Saturday, 10 September 2016 at 7:30 pm

Mehmet Polat Trio

“Evocative melodies, intricate arabesques, and sparkling cascades over the 
mystical-spiritual aura of the ney flute. Contemplative or rhythmic, the trio 
produces a unique magic.” – Frankfurt Journal

Crossroads Music
801 South 48th Street (in Calvary Church)

Video at youtu.be/XgAPBEET_a0

Tickets ($10-$30) and more info at www.crossroadsconcerts.org

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The Mehmet Polat Trio is a spiritual yet adventurous meeting of three masters 
of their magical instruments: ney, kora and oud rooted in Ottoman, Anatolian, 
Balkan and West African music traditions. Their original compositions are 
colored by daring improvisations and grooves, presented in an atmosphere of 
chamber music. The Mehmet Polat Trio invites you to a sincere musical journey 
from the past to the present.

Mehmet Polat was born and raised in Urfa, Turkey, and studied Ottoman music in 
Istanbul. His new approach to the oud – a close relative of the lute common not 
only in Turkey but also North Africa, the Arab world, and the Caucusus — and 
his broadened vision towards music making brought him to Amsterdam in 2007, 
where he collaborated and experimented with many other musicians from around 
the world and became fascinated by the inner world and spiritual side of 
African music, especially the timbre of the harp-like kora. With kora as the 
earth element, oud as space and ney as air, the idea of Mehmet Polat Trio was 
born.

Victor Sams was born and raised in the Dutch Antilles, and grew up playing 
reggae. Seeking to learn more of his African roots, he studied kora in Mali. In 
addition to several percussion instruments, he plays kamale ngoni, a small kora 
first used in Wassoulou popular music in the 1960s and derived from the ancient 
ceremonial donso ngoni (hunter’s harp) of southern Mali.

Ney player Pelin Başar studied classical Turkish music and composition in 
Istanbul, was an accompanist for the Turkish State Choir of Samsun, and now 
lives in Paris. She joined the trio in 2016. The ney, a type of reed flute, is 
one of the most ancient instruments of Turkey and the region and an important 
solo instrument in both secular classical Turkish music and the ritual music of 
the Mevlevi Sufi order.


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