Bahamut (album) explained

Bahamut
Type:studio
Artist:Hazmat Modine
Cover:Bahamut - Hazmat Modine.jpg
Alt:A red harmonica sits on a black background, labeled "Hazmat Modine" with "Bamahut" in small white letters below. Five brass musical horns protrude from above the harmonica.
Recorded:1999–2005
Label:Barbès Records
Next Title:Cicada
Next Year:2011

Bahamut is the debut album by American blues/folk/world music/jazz band Hazmat Modine. The album was released on August 26, 2006 by Barbès Records. Most tracks were composed by lead singer Wade Schuman; the album also includes arrangements of traditional songs. Tuvan folk band Huun-Huur-Tu feature on three tracks with their characteristic throat singing.

Personnel

Hazmat Modine

Hawaiian guitar

Tuba

Guitar

Huun-Huur-Tu

Reception

Bahamut peaked at #12 on Billboards "Top Blues Albums" chart.[1]

Reviewing the album for Allmusic, Jeff Tamarkin gave it four stars out of a possible five, and termed it a "stunning debut".[2] Tamarkin praised the band for successfully fusing styles as disparate as blues, jazz, klezmer, calypso, and ska into "music that sounds at once ageless and primeval, authentically indigenous and inexplicably otherworldly, familiar and unlike anything else." He also praised the group for making "listener-friendly music" that doesn't "require a degree in ethnomusicology to enjoy".

Pitchfork Media reviewer Joe Tangari gave the album's track "Everybody Loves You," a collaboration with Tuvan throat singers Huun-Huur-Tu, a four-star review. Characterizing it as "generalized roots music that takes from pretty much any roots it sees fit," he praised it as "true world music, weird and wonderful to the last note."[3]

Notes and References

  1. "[{{AllMusic|class=artist|id=p822113/charts-awards|pure_url=yes}} Hazmat Modine – Charts & Awards]", Allmusic, accessed February 15, 2008.
  2. Tamarkin, Jeff. "[{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r850338|pure_url=yes}} Bahamut – Overview]", Allmusic, accessed February 15, 2008.
  3. Tangari, Joe. ""Everybody Loves You" Track Review," Pitchfork Media, published January 3, 2007, accessed February 15, 2008.