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Harry Manx — Forgive & Remember
Album: West Eats Meet
Avg rating:
6.8

Your rating:
Total ratings: 2158









Released: 2005
Length: 3:34
Plays (last 30 days): 5
(Instrumental)
Comments (126)add comment
 nook wrote:

noodling with an exotic instrument is still noodling. 



What does that even mean?  And what does it matter?
Stunning -- always was, is now and forever shall be. Amen. Manx is such a mind-blowing talent! I love his fabulous, timeless, and contemplative classical Indian string-style on this! It's one of my favorites by him.
 kurtster wrote:
Too sleepy to rate this song ... {#Sleep}
 
7 years later, I'll give a 7
 mikedgreene wrote:

As a dyslexci it takes me two or three reads of the album title to understand the humor!!!! (;




And a play on the fantastic "West Meets East" albums from the '60s!
i hear dead

i know what it is...live bird song
 mikedgreene wrote:

As a dyslexci it takes me two or three reads of the album title to understand the humor!!!! (;

Kanye get it?

"Alli Mullah Alli Mullah Alli.."....wait - that's a different song. - but good too!
Yeee-Hawww-Ommm
As a dyslexci it takes me two or three reads of the album title to understand the humor!!!! (;
Outstanding,love Harry Manx👍
Приятный фолк. Профессионально. Прямо зона рекреации
 sfoster66 wrote:
Noise...just noise. And not nice noise either...
 

I think you've just described your comment perfectly.
Noise...just noise. And not nice noise either...
Once again Harry thank you for not singing, scatting, or if you want to call it new age rapping.
Reminds me of Prem Joshua, an artist sadly missing from RP playlists
LOVE Harry Manx

Give bless
Producer: "We don't have enough material to fill your album."
Engineer: "Why don't you play Jazz Oddysey."
Manx: "Naw. I got another one that goes nowhere."
RP: "Perfect! Gimme that track!"
someone pass the naan, please.
 nook wrote:
noodling with an exotic instrument is still noodling. 

  Well said.


Too sleepy to rate this song ... {#Sleep}

Middlesbrough 2

Isle of Man 0


For a minute I thought this was Jai Uttal!

Suddenly I smell incense.

Nice change of pace for a weekday morning.
 
I love when the comments are as enriching and thought provoking as the cool music, cheers to you all!!!
Scrolling down is a joy            Peace people 
Bildergebnis für logo radio paradiseist großartig!
 haresfur wrote:
biomedvgh wrote:
Blessed are the cheesemakers. Harry is a Salt Spring Island, B.C. resident. The island is known for it's goat cheese among other varieties and for a diverse and talented range of musicians and artisans. I have seen Harry live a few times and his shows are not to be missed. Hendrix on the banjo never sounded so good.  
 
I guess that's another couple of reasons I wish I lived on Salt Spring.

 

,,,everything that you have, made out of metal, will rust before your very eyes. Stored a '47 Harley with a friend for 2 years while in a transitional period. What a loss that was.
.... grabbed my attention :)
 Bodhisattva wrote:

Ghee is clarified butter, unless there's a cheesy kind that I don't know about.
 
I don't know of any cheesy ghee either; I think that writer you responded to may have been thinking about paneer or chhena.
 nook wrote:
noodling with an exotic instrument is still noodling. 

 
mmmmmmmmmmmm good noodles, great sauce.....
I think the album title is a pun, a play on words:
west eats meet - west meets east, both makes sense in a way...{#Whisper}
LOVE IT< YES !!
Love it's mystery!
 Not from me - but I Love this
ziakut wrote:
If this had been released from Beatles Sgt. Pepper album it would have a rating of 8 or higher.
 


noodling with an exotic instrument is still noodling. 
If this had been released from Beatles Sgt. Pepper album it would have a rating of 8 or higher.
All day has been grey and slow.  Hard music to work to.  Up tempo on occasion can be very nice.  {#Devil_pimp}
biomedvgh wrote:
Blessed are the cheesemakers. Harry is a Salt Spring Island, B.C. resident. The island is known for it's goat cheese among other varieties and for a diverse and talented range of musicians and artisans. I have seen Harry live a few times and his shows are not to be missed. Hendrix on the banjo never sounded so good.  
 
I guess that's another couple of reasons I wish I lived on Salt Spring.
Just love this music.{#Dance}
 TerryS wrote:
It's callled a 'Mohan Veena' after it's creator and looks like a regular guitar - only it's got a whack of sympathetic strings which resonate or can be strummed (the silvery sound). The whammy is all Harry's fingers and a tad of talent
 
Thanks for that info, Terry - the silvery glissando really makes this number IMO. 8 from the swaying Nottingham jury.
I'm diggin' this big time.
It grows.  and grows.  better every time I hear it
This is very cool. Thanks for playing!

Like this kind of music! Very nice song!
 shaktiboy wrote:

Dear Cheese,  are you the cheese or is the music?  What exactly does that deep statement refer to.  If you're an aspiring critic,  I have to wonder what your cheese angle is on this tune.  I enjoy this work (like a fine french camenbert)  from Mr. Manx and wonder where your cheese is made?  You are perhaps a cheddar man. By the way, the instrument he's playing is a 20 stringed instrument which Manx spent 12 years in India to learn..... some cheese in India is called 'Ghee" ?  The composition is his as is the arrangements.  What magnificent cheese-man-ship.  This CD was nominated for CD of the Year in Canada   (home of fine cheddar)  
 
Ghee is clarified butter, unless there's a cheesy kind that I don't know about.

Really like his work. Bought the CD after hearing it here for the first time.
Manx is one cool cat...


 TerryS wrote:
It's callled a 'Mohan Veena' after it's creator and looks like a regular guitar - only it's got a whack of sympathetic strings which resonate or can be strummed (the silvery sound). The whammy is all Harry's fingers and a tad of talent
 
Cool!  Very interesting!

*9* Mr Harry's Manx serene solo sound is enhanced with decorative elements of tabla, dholak and keys, Ms. Emily Braden backing vocals newcomer  and Australian trio The Heavenly Lights. Original songs delve into Harry's experiences from Rajasthan to Toronto to Brazil and beyond a nod both to an Indian musical giant and Manx's own western usage. *9 *{#Arrowu} *10 * no comment*

Wow, I didn't realize these are the same people who did Shadow Of The Whip, I like these people.


 biomedvgh wrote:
Hendrix on the banjo 
 
I'm not sure if that is a compliment or a threat...

Blessed are the cheesemakers. Harry is a Salt Spring Island, B.C. resident. The island is known for it's goat cheese among other varieties and for a diverse and talented range of musicians and artisans. I have seen Harry live a few times and his shows are not to be missed. Hendrix on the banjo never sounded so good.  
 shaktiboy wrote:

Dear Cheese,  are you the cheese or is the music?  What exactly does that deep statement refer to.  If you're an aspiring critic,  I have to wonder what your cheese angle is on this tune.  I enjoy this work (like a fine french camenbert)  from Mr. Manx and wonder where your cheese is made?  You are perhaps a cheddar man. By the way, the instrument he's playing is a 20 stringed instrument which Manx spent 12 years in India to learn..... some cheese in India is called 'Ghee" ?  The composition is his as is the arrangements.  What magnificent cheese-man-ship.  This CD was nominated for CD of the Year in Canada   (home of fine cheddar)  
 
{#Angel} shaktiboy: You are cheesly right, man! {#Roflol}
 Montyontherun wrote:
This is cheese of the highest odour
 
Dear Cheese,  are you the cheese or is the music?  What exactly does that deep statement refer to.  If you're an aspiring critic,  I have to wonder what your cheese angle is on this tune.  I enjoy this work (like a fine french camenbert)  from Mr. Manx and wonder where your cheese is made?  You are perhaps a cheddar man. By the way, the instrument he's playing is a 20 stringed instrument which Manx spent 12 years in India to learn..... some cheese in India is called 'Ghee" ?  The composition is his as is the arrangements.  What magnificent cheese-man-ship.  This CD was nominated for CD of the Year in Canada   (home of fine cheddar)  
I like how the notes bend and linger on the microtones
I just love this artist.
This is cheese of the highest odour
Waiter!...my Korma's cold..and I'm still waiting for my naan.
Dude wrote:
The Indian version of the Stratocaster with the whammy bar... nice picking and bending. Keep up the good work RP!
It's callled a 'Mohan Veena' after it's creator and looks like a regular guitar - only it's got a whack of sympathetic strings which resonate or can be strummed (the silvery sound). The whammy is all Harry's fingers and a tad of talent
OK, I am inured to the usual abysmal online penmanship, but good lord girl, get at least ONE of their names spelled right please. Tagish_girl wrote:
If Lorena McKennett and Harry Manks got married, I think they would blend quite nicely. Or get totally turkishy together. In that blue tent....
The Indian version of the Stratocaster with the whammy bar... nice picking and bending. Keep up the good work RP!
If Lorena McKennett and Harry Manks got married, I think they would blend quite nicely. Or get totally turkishy together. In that blue tent....
I keep waiting for the acoustic version of Hotel California to kick in.
Zweiblumen wrote:
RP suffers from a massive case of grade inflation. 6.5 is halfway between "Pretty Good" and "Quite Likable" which is where I see this song as belonging.
okobojicat wrote:
Seconded.
On second listen, 6.5 might have been a wee bit to high. 4
Love Harry! So original!
Zweiblumen wrote:
RP suffers from a massive case of grade inflation. 6.5 is halfway between "Pretty Good" and "Quite Likable" which is where I see this song as belonging.
Seconded.
maryte wrote:
I can't believe this one is only rated 6.5 - should be closer to an eight, in my not-so-'umble opinion...
RP suffers from a massive case of grade inflation. 6.5 is halfway between "Pretty Good" and "Quite Likable" which is where I see this song as belonging.
I can't believe this one is only rated 6.5 - should be closer to an eight, in my not-so-'umble opinion...
daedalus wrote:
Great mingling of sounds, and lots of small surprises in the direction. I think there is a straight sitar playing in there -The Oracle at AMG tells us that Harry manx studied and toured with a sitar master in India. I like it.
Not a sitar, but a Mohan Vina named after Harry's mentor during the seven years he spent in India learning how to play this beast. It looks like a regular guitar, but has a raft of sympathetic strings on the upside neck (OK I'm not a picker) which can also be strummed for the shimmering sound on some of his tracks. Ubercool dude.
Im really enjoying this...a prety unique fusion, using the blues scale instead of a traditional raga (at least I think that was what was going on)...wonderful.
diggin this pickin wizard
xs9095 wrote:
this f ing dude picks, sweet and slinky
Your comment captures an emotional perspective I'd like to reiterate.
VAST, Harry Manx, then Supergrass! Ahhh, Bill ... too bad for me that you are already 'taken'. *sniff*
this f ing dude picks, sweet and slinky
Great song title.
Weird - I am making curry chicken as we spoeak...
Another fine segue
Is this the chinese song Tu-ning?
where 's Ravi? that's so beautiful...
Thanks Bill for another artist I would not have known about if it wasn't for RP. Caught HM the other week in DC - he has such a smooth style - nice guy too. Had a dang good harmonica player with him. Audience was from 8 to 80 and everyone loved it.
From "Within You Without You" to "Forgive and Remember".. can dub this "the sitar segue"
I'm surprised that no one has mentioned that this is used regularly on NPR's The World.
you again?
Bill is in the Persian corner today. (Earlier we had Sixteen Horsepower and Joe Strummer - Mondo Bondo)
thenoizzbox wrote:
His name is spelled John McLaughin and the band you are refering to was called Shakti which I believe he formed after The Mahavishnu Orchestra. The only Shakti album I had was a live one (on vinyl) and it was aboslutely amazing. Harry Manx's music is definitely in the same spirit but McLaughin's guitar work is in a league of its own...
I just did a search on Amazon.com for "Shakti" and found a whole bunch of Shakti/John McLaughin hits. (Remember to make any Amazon.com orders through the link here on RP so they get some benefit!)
rumplestiltskin wrote:
Oh, very nicely done, Bill! Wonderful segue from Sgt. Pepper's "Within You Without You". You should really add a way to rate song combinations, as well as just individual songs.
I guess Bill likes this segue. First on Nov 21st... now the same segue on Dec 6th.
Oh, very nicely done, Bill! Wonderful segue from Sgt. Pepper's "Within You Without You". You should really add a way to rate song combinations, as well as just individual songs.
Cool, different, entrancing, a cool jam. Great sitar.
Nice!!
Great mingling of sounds, and lots of small surprises in the direction. I think there is a straight sitar playing in there -The Oracle at AMG tells us that Harry manx studied and toured with a sitar master in India. I like it.
Bill you sure get into a wonderful space with 'the music'. Thanks Jmrz
I like
CinnamonGirl wrote:
At first I thought this was John McGloughlin -- from those albums he did in the late 70s. I think one was called Shiva. McGloughlin had a great Indian violinist along with his blistering guitar riffs.
His name is spelled John McLaughin and the band you are refering to was called Shakti which I believe he formed after The Mahavishnu Orchestra. The only Shakti album I had was a live one (on vinyl) and it was aboslutely amazing. Harry Manx's music is definitely in the same spirit but McLaughin's guitar work is in a league of its own...
At first I thought this was John McGloughlin -- from those albums he did in the late 70s. I think one was called Shiva. McGloughlin had a great Indian violinist along with his blistering guitar riffs.
8) more, please.
Nice, trippy. The first few notes trick me thinking its Mr Dave. More of this please.
:sunny.gif:
Awesome......he was here in Kelowna a few weeks back......and a great guy to boot.
beelzebubba wrote:
Thank you, thank you, thank you....this is the second song here on RP that has reminded me of 'Mathar', but every time I think of it, I can't remember the name. I used to have a copy of that song (but I don't do do that bad stuff anymore, so don't come looking for me, RIAA). I think I will buy from iTunes if they have it!
bummer. they don't have it.
Atombender wrote:
I like that kind of stuff :)) Please Please Please...play some Dave Pike and his great Sitar song "Mathar"... Thanks!
Thank you, thank you, thank you....this is the second song here on RP that has reminded me of 'Mathar', but every time I think of it, I can't remember the name. I used to have a copy of that song (but I don't do do that bad stuff anymore, so don't come looking for me, RIAA). I think I will buy from iTunes if they have it!
Sounds good to me. Might be nice mixed next to some Benji Wertheimer.
Love this Eastern groove... (Follows Within Without You)
This got my attention.....
trekhead wrote:
...Wait a minute!!! Minas Morgul, Minas Tirith, Minas de Cobre.... Tower of the Serpent??
Almost. Copper mines.
Good artist. I like the indian instruments. I want to learn how to play the tabla. They say you need a guru though, not books. mmmm, I'll have to see about that.
Bill has me trained. Two notes and I recognized Harry Manx. This guy is great.
...Wait a minute!!! Minas Morgul, Minas Tirith, Minas de Cobre.... Tower of the Serpent??
physicsgenius wrote:
Wow, trippy. It's like being caught in a Simpson's parody of a 60's ripoff of real Indian music.
...Which, as we all know, is actually Sinatra played at higher rpm...
Nice to hear this side of Manx. Had heard his other stuff with vocals and liked it. This is pretty trippy-dreamy.
segueman wrote:
No, it is a Mohan Veena. Invented by Vishwa Mohan Bhatt it combines drone and sympathetic strings of the sitar with body similar to Hawiian guitar played with a slide. Harry studied with Vishwa.
I stand corrected. Very interesting.
mojoman wrote:
It's simply a lap steel guitar in open tuning. Still sounds very cool.
No, it is a Mohan Veena. Invented by Vishwa Mohan Bhatt it combines drone and sympathetic strings of the sitar with body similar to Hawiian guitar played with a slide. Harry studied with Vishwa.
Well, Kelly Joe Phelps certainly doesn't come to mind when listening to this one.
ArbiterOfGoodTaste wrote:
A lot cooler than any other Manx I've heard here.
i was just thinking the same thing.
Wow, trippy. It's like being caught in a Simpson's parody of a 60's ripoff of real Indian music.
A lot cooler than any other Manx I've heard here.
It's simply a lap steel guitar in open tuning. Still sounds very cool.
samiyam wrote:
... This isn't a sitar or a guitar but a very unique instrument.
Mohan Veena , maybe?
I found myself chin in hand, elbow to desk, eyes closed, head waving back and forth with the beat... How did I get here? Lulled and mesmerized to be sure. Quality of the music? I'm not sure I care. Is that a good or bad thing? I don't seem to have the energy to decide... ... ........................... back & forth, side to side, side to side .......... ...
pilate wrote:
I don't know what to say... it's got shades of some low budget bollywood fare, shades of decent sitar, and the accompanying tabla beat (tabla or mrudangam or something else?)... well, they wasted a beautiful instrument.
Knowing that Harry Manx is much better than the slow rhythm played here then I know that he was shooting more for effect than musical picking speed. He's really quite good. This isn't a sitar or a guitar but a very unique instrument.
YOU GUYS ARE WAY TOO CRITICAL... SOUNDS GOOD TO ME..
...Thought they'd pull a Manx after that BEATLES tune....