Great 60s Turkish Instro (mostly) band. Silüetler is Turkish for Silhouettes (maybe a nod to the Shadows?) Great stuff!!
—Ryan
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Last edited: Jan 12, 2012 15:54:58
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![]() Joined: Jun 21, 2007 Posts: 3909 San Diego, CA ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Great 60s Turkish Instro (mostly) band. Silüetler is Turkish for Silhouettes (maybe a nod to the Shadows?) Great stuff!! —Ryan Last edited: Jan 12, 2012 15:54:58 |
![]() Joined: Nov 02, 2010 Posts: 97 Austin, TX ![]() |
Cool stuff - thanks for sharing (would love to find this album somewhere)! I found this page which has some info on the group: |
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Definitely a very interesting band. http://surfguitar101.com/forums/topic/13139/ Last edited: Jan 12, 2012 18:39:51 |
![]() Joined: Feb 15, 2007 Posts: 2846 Fredericksburg, Virginia ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
The song is quite different. very interesting indeed. —Matt "tha Kat" Lentz |
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Kind of a quirky meter, but I love that guitar sound. — |
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norcalhodad wrote:
Indeed. That guitar sound is just ridiculous. I've seen several pictures of their guitar player with a Jaguar, but have no idea what was used here. Whatever it is, it rules. —Ryan Last edited: Jan 13, 2012 11:30:39 |
![]() Joined: Feb 27, 2006 Posts: 10331 southern Michigan ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
If you love that guitar sound, you should definitely check out some more obscure early '60s British instro stuff. It's very similar. Check out bands like Nero & the Gladiators, the Cougars, the Eagles, etc. Great comps to start off with would be Instro Beat and Phantom Guitars. Anyway, I have this track, got it from somebody on CD before, and yeah the timing on it is really weird, must be some kind of a Turkish thing. Love when bands introduce their own local flavor into this music! It's a great track. It's just amazing how there seems to be a neverending well of great '60s instro tracks! This music was truly international from the very beginning. Thanks, Ryan! —Ivan |
![]() Joined: Jun 21, 2007 Posts: 3909 San Diego, CA ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Ivan, Ryan |
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Balkan/Anatolian (Byzantine/Ottoman Empire) time signatures are proverbially weird. |
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In fact if you ask a whole lot of turks what surf music is, they can't reply to you. Because they don't know surf music.As a turk I would like you to know that turks and other middle east folks don't have guitar music culture (surf, blues and so on. Also it's seriously sad for me but what can I say?). But even so, some good musicians came out in Turkey. Notable Turkish Rock instrumental music players & surfers Mustafa ozkent (funk-rock instrumental) Siluetler (by the way you're right, "siluetler" means like "shade(s), shadows") Hayvanlar alemi (Turkish for "animal world") Rumblefish Notable Turkish Rock musicians http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anatolian_rock Erkin Koray Regards. muZZy —Last edited: Jul 25, 2012 06:54:14 |
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Welcome to sg101 MuZZy. I'm a huge fan of Erkin Koray! For anyone interested in some great Turkish Psychedlic music, I can't reccommend this comp. enough: Selda (2) – Bundan Sonra Ryan Last edited: Jul 24, 2012 09:51:44 |
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Great stuff! —This is Noel. Reverb's at maximum an' I'm givin' 'er all she's got. |
![]() Joined: Jul 20, 2012 Posts: 32 Middle East ![]() |
and lastly I just wanna say a few things about Turkish music. Actually Turkey is a nice country that has natural beauties, delicious foods but about art it's really hard to tell that turkey is a nice country. if you want to find out turkish music, you should check out arab music that is a key element of influencing Turkish music (especially egyptian arab musicians like umm kulthum, farid el atrash). For example; a Umm Kulthum song named Enta Omri was used by Erkin Koray (back in the day he had plagiarised this song )then this song and Orhan Gencebay who is turkish arabesque music legend, became pioneers of Turkey's most common cheesy music genre named Arabesque music. In turkish music it's possible to see many plagiarism examples, in this respect (excluding original turkish folk music neset ertas, selda bagcan, erkan ogur and so on) it can be said that turkish music does not have any originality, actually as is turkish cinema (Turkish movies are poor as aspect of creativity (except limited personal successes like yilmaz güney,nuri bilge ceylan and a few more). Almost all Turkish films that were made up to today, have an unauthentic tongue between italian and egyptian cinema as well as in Turkish Cinema there is no any successful example for horror, thriller,science fiction, war, adventure and action genres (tho apart from a few movies, but I believe we made cool and successful drama and comedy films). Turkish music has original and soulful vocals( for example; sezen aksu, ayla dikmen, aziz azmet and so on), also if you are a turk you like their meaningful lyrics but if so not it can be hard that you bear with any song because In turkish music usually the guitar quality is weak. For instance, (excluding some instrumental works) you cannot hear a nice toned guitar solo that is more than one minute long.I think its reason that most of Turkish listeners don't much like guitar, on the other side you hard find songs with original, strong main riffs (by the way Turkey's first guitar magazine appeared two years ago http://www.gitardergisi.com/Haber.aspx?ID=4 for reading link please use google translating here, sorry). guys, I heard four greatest guitarists that belong to this music culture. And their fates became some tragic: aydin cakus -lead guitarist of bunalimlar In turkey making real music is hard as it seen. Apart from them in Turkey there are some cool guitarists more, h.c. örter, awesome john/asım can gunduz and so on but strictly speaking, I don't like their styles and I don't think they are original, creative and notable musicians. But by listening to them on youtube you decide your opinion about those artists. Beginning from 2000s in turkish music some cool examples came out like replikas(a sample), 657 (a sample), Baba Zula(a sample), kirika (a sample), hayvanlar alemi (a sample). For Turkey, I would like you to know that I just talk to y'all about blues, rock'n'roll, surf and rock. Due to I am not into metal music, jazz music and electronic music, I can not tell y'all anything about its. Also about turkish music, I want to express that we have quality oud musicians, a few of them: In fact; excluding some names (erkin koray,orhan gencebay, sezen aksu) most of turks did not listen to/don't listen to musicians that I mentioned here. via the internet for many years I have been researched other middleast countries too and clearly I can tell y'all that only Texas music area is more deep and strong than all middle east geography "as guitar music culture" (Before I had posted a blogpost about Texas Psychedelic and I had written some Texan Musicians there. Even tho I don't say a whole lot of famous texan musicans like t-bone walker, buddy holly). In short; in this geography I never been heard a emotional guitar like this finally; some turkish melodies can be inspired for Surfers Regards. Last edited: Jul 30, 2012 11:15:38 |
![]() Joined: Jun 12, 2008 Posts: 3331 Huntington Beach, CA ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Played them on RFB 261... http://www.radiofreebakersfield.com/shows/rfb261.mp3 —Radio Free Bakersfield--60 Minutes of TWANG, CRUNCH, OOMPH. |
![]() Joined: Jul 20, 2012 Posts: 32 Middle East ![]() |
WhorehayRFB wrote:
yeah 36:30, |
![]() Joined: Jul 20, 2012 Posts: 32 Middle East ![]() |
MuZZyGoesSurfing wrote:
also that's one of my favs! "Texas Guitar Slingers" an album that include some texan musicians' (eric johnson, van wilks and so on) God bless Texas! |
![]() Joined: Nov 16, 2009 Posts: 1075 San Francisco Bay Area ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Siluetler has a couple of tracks on the collection called "Guitar Mood 2" out on Repent. It's a really interesting comp. Here's my review. |