Tag: Balkan

The Barons of Tang, supported by Kapelle Herrenweide @ Astra Stube, Hamburg – 17.07. 2012

For those who have never been to Astra Stube in Hamburg, the venue is about the size of an airing cupboard and nestles resentfully under a railway bridge in Hamburg. I suppose you could say it’s the troll of all venues.

Local four-piece Kapelle Herrenweide kicked off the evening’s entertainment with their brand of urban folk-rock, for want of a better way to describe it. They combine influences from Finnish humppa music, klezmer, and polka, coupled with German pop and schlager, with lyrics which the band and two or three people in the audience (at this point of the evening I wouldn’t call it a crowd) found hilariously funny.

These youngsters lean heavily on German witticisms and social observations from the Teutonic perspective. The lyrics are of course in German. Their music occasionally runs uncomfortably close to bad cabaret with slight rock influences, a style which is well-liked in Germany but I’m not sure if it could really appeal to non-German punters. I couldn’t understand most of their puns and witty innuendo, so concentrated on the musical side of the performance. After three songs I was on the footpath with the rest of the crowd waiting for the Barons of Tang.

If you thought it was hot inside Astra Stube, the thermostat in the broomcupboard was about to be wound open several notches.

Between festivals, Melbourne’s self-proclaimed Pioneers of Gypsy Deathcore decided to grace Hamburg with their presence. And the Barons were worth the wait.

Combining tango, ska, punk, Balkan and metal influences, just to name a few, this seven piece combo from the Antipodes set the place on fire. Packed like cigarettes the crowd moved shoulder to shoulder as a unit, with just enough space down the front for one white guy with dreadlocks (why is there always one?) to embarass himself and everyone else by dancing like no-one was watching.

The lead singer slapped his double bass to psychobilly speed, with a box full of pedals to stomp on, while the rest of the band kept pace on whatever came to hand. It seemed like every member played at least two instruments, often simultaneously.

From « Villain Stage Left », which combines tango strains with old style ska and wistful jazz refrains, to the sheer musical violence of « Dogs of Rotterdam » and « Even if You’re Missing Fingers You Can Still Make a Fist » the Barons of Tang had us totally under their spell until finally the door opened after the last number and the steam rushed out of the pressure cooker. The band and crowd mingled sweatily on the footpath, gasping like fish and gulping beer.

The Barons formed in 2007 and they’ve risen rapidly. This year they played about 40 dates on a merciless three month tour of North America and Europe. That tour sees them with a berth at no less than ten European festivals, including giants such as Roskilde in Denmark, Sziget in the land of the Magyars and Womad in the UK. Not bad for a band that’s only been around a couple of years.

See them somewhere if you can !

© CCC

Babylon Circus @ Stadtgarten, Cologne

Babylon Circus @ Stadtgarten, Cologne – 23.03.2009

This was also a dancing to death concert! 🙂 Some of the members already seen in 2008: Les Touffes Krétiennes and  Les Fils de Teuhpu

Babylon Circus is a ten piece ska and reggae group founded in 1995 in Lyon, France. Since forming, they have released four full – length albums and one EP. They have played over 1000 shows throughout Europe, and have toured as far as Syria , Australia and South Africa
The band began as a ska group but quickly transcended the genre, mixing punk, reggae, rock, swing and jazz influences. They sing in both French and English, sometimes mixing the two in songs. Their third album, Dances of Resistance, was recorded in 2003 and largely has an anti-war theme. In 2009 they launched their latest album La Belle Étoile. – source Wiki

Babylon Circus © Ze Sikret Skvirel (ZASPH!)
Babylon Circus © Ze Sikret Skvirel (ZASPH!)

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© Ze Sikret Skvirel

La Cherga @ Gebäude 9

La Cherga

@ Gebäude 9, Cologne – 06. Mars 2009

Hehe! .. Balkan Xpress party at Gebäude 9 … with Penny Metal and Kosta Kostov … and before that http://www.myspace.com/lacherga live … 🙂

Petit résumé sur La Cherga que j’ai trouvé assez veridique:

Mûrs, éclatant de couleur et avec autant de gout que des poivrons farcis, La Cherga crée la musique électro-roots du 21ème siècle avec une sensibilité pan-balkanique. La Cherga, ce sont six musiciens, tous de l’ancienne Yougoslavie. La chanteuse Irina Karamarkovic est une réfugiée du Kosovo tandis que Nevenko Bucan, un magicien croate de l’électronique avec une préférence pour les grooves des Balkans en version dub, a aussi fui le feu du nationalisme qui a consumé la Yougoslavie de Tito. D’autres membres du groupe nous viennent de Bosnie et de Macédoine.

La Cherga s’est formée en Allemagne et en Autriche, au moment où ces musiciens ont commencé à expérimenter une nouvelle identité musicale, en partageant ce qu’Irina appelle une philosophie « post-pessimiste » ; en travaillant sur des projets d’échanges culturels, apprenant à faire la différence entre ceux qui profitent de la guerre et ceux qui profitent des initiatives anti-guerre. La Cherga, qui doit son nom à un tapis des Balkans fait de bouts de tissu et parfois même de haillons (nom tout a fait approprié à ces recycleurs de musique), a commencé à tisser un collage sonique, en inventant un manifeste musical balkanique et internationaliste; leur son s’inspirant de ce qu’il y a de mieux dans l’Est et dans l’Ouest (rythmes composés de skankin et de cuivres avec dub chauffés à blanc opposé à la techno de Detroit) tandis qu’Irina chante la liberation de l’esprit de l’esclavage mental.
Combiner les cuivres des Balkans, des voix jazzy, des grooves jamaïcains et des beats électroniques pourrait ressembler à une recette pour un désastre, mais La Cherga démontre de façon éclatante comment bâtir des ponts musicaux et culturels. Emmenez quelques copains, une bonne bouteille et mettez la musique à fond : La Cherga crée une musique festive d’unité radicale.

par Garth Cartwright

La Cherga © Ze Siket Skvirel (ZASPH!)
La Cherga © Ze Siket Skvirel (ZASPH!)

Oppaaaa! 😉

So here a little “aprecu” :

La Cherga © Ze Siket Skvirel (ZASPH!)
La Cherga © Ze Siket Skvirel (ZASPH!)

© Z Sikret Skvirel