Miles Davis'
Sketches of Spain
rather than anything overtly Arabic. However given that there is a Moorish
influence in Spanish culture and music, and that these influences can be heard quite clearly on
Davis' album, one could say that from a musical point of view
(let's leave the lyrics out of this)
Mayssa Karaa's interpretation of the song returns it in some way to its eastern inspired musical roots.
So when I first heard this version it seemed so perfect. Not only is it a brilliant vocal performance that transfixes you right from the opening lines but it is imbued with all that middle eastern mystique that was there to begin with but was only hinted at in the
Airplane's version. I'd love to know what
Airplane singer (and song composer)
Grace Slick thinks of it.
Take a listen.
More stranger than known
Asturias > Eight Miles High - Roger McGuinn
Eight Miles High on bagpipes - Rufus Harley
Horizonte
Eléctrico 2 - 10 Flamenco Rock Classics
Jonathan
Miller's Psychedelic Alice in Wonderland
Ten 21st Century Summer Psychedelic Nuggets
I'll be in my bunk.
ReplyDelete