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Pure Water - Poetry of Rumi
 
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Pure Water - Poetry of Rumi [Single]

Coleman Barks & Eugene Friesen Audio CD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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MP3 Download, 1 Song, 2010 $8.99  
Audio CD, Single, 2007 --  

Product Details

  • Audio CD (October 4, 2007)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Single
  • Label: Maypop/FiddleTalk
  • ASIN: B000WC08GM
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #393,628 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. Introduction
2. Love Dogs
3. The Dervish Learning Community
4. What Was Said To The Rose
5. The Friend and Pronouns in Persian
6. The Harshness in Rumi Poems, Not Here
7. Who Makes These Changes? and On Resurrection Day
8. When School and Mosque and Minaret
9. Who Says Words With My Mouth
10. Soul and the Old Woman
11. The Death of Saladin
12. Bill Matthews: Good Company
13. Bill matthews Coming Along
14. No Finale
15. Glad and In Opening Game Day Traffic
16. Rumi Quatrains
17. The Guest House
18. Darshan Singh & Christian Harmony
19. Nasruddin Jodes
20. Various Mistakes
See all 23 tracks on this disc

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pure Pleasure, October 5, 2007
By 
Cassandra Cleghorn (Williamstown, Massachusetts) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Pure Water - Poetry of Rumi (Audio CD)
There is a shameful secret held close by many poets and musicians: as much as each of us loves the other's art, we also, deep down, suspect the other's instrument. Poets love music and the musicality of words, but ultimately we choose words; musicians love poetry and the poetical meanings of music, but ultimately we choose music. I exaggerate the opposition, of course. But as a poet and musician steeped in Western paradigms, I speak from either side of my mouth.

Pure Water, the glorious new CD of poems by Rumi as performed by translator/poet Coleman Barks and cellist Eugene Friesen, in its very purity and unity frees us from such false dichotomies. This album is the perfect realization of the innate kinship between poetry and music, a kinship recognized by the 13th-century Sufi poet and expressed in his culture's intertwining of art forms. "For over 1,000 years," Barks says at the beginning of the CD (exquisitely recorded from a live performance), "the Sufis have been experimenting with a form of deep listening that brings together poetry, spoken word, music and movement." This CD puts me, again and again, into the place of deep listening, and a very fine place it is. If, as Rumi and Barks say, "Poems/are rough notations for the music we are," this CD gives us the profound gift of ourselves, realized through our listening to others.

Barks' translations have long been recognized as among the most vital representations in English of Rumi's extraordinary mix of grief, faith, passion, sensuality and rigorous thought. His reading of these translations in a voice that is resonant and measured yet always easy, does justice to the work, conveying at once the seriousness of purpose around the whole enterprise of ecstatic poetry--that of "opening the heart"--and the free-wheeling irreverence of both poet and translator. I swear I can hear Rumi's laughter and tears seeping around the Southern edges of Barks's decidedly American accent. Barks includes a few of his own poems (in homage to his granddaughter and in memory of the poet William Mathews) in the middle of the concert, timed as a sort of interval between Persian ruminations. The overall rhythm of the program as it moves from poem to poem is exactly right.

Now for Friesen's music: To anyone who is familiar with Friesen's discography (especially his solo CDs In the Shade of Angels and Sono Miho, and his decades-long association with the Paul Winter Consort), Friesen's natural affinity for poetry makes perfect sense. Friesen's improvisations draw from the classical cello repertoire, jazz and vernacular music including Celtic, Brazilian, Indian and the blues; through this synthesis he has helped to remap the horizon of possibilities for cellists around the world. But even those in the know may be stunned by the sensitivity of Friesen's response to Barks. "Response" is a misleading term (though not as wrong as "accompaniment," to which this collaboration bears no resemblance). The relation between poet and cellist is closer than that of body and shadow. Like Barks who as translator inhabits Rumi's words, Friesen transforms these poems from within as they are uttered. Translation is itself always an act of reading, of interpretation, of growing the conversation. The conjoined effect of Barks's voice and Friesen's cello extends this act, giving the listener an embodied and unfolding rediscovery of each poem, as if it were happening for the first time, every time. The result is rare and radiant.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An important recording, February 7, 2008
By 
This review is from: Pure Water - Poetry of Rumi (Audio CD)
Rumi's poetry is deceptively simple, and lovely. Coleman Barks's Tennessee accent (not to mention his personality) gives a delightful playfulness, and Eugene Friesen's cello accompaniment is spare, musical, and perfect.

Another reviewer spoke of "deep listening." Yes.

Rumi's poetry is how I choose to understand Muslim culture. I don't want to get political over a recording that's beautiful and completely enjoyable, but we seem to be going too far these days in thinking Muslims are all suicide bombers. I prefer to emphasize poetry, and Rumi's works glow.

This is an important recording for many reasons. You should own it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Perfect Gift for Rumi Fans, October 2, 2007
This review is from: Pure Water - Poetry of Rumi (Audio CD)
The only thing better than a dose of Coleman Barks reading Rumi in an intimate setting is to add the ethereal and spiritual beauty of Eugene Friesen's cello mastery.

This is like sitting with friends by a nice campfire on a cool autumn evening, the "friends" being the readings and the "warmth of the fire" is the cello playing of Eugene's.

A very enjoyable journey indeed.
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