Ask Your Heart: Mehmet Polat Trio

Mehmet Polat Trio – Ask Your Heart

Ask Your Heart is the second album by the Mehmet Polat Trio (released in 2017 on homerecords.be). Its music transports the listener from a world of agitation to a place of calm.  Imagine you are by the sea, relaxing by the waves, and you begin to get an image of this trio’s sound.   Much contemporary music is too overproduced with electronics in place of real instruments, but not this album.  Its sparseness is elegant and moving.  The trio has nothing fancy to hide behind. They have only each other for back up.  Folk in feel, the music has within it modal jazz and traditional African sounds.   The album starts out slowly with “Untouched Stories,” as the two-stringed instruments, kora and oud, take baby steps and gradually move together with the flute-like ney.  There is a lullaby feeling as the ney moves out expansively, playing longer notes while the oud and kora provide a steady accompaniment. 

Mehmet Polat is the trio’s founder.  He started his life’s journey in Turkey, raised in a family of Alevi Sufi musicians.  They play a spiritual folk music, whose songs are often revelatory or in praise of Sufi saints.  Yet Mehmet was not content to remain within one musical genre.  He seeks to voyage, exploring the musical connections between the middle East, traditional African music, and jazz.  He has written that he is “constantly searching for new musical paths and inspiration.”     He has found two master musicians to accompany him on his quest: Sinan Arat on ney and Dymphi Peeters on kora. The ney is an ancient reed flute, and the kora is 21 stringed instrument from West Africa with a calabash base as a resonator.  But, neither instrument dominates the other; and none of the musicians overpowers the others or remains the center of attention.  There is equilibrium among the players, a sense of give-and-take as they improvise, as if each has come to share a delicious communal plate of food. The trio’s first album Next Spring started their collective adventure, but on this album, the different musical genres coalesce. The sound takes flight.

The trio’s musical creativity is heard best on the fifth track, “Whispering to the Waves,” as the oud shapeshifts to sound like an upright bass.    The music breathes and the listener breathes with it. It has spaciousness. Sinan plays a long solo on the ney.  It is haunting, seeming to flow like a mysterious mist into the night air.

Mehmet Polat

On “Evening Prayer,” the three instruments together announce a simple melody. The ney improvises next.  And then, a surprise: Mehmet sings a vocal of longing, and the ney shadows it.  The piece is a gazel from the Middle East.  Mehmet explains, “there is a melody or groove underneath, and the vocal improvisation is on top of it.” He learned how to sing gazels from listening to recordings of an old local master from Urfa, Turkey, Kazancı Bedih. His listening paid off. He’s a talented, expressive singer.  The deep vocal works well with the low tones of the instruments.    The vocal is full of yearning for the divine. The song is from a poem by Leyla Hamm, who was an Ottoman woman poet, and reads in part:

            Dear Divine: please help this powerless being in despair

            May you help me heal my heartache

            I am your disobedient creation, please forgive me…

The final track, “Mardin,” is also a gazel. Here again the instruments start by playing the melody together and then the vocal is introduced. The song’s lyrics are translated in part as, “I have sacrificed myself for no other than your love.” The listener is drawn into this powerful, meditative moment as the vocalist moves into a place of longing. Mehmet Polat writes in the album’s liner notes: “Music for me is a connection from heart to heart. I invite you to open your heart to the music and let it come to you.”  And if you allow yourself to stop and to listen, this music will open your heart.

For more about the Mehmet Polat Trio or to purchase “Ask Your Heart” you can visit their website: mehmetpolat.net

Author: Dorothy Johnson-Laird

Dorothy Johnson-Laird comes from a long line of musicians, including a music teacher in the 1820s in England. As a child she trained in both classical and jazz piano. Dorothy has a Master’s Degree in Creative Writing from Sarah Lawrence College. At New School University, she was the Research Assistant for a course taught on gender issues and women in blues music. Dorothy’s passion is African music. She was formerly a regular contributor to worldmusic.about.com.
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