shammi pithia // paredolia e.p. [review]
When I heard Shammi was producing a new E.P. naturally I was stoked. The musician who crafted “Cinema for the Ears E.P.” and debut album “Audio Descriptive” was on his next venture.
His latest E.P titled “Paredolia” is composed of six tracks, each individually bringing a different story to the ears leaving the listener to find their own meaning of the music.
“Switch” introduces the E.P with a somewhat dark sound but 22 seconds in, the equation is balanced with the elegant Bansuri. Naturally these sounds wouldn’t work together but on this track they manifest a harmonious contradiction. As the director Shekhar Kapoor said “if you take contradictions away there would be no creativity.” As the Bansuri dances majestically with its dark bassline partner, the vocals of Rita Morar give it that defining human emotion.
This is soon followed by the title track of the E.P “Paredolia.” A beautiful track introduced by the humble piano married with deep bass and the constant thread that weaves the story of this record together – the Bansuri. It’s an excursion of the two instruments that does not need words to tell the story – the feeling it draws out says it all.
To counter the soothing vibes of the previous track, Shammi launches into “Thanks to a Busker” an Indo-Latino number with the help of the fabulous vocalists Ambika Jois and Ash King – a very romantic flamenco style track with funky bass lines, sexy guitar riffs.
On to the fourth track “Taareyan di Chaan” – meaning Shade of the stars is an abstract poetic song about longing to meet a lover sang in entirely in Punjabi. Japjit Kaur graces us with her gorgeous and elegant voice giving the track a contemporary yet folksy feel.
The penultimate track, “True” is one composed entirely of strings. The polite yet playful sounds of the Cello, Violin and Guitar really give that old fashion warm feeling to the track. It reminded me of some of the work done by Michael Giacchino on the TV programme LOST, really capturing the moments of happiness and truth – something Shammi does very well here – an unadulterated melt of sublime soundscapes.
Finally we come to a “Sweet Nothings (Phaeleh Remix)” – and what a way to end the E.P! Phaeleh, the Bristol based prolific producer has his way with “Sweet Nothings” as featured on the “Audio Descriptive” album. This is a track where the affable vocals of Japjit Kaur, Bansuri and the dark melodies of downtempo electronica melt together into a beautiful frenzy.
Shammi Pithia, has the ability to absorb the sights, sounds and influences around him and translate them to what we hear, giving each string, raga, chord, beat and baseline a purpose in the grand scheme of things. If you liked any of his previous work you will adore “Paredolia”.
Available to purchase from Amazon.co.uk | Juno Download
nada:brahma rating 4.5/5
Previews below:
Shammi Pithia Live @ OXJAM
So I missed the OXJAM Bricklane Takeover gig in London. I hear it was brilliant!! Shammi Pithia was also performing that day and he has kindly put his performances on YouTube for us to absorb the goodness!
Nuff respect to Shammi and his band for the music you are about to hear!!
The Seeker
Solid State
Piece By Piece
Mirror
Solitude
audio descriptive … shammi pithia
This isn’t a review but just a few words on how I’m feeling about what I’m hearing. Over the past few month my ears have been subjected to a lot of dubstep, drum n bass, electronica etc. This I have to say was just the break my ears were searching for…
I received my copy of Shammi Pithia’s Audio Descriptive today. I stuck it straight on my Ipod, listened to it on the way to the gym, at the gym and on the way back. I’m kinda lost for words, not really sure how to describe this audio experience …
Shammi’s first EP Cinema for the Ears was great, he set himself a foundation, a beginning. Audio Descriptive resonates sounds from the EP, certainly not a flaw, a clear indication of an organic evolution Shammi’s music is going through – what he started with, to where he is going. There has been no need for reinvention here, because its simply not needed, what he has created works well.
There is a very good mix of sounds on the album, from an almost latino track to a hip hop, classical, hindi, cinematic and tonnes more.
This album is great, lots of dynamism and intelligence, truly refreshing piece of work.
Simply Beautiful …
get you copy here: