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READ: Aaron Dilloway's Original Liners for the Nath Family's 'SOUNDS OF THE INDIAN SNAKE CHARMER, VOL. TWO' (Hanson)

Originally released as a cassette back in 2005, this second volume of Aaron Dilloway's in-the-field recordings of the Nath snake charmers of Haryana, India was recorded in March of that year in Kathmandu. Now, Dilloway is putting it all out there via 600 vinyl copies--500 on black, first 100 on marbled burgundy (plus a DVD-R).

Housed in a silk-screened jacket with his trademark Hanson Droll flaps, SOUNDS OF THE INDIAN SNAKE CHARMER, VOL. TWO comes with a download code, too.

Here, then, are Aaron Dilloway's original liner notes:

"For the first half of 2005, I lived with my wife Erika in Kirtipur, Nepal. During our days, while she was studying at the Kathmandu Association for the Deaf, I was roaming the streets and villages of the Kathmandu Valley in search of sounds and music. While kickin' 'round the tourist district of Thamel picking up cassettes, I met a family of snake charmers from Haryana, India. An old man probably in his 70s or 80s, his two grandsons and one of the grandson's sons. They asked if I wanted to see a show...I said, 'Hell YES!!' They gave me a show--a KILLER show--we're talkin' 3 fuggin' king cobras dancing at once, while a giant boa chilled at the side and few other random li'l snake dudes are wigglin' around here and there. I became obsessed. I had met my new best friends--though the kind of best friends you have to pay to hang out with. They were hustlers, yes. But that's their job. The money was well worth the shows. I spent about three to four days a week, for the next two months, recording their music and their snake shows on mini-disc and video tape. I drank a lot of chiyaa with them, smoked a lot of cigarettes and bidis. They taught me how to make reeds out of bamboo, and I traded them some clothes for a snake charming horn. They call them beens; they are also known as pungis. These guys were the best. At the end of April, they left Kathmandu, heading to Pokhara. After that, it was time for them to head back home with their earnings. Man...I missed them. This is the best of the best of the recordings I made of them. There are some classic Bollywood tracks, a Nepali folk song, and a 19- minute drone journey into the head of the King Cobra. The recordings were done in stereo. A been on the left, a been on the right. A premtal (stringed percussion instrument) on the left, a premtal on the right. The stereo recording of the charmers sway creates a very disorienting tremolo effect. It's almost as if you are the snake! These tracks were recorded in an alley.

LP: https://www.hansonrecords.net
Bandcamp: https://hansonrecords.bandcamp.com/album/sounds-of-the-indian-snake-charmer-vol-two 

SOUNDS OF THE INDIAN SNAKE CHARMER, VOL. TWO from Hanson Records on Vimeo.

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