
roots/round/about is a consortium of promoters from the south east of England who are committed to producing live music tours by unique artists from around the world.
The project is managed by
Mark Johnson-
contact: mark@hooba.co.uk











Eagles soar in the slipstreams of Xinjiang province, a windblown place way out in
western China. A place where forests of stone jut from land carved by restless tectonic
plates; where glacial waters flow into melon fields then disappear into deserts.
A place where nomads herd sheep across grasslands and spirits dwell in rocks and
trees, take shape of birds and animals. A place where everything -
The singer/songwriter Mamer was raised in Xinjiang, one of ten children for whom
singing and playing the two-
"The great old Kazak folk songs were born when people were shepherding," says the
boyish thirty-
He pauses, smiles. "I always stay awhile with the old people in the mountains, learning their songs and traditions," he continues in his native Kazakh. "Without this a whole way of life will be lost to the young generation. I want to breathe new life into the poems and songs I grew up with. "
Mamer's stunning debut album Eagle does precisely that, revitalising the ancient
songs and instruments of his heritage with an alt-
"I play a lot of the music on acoustic guitars but I use open tunings," says Mamer.
"So although the sound is louder and more resonant the guitar becomes like a dombra
-
Grassland instruments are prevalent in Xinjiang's capital, Urumqi. For much of the
year Mamer lives in this city of faith and mosques, knives and scarves, golden teeth
and cologne. It was here that he once listened to Xinjiang folk music on Chinese
Central Radio broadcasts: music variously played, as his is, on flute, jew's harp,
kobyz violin, sherter bass, ghijek spike-
Mamer tells stories about the birth of the dombra. Stories of love: a cedar tree
comes alive in the hands of a craftsman so that he may woo his sweetheart. Stories
of the natural world: a lonely young shepherd fashions a dombra from the dried, wind-
Mamer tells, too, of the first Western music he fell for: Yes, King Crimson, Television,
Pink Floyd. Of his formal music education at Urumqi's music college, which -
In 2002 Mamer moved to his second home in China's musical centre, Beijing; to a bungalow
with a small courtyard from where he could see the sky. He put together IZ -
Executives took notice: Mamer was invited to record albums, perform on television,
tour the country. But because each golden carrot involved a compromise -
Two years ago Mamer met Englishman Robin Haller, a producer and musician who was presenting a folk music show on Chinese radio. "I was really struck," says Haller. "Mamer's musical ideas were the most original I'd come across. It was all string instruments and this great austere sound; he kept things as close as he could to tradition."