Songs for a great Istanbullu mix?
April 22, 2010 1:06 PM
Help me make an awesome Istanbul travel mixtape!
I don't know if you guys ever do this, but I really like listening to a badass mix everytime I travel somewhere - preferably that last hour as you begin your descent into a place you've neer been. Well, I'm going to Istanbul for a few days tomorrow, and am looking for suggestions about what should go on there. It doesn't have to be Turkish (although it's totally cool if it is), but stuff that evokes the mood or sense of Istanbul would be rad. I am completely open to everything (world, hip hop, pop, dance, whatever) except that fucking TMBG song.
I don't know if you guys ever do this, but I really like listening to a badass mix everytime I travel somewhere - preferably that last hour as you begin your descent into a place you've neer been. Well, I'm going to Istanbul for a few days tomorrow, and am looking for suggestions about what should go on there. It doesn't have to be Turkish (although it's totally cool if it is), but stuff that evokes the mood or sense of Istanbul would be rad. I am completely open to everything (world, hip hop, pop, dance, whatever) except that fucking TMBG song.
Crossing the Bridge, the soundtrack to the Fatih Akin/Alexander Hacke documentary, is a decent introduction to the various styles you might hear. The tracks by the amazing Kurdish singer Aynur Dogan and by Ceza are the standouts.
posted by runincircles at 1:27 PM on April 22, 2010
posted by runincircles at 1:27 PM on April 22, 2010
Is Telephone Call from Istanbul, Tom Waits, too obvious?
posted by rabidsegue at 1:44 PM on April 22, 2010
posted by rabidsegue at 1:44 PM on April 22, 2010
Folks I like: Hisarli Ahmet, Arif Sag and Belkis Akkale [also], Feyzullah Çınar, Bülent Ersoy.
Also, my blog ShortWaveMusic has a few songs from Turkey if you want the strong local flavor. This stuff is broadcast straight from the homeland.
The best online store for Turkish music is Tulumba, but all the albums I linked to above are also on eMusic if you have an account there. They have a pretty awesome selection of Turkish folk and pop.
posted by mykescipark at 2:03 PM on April 22, 2010
Also, my blog ShortWaveMusic has a few songs from Turkey if you want the strong local flavor. This stuff is broadcast straight from the homeland.
The best online store for Turkish music is Tulumba, but all the albums I linked to above are also on eMusic if you have an account there. They have a pretty awesome selection of Turkish folk and pop.
posted by mykescipark at 2:03 PM on April 22, 2010
Selda Bagcan! There's a great retrospective of her work on Finders Keepers (UK)/B-Music (US).
(Yes, this is the second time I've shilled for Finders Keepers on a music thread; I have no connection with them, I'm just a huge nerd for the music they reissue)
posted by Merzbau at 2:13 PM on April 22, 2010
(Yes, this is the second time I've shilled for Finders Keepers on a music thread; I have no connection with them, I'm just a huge nerd for the music they reissue)
posted by Merzbau at 2:13 PM on April 22, 2010
A Turkish music thread! Awesome!
Ditto Merzbau's Finders Keepers nerdery. Love the Selda-- and I'd add recomendations for Finders Keepers' Mustafa Özkent album and their Ersen collection. I also second the up-thread recommendation of Mercan Dede (his recent album Su is about the Bosphorus-- it doesn't get more Istanbuli than that.
Taksim Trio is also great. (Their name's a reference to Taksim square.) There's also quite a bit of excellent Turkish psychedellic rock out there. Moğollar's my favorite band of that type.
As far as the actual "sound of Istanbul" goes, I think you've probably got to include some nice, cheesy local pop. Tarkan's probably the king of that. Fatih Kisaparmak is sort of a Tarkan for the older generation, I gather, and would also be a great addition to a mixtape.
If you don't want to hunt down too many individual artists, there's a fine compilation series out that can get you started: Zula Müzik's "Homegrown Istanbul," volumes I and II are both wonderful. I'm a bit partial to volume II, which, conveniently, is also the one that's easiest to get in the U.S.
Have a great time in Istanbul! I'm seriously, seriously jealous!
posted by palmcorder_yajna at 2:44 PM on April 22, 2010
Ditto Merzbau's Finders Keepers nerdery. Love the Selda-- and I'd add recomendations for Finders Keepers' Mustafa Özkent album and their Ersen collection. I also second the up-thread recommendation of Mercan Dede (his recent album Su is about the Bosphorus-- it doesn't get more Istanbuli than that.
Taksim Trio is also great. (Their name's a reference to Taksim square.) There's also quite a bit of excellent Turkish psychedellic rock out there. Moğollar's my favorite band of that type.
As far as the actual "sound of Istanbul" goes, I think you've probably got to include some nice, cheesy local pop. Tarkan's probably the king of that. Fatih Kisaparmak is sort of a Tarkan for the older generation, I gather, and would also be a great addition to a mixtape.
If you don't want to hunt down too many individual artists, there's a fine compilation series out that can get you started: Zula Müzik's "Homegrown Istanbul," volumes I and II are both wonderful. I'm a bit partial to volume II, which, conveniently, is also the one that's easiest to get in the U.S.
Have a great time in Istanbul! I'm seriously, seriously jealous!
posted by palmcorder_yajna at 2:44 PM on April 22, 2010
Oh, and if you want local hip-hop, check out Cartel. Sultana is also good.
posted by palmcorder_yajna at 2:53 PM on April 22, 2010
posted by palmcorder_yajna at 2:53 PM on April 22, 2010
Nadide Sultan - Konyalim (yes, it's about Konya, but it's still a very good, catchy Turkish tune)
posted by jpcooper at 3:31 PM on April 22, 2010
posted by jpcooper at 3:31 PM on April 22, 2010
Thirding Selda (especially Yaz Gazeteci Yaz)
The Cedars - For Your Information (They're Lebanese not Turkish but close enough)
posted by mia_farrow at 5:57 PM on April 22, 2010
The Cedars - For Your Information (They're Lebanese not Turkish but close enough)
posted by mia_farrow at 5:57 PM on April 22, 2010
hayko cepkin - seninki dertmi is a mellow favorite.
for the in-betweens, you might capture a bit of audio from istanbul air traffic control
posted by kimyo at 6:05 PM on April 22, 2010
for the in-betweens, you might capture a bit of audio from istanbul air traffic control
posted by kimyo at 6:05 PM on April 22, 2010
A bit late, as usual, but I'll second the recommendation for the "Crossing the Bridge" compilation that runincircles mentioned. Lots of good stuff, including Baba Zula (great Turkish psychedelic rock).
I'd include some Turkish gypsy music. Selim Sesler (included on "Crossing the Bridge") is good, as are Deli Selim and Kadir Ürün.
A few other people to look out for (some mentioned previously, in various musical styles), off the top of my head: Arif Sağ, Ceylan, Erkin Koray, Kazım Koyuncu, Moğollar, Muazzez Ersoy...
Surprisingly, the iTunes store has a pretty extensive selection of Turkish music – I think most of the artists mentioned in this thread have something available there.
posted by klausness at 10:06 AM on April 25, 2010
I'd include some Turkish gypsy music. Selim Sesler (included on "Crossing the Bridge") is good, as are Deli Selim and Kadir Ürün.
A few other people to look out for (some mentioned previously, in various musical styles), off the top of my head: Arif Sağ, Ceylan, Erkin Koray, Kazım Koyuncu, Moğollar, Muazzez Ersoy...
Surprisingly, the iTunes store has a pretty extensive selection of Turkish music – I think most of the artists mentioned in this thread have something available there.
posted by klausness at 10:06 AM on April 25, 2010
Mefites must have shown remarkable constraint in not posting this. I'm sorry! But really, it was inevitable.
posted by indienial at 10:04 PM on April 25, 2010
posted by indienial at 10:04 PM on April 25, 2010
indienial, that's because the OP said "everything except that fucking TMBG song" in her original post.
posted by mykescipark at 7:23 AM on April 26, 2010
posted by mykescipark at 7:23 AM on April 26, 2010
clearly, i'm not good at interpreting abbreviations, mykescipark. sorry OP!
posted by indienial at 4:13 AM on May 17, 2010
posted by indienial at 4:13 AM on May 17, 2010
This thread is closed to new comments.
posted by Phineas Rhyne at 1:14 PM on April 22, 2010