Magic Carpet

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
The Phoenix 00:00 Tools
The Magic Carpet 00:00 Tools
Father Time 00:00 Tools
Alan's Christmas Card 00:00 Tools
black cat 00:00 Tools
Do You Hear the Words 00:00 Tools
Harvest Song 00:00 Tools
The Dream 00:00 Tools
La La 00:00 Tools
Peace Song 00:00 Tools
Take Away Kesh 00:00 Tools
High Street 00:00 Tools
Awakening 00:00 Tools
Raga 00:00 Tools
Return 00:00 Tools
Upside Down 00:00 Tools
Tango Capoeira 00:00 Tools
Drmes 00:00 Tools
Longa 00:00 Tools
Yorgos 00:00 Tools
End of the Road 00:00 Tools
Xixi 00:00 Tools
Raga (bonus) 00:00 Tools
Feather Time 00:00 Tools
Un Sueño del Mar 00:00 Tools
Un Sueno del Mar 00:00 Tools
10 / FEEL BIG AS A MOUNTAIN 00:00 Tools
Magic Carpet 00:00 Tools
Perfect Game 00:00 Tools
Daisy Field 00:00 Tools
Early Morning 00:00 Tools
In A Maze Of My Illusions 00:00 Tools
I'm OK 00:00 Tools
Your fears 00:00 Tools
Fine Little Mama 00:00 Tools
I Can Make It 00:00 Tools
Messes Me Up Bad 00:00 Tools
Fore [Taste] 00:00 Tools
Apache Indian (wacky_p) 00:00 Tools
Things Go Better With You 00:00 Tools
Oriental Tango 00:00 Tools
Mwashah 00:00 Tools
monkey blues 00:00 Tools
Fore (Taste) 00:00 Tools
Magic Carpet - Father Time 00:00 Tools
oriental massage 00:00 Tools
Full Of Love 00:00 Tools
06 / perfect game 00:00 Tools
Poppy Family 00:00 Tools
The Strange Song 00:00 Tools
07 / your fears 00:00 Tools
04 - Poppy Family 00:00 Tools
05 / daisy field 00:00 Tools
04 / endless wall 00:00 Tools
Daniel Wurtzel 00:00 Tools
The Dream 1972 00:00 Tools
03 / in a maze of my illusions 00:00 Tools
Yekermosew (Sheba) 00:00 Tools
02 / magic carpet 00:00 Tools
Red Kimono 00:00 Tools
Magic Carpet - The Phoenix 00:00 Tools
13 Raga (bonus) 00:00 Tools
Oriente 00:00 Tools
Kamasutra 00:00 Tools
Menage A Trois 00:00 Tools
Raga (bonus track) 00:00 Tools
Magic Carpet / Father Time 00:00 Tools
Sohini 00:00 Tools
08 / early morning 00:00 Tools
09 / i'm OK 00:00 Tools
A Night In Tunisia 00:00 Tools
Raga [Bonus Track] 00:00 Tools
Meroe 00:00 Tools
Raga [*] 00:00 Tools
2. The phoenix 00:00 Tools
Tonight 00:00 Tools
12 / crazy 00:00 Tools
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There are two bands with the name MAGIC CARPET. The first band was formed in 1971 and released the album Magic Carpet, with Clem Alford on sitar and Alisha Sufit, vocals and guitar. The band also released an album called ONCE MOOR The other Magic Carpet band is from a much later time and there is no source information available about it. MAGIC CARPET (1972) was an innovative Anglo-Indian so-called psychedelic prog folk fusion band, that started in the early 1970s. Three musical friends, Clem Alford (sitar), Jim Moyes (guitar), and Keshav Sathe (tabla), made one album under name Sargam which was misspelt as Sagram, inappropriately entitled ‘Pop Explosion Sitar Style’ and released by the Windmill recording company without the band’s permission in 1972. In 1971, the Sargam trio were offered an LP recording contract by Mushroom Records (UK), with the proviso that they find a singer. So Jim Moyes contacted fellow ex-Chelsea School Of Art student Alisha Sufit (voice and guitar), and the eponymous album, Magic Carpet was released early in 1972. In the 1960s and 70s, both in the UK and in America, there was a burgeoning interest in Indian culture and music, most famously spear-headed by virtuoso sitar player Ravi Shankar and sarod player Ali Akbar Khan, amongst others. Numerous UK bands of the era began to use sitar and Indian musical sounds generally to add a flavor of the east to their recordings. By contrast, Magic Carpet was a more cohesive Anglo-Indian fusion, the Indian instrumentation generating and being integral to the music, not simply an addition. Based around the classically trained sitar virtuoso, Alford, and the ethereal voice of Sufit, Magic Carpet created a distinctive sound described (perhaps misleadingly) as "progressive psych folk" music. The Magic Carpet album has been described as "a psych folk gem - a unique and extraordinary fusion of east and west, Magic Carpet being one of the very first bands to truly combine Indian and western instrumentation". After a launch at the 100 Club, London, UK, the 'Magic Carpet' band performed at Cleo Laine and Johnny Dankworth's Wavendon, enjoyed airplay on Pete Drummond's Sounds of the Seventies on BBC Radio, plus made several club and festival appearances. However, this novel collective split up shortly after the first album was released. It was only after a lapse of some fifteen years that recognition followed. Widely and more positively reviewed, the original 'Magic Carpet' album has now been reissued on CD and vinyl by the UK Magic Carpet Records label. Seven of the vocal tracks written by Sufit employ modal tunings in the guitar accompaniment. These 'open' guitar tunings, first introduced and popularized by musicians such as Davey Graham and Joni Mitchell, are supremely compatible with the modal tuning of the sitar, allowing a true integration of sounds. Sufit's vocals feature on nine of the twelve tracks, the remaining three being purely instrumental. In 1996, Alford and Sufit got together again and collaborated to record the album Once Moor (subtitled Magic Carpet II). It is a true follow-on from the original Magic Carpet album, with its simple acoustic instrumentation - guitar, sitar, tabla, tamboura, and Appalachian dulcimer. The album was issued on CD and heavy-weight vinyl. Around the same time, the album by Clem Alford entitled Mirror Image was reissued, a record first released on vinyl in 1974. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.