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Pharaoh's Daughter

New album, HARAN, is available NOW!

About Me

Blending a psychedelic sensibility and a pan-Mediterranean sensuality, Basya Schechter leads her band, Pharaoh's Daughter, through Doors-like improvisations, liturgical chants with Middle Eastern, and spiritual stylings filtered through percussion, flute, strings, oud, saz, bass, rhodes and electronica. Their sound has been cultivated by Basyas Hasidic musical background and by trips to the Middle East, Africa, Israel, Egypt, Central Africa, Turkey, Kurdistan and Greece. There she has studied in ethnomusicology centers as well as learning through meeting internationally renknowned folk musicians in cafes, and from street performers, who have taught her songs from their musical heritages. Inspired by world instruments, but also influenced by Western song structure, she began retuning her guitar to sound like a cross between an Arabic oud and a Turkish saz, with harmonic minor melodies, and odd time signatures. Pharaohs Daughter has traveled both nationally and internationally, has performed recently at Central Parks Summerstage and at Carnegie Hall. They have released two cd's on John Zorn's Tzadik label.'Haran', Pharaoh's Daughter's five record, will be released on Oyhoo Rocords in May.

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 2/2/2006
Band Website: pharaohsdaughter.com
Band Members: Basya Schechter - oud, guitar, saz, percussion, vocals; Daphna Mor - recorders, zurna, melodica, ney, vocals; Meg Okura - violin; Shanir Blumenkranz -bass; Yuval Lion - drums; Jason Lindner - rhodes, keys; Mathias Kunzli - percussion; Uri Sharlin - accordian, vocals.Regular guests:Alan Kushan - santur, for Queen's Dominion project; Shane Shanahan - percussionist, for Queen's Dominion project.
Influences: Oumou Sangare, Ali Farkah Toure, Suzanne Vega, Salif Keita, Oum Kalthoum, Loreena Mckennitt, Noa, Abdullah Ibrahim, Miriam Makeba, Hugh Masekela, Voix de Bulgare, Shimi Tavori, Abdelli, The Doors, South Indian, Bulgarian & Macedonian vocal styles, Rokia Traore, Pink Floyd, Bouboucar Traore, Ofra Haza, Joni Mitchell, Chasidic Jewish music, Led Zepplin, Paradox Trio, Tori Amos, Radiohead, Turkish folk music, Chava Alberstein, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Jewish litergical and cantorial music, Ismet Siral, Nick Drake, Gilberto Gil, Mordechai Ben David, Cesaria Evora, Joao Gilberto, Fela Kuti and Afrobeat music, Gigi, Manu Chao, Toumani Diabate, Simon Shaheen, Amadou & Mariam, Abida Parveen, Riyad Sombati, Miami Boys Choir, Poogie, Tananas, Farid El Atrache, Latcho Drom soundtrack, Nacati Celik, Yair Dalal, Rasha, Youssou N'Dour, Qawwali Sufi music, Hungarian Gypsy folk music, Sudanese and Nile River folk music, Sephardic and Ladino music, Greek folk music...
Sounds Like:
Listen to Haran, the latest album by Pharaoh’s Daughter, and you hear a musical journey from Hasidic Brooklyn to ’70s psychedelia, from an Israeli seminary to smoky bars in Turkey, and street scenes in Morocco and Zambia. Band leader and vocalist Basya Schechter has invented her own identity, still rooted in the words, sounds, and experiences of her childhood, but using her global curiosity to launch a reformulation of Judaic musicality. Haran marries the Hebraic and Biblical texts that orthodox children memorize with a modern, globally-informed Jewish sound.“By Way of Haran,” the album’s namesake, invokes the place where Abraham started his spiritual journey, and a place of significance as an early caravan route. “I heard the names of these ancient places throughout my childhood,” remembers Basya. “So I hitchhiked to eastern Turkey by myself and came to these places and felt the deep history. Haran represents the beginning of a journey, a crossroads between east and west, the beginning of the Jewish religion, and the beginning of monotheism.” The song starts with a strong Turkish theme composed by the late Ismet Siral upon which is added an unexpected bass line and the influence of The Doors.Many of the songs on Haran come from the diverse repertoire of songs of the Sabbath known as zmirot (“Yona” and “Hashomer”) and mystic Kabalistic poetry from the 11th-15 centuries (“Ka Ribon” and “Askinu”).“In some of these words you feel the mystical weight,” Basya says “I love to explore that, because it makes me feel connected to a deeper understanding of the world and myself. I’ve always been connected to a sense of yearning in melody; a sense to get to someplace. Zen is all about being where you are. I come from a very unsettled sense of home; always that promise that something in the future or something that is part of the world that I don’t understand is going to give me answers. In melody, I am deeply connecting to who I am now and what I want to be and what I want to express.”What Baysa found was that the connection she needed was across cultures. “I’ve found inspiration in people connecting to their tradition as deeply as I connect to mine,” says Basya. So other songs on Haran are inspired by a range of influences: an Arabic rhythm in a ten-beat meter reminiscent of Oum Kalthoum, a slow African groove in five, a melody by Algerian singer Abdelli. But the presence of the standard drums-guitar-keys of a rock band cannot be missed.Rock organ meets kemanche (spike fiddle), ethereal keys are the foundation for santur (Persian dulcimer), and the zabumba (Brazilian forro drum) drives accordion. Haran unites all of these elements in a simultaneously fresh and timeless way. But this multiplicity of sounds does not stand in the way of Pharaoh’s Daughter’s biggest accomplishment on Haran: a bottomless well of melodic creativity. Even if the listener does not fully grasp the spiritual power of the lyrics in Aramaic, Ladino, or Hebrew, the musical hooks resonate on their own journey long after the album is over. 'Haran', Pharaoh's Daughter's fifth album, will be released on Oyhoo Records in May.
Record Label: Tzadik
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

PHARAOHS DAUGHTER FEATURED IN GLOBAL RHYTHM MAGAZINE!

Pharaoh's Daughter is a featured artist in the August print edition of Global Rhythm. Derek Beres wrote an excellent article about Basya and the band.GLOBAL RHYTHM is a monthly World Music, Culture & ...
Posted by Pharaoh's Daughter on Wed, 15 Aug 2007 04:22:00 PST

PHARAOH’S DAUGHTER ON NPR, & OTHER PODCASTS!!!

Check out these podcasts of radio broadcast that Basya and the members of Pharaoh's Daughter have recorded this summer:PRI's The World- Syndicated on over 130 NPR stations across the U.S. the daily ne...
Posted by Pharaoh's Daughter on Tue, 14 Aug 2007 06:25:00 PST

READ THE RAVE REVIEWS FOR HARAN!

The reviews for Pharaoh's Daughter's latest release, Haran, are in, and they are glowing! Haran is a stunning achievement, from which the Jewish Week declares, "Schechter emerges as one of the most ta...
Posted by Pharaoh's Daughter on Tue, 14 Aug 2007 04:57:00 PST