|
|
Sussan Deyhim
Rarely does an artist come along
who is equally at home recording and performing an album like
Madman of God: The Divine Love Songs of the Persian Sufi
Masters, as she is on a stage with the likes of Praxis,
Buckethead and Bill Laswell, walking the very cutting edge of
techno hip hop, but such an artist is Sussan Deyhim.
Born in Teheran to an old aristocratic family, the youngest of
eleven children, Deyhim upbringing's during the rule of the Shah
was ultra-progressive. Her father was an economist, scientist
and violinist; her house was filled with every conceivable style
of music, old and new.
"There was unbelievable variety," recalls Deyhim, reflecting on
the creative odyssey that has taken her from pre-Revolutionary
Iran, to the cutting edge conceptualism of the progressive music
scene. "There was all this growing tension between
traditionalism and the modern world-a lot of schizophrenia at
the time. So much was open and available and you had this young
generation trying to make up its mind about what was real for
them."
What was real for Deyhim was dance and music. Her life was
consumed with ballet and her teacher was a choreographer who
combined works by Stockhausen and Bartok with traditional and
folk Persian music. Summers were spent at a special dance and
arts camp at the Caspian Sea, and at the Shirazz Festival, the
largest avant-garde gathering in the country, which featured the
likes of Robert Wilson, John Cage and the Living Theater. By the
time she met Maurice Bejart and was offered a scholarship to
attend his School of Performing Arts in Brussels, Deyhim had
been exposed to an amazing variety of music: from India, Egypt,
Andalusia, and every part of her own country-the
African-influenced styles and trance ceremonies of the south,
Saudi Arabian, Kurdish, Luristani, Baluchistani, Afgani, the
immigrant tribes of the central regions. "I was trained to
recognize all of these sonic dialects and we studied dances with
the real musicians of all the traditions," she explains, "so I
grew up thinking that that was the way to go. Either it was pure
roots, or completely conceptual in a very pure way."
Both approaches would shape Deyhim's creative sensibilities in
critical ways. She studied and performed with Bejart's Ballet of
the Twentieth Century and had been dancing with the company for
almost two years when she moved to New York and plunged into
dance classes, only to realize that ballet was no longer her
calling. "I had been trained to do unusual vocals and I started
doing choreography and composing music myself, using my voice as
my instrument. Gradually I started getting very excited about
music. My apartment was in the Village and I got into the
downtown music and arts scene. I wanted to do something cool and
an interesting hybrid relevant to our times."
Her opportunity arrived soon enough when she met and began
working with Richard Horowitz, a musician, composer and producer
schooled in free jazz, steeped in the music of Morocco and many
other forms of what would become known as "world music." Their
collaboration would produce Majoun for Sony Classical-a unique
synthesis that married the strains of traditional Middle Eastern
music with cutting edge technology and a very progressive
sensibility. Billboard described her vocals on the album as "an
overpowering presence. Her wordless incantations are amplified
in harmonized layers and recycled into sampled loops, beckoning
you into this virtual desert ritual."
It was this same haunting quality that inspired Peter Gabriel to
use Deyhim's voice to evoke Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead
in Scorsese's Last Temptation of Christ. Deyhim eventually
collaborated with Depak Chopra for A Gift of Love, with the
poetry of Rumi being read by Madonna, Martin Sheen and many
others. She also began a solo album in London called Maze, mixed
by Adrian Sherwood and Keith LeBlanc in London and produced by
Bill Laswell in New York, which is still in production.
At the same time Deyhim became a presence on the international
scene as a multi-dimensional vocalist and performance artist
combining music, movement, and media. "I don't really consider
myself an entertainer from the showbizz tradition," she points
out. "I come more from Artaud, where performance and shamanism
are connected, where going onstage is like being ready to fall
off a cliff."
Her appearances have ranged from productions like John Claude
van Italie's Tibetan Book of the Dead at La Mama in New York to
playing Euridice at La Scala in Milan, from performing with Bill
Laswell and Jah Wobble to recording and performing as a soloist
with Bobby McFerrin's vocal ensemble. Deyhim wrote and performs
the music in Shirin Neshat acclaimed short film, Turbulent,
which has toured major international museums, with Deyhim also
performing live in a solo piece at the museums called 'Vocadeliks'-"her
face and voice are the center of attention", noted Holland
Carter in the New York Times, calling her work "thrilling music
that sounds in the ear long after you've left the show."
This year Deyhim released Madman of God, a self-produced album
of the divine classical love songs of great Sufi poets like
Rumi, Saadi and Djami from the eleventh to nineteenth centuries,
which reunites the artist with her own "gracious old culture",
as she calls it, but at the same time continues her journey into
new sonic dimensions. "It's a completely acoustic album played
by master musicians and yet it has a very modern sound," she
observes. "It has the precision and vibe of a groove album--and
yet there's something about it that's ancient, and that engages
you on a journey."
While Deyhim's ongoing musical odyssey reflects her broad
diversity of interests and tastes-current projects range from
writing an opera to performing the music of Mahler-other
interests are clearly heading her right towards the mainstream.
"What I'd really like to do is an album of great R&B and soul
songs--but as an Eastern singer," she says, describing her
vision for an upcoming album project. "It would be a real vocal
album that blends the traditions that exist here with traditions
that exist there and stretches it into a new synthesis--really
takes it someplace it hasn't gone before."

|