KottarashkyOPA HEY! has the vivid presence of an old photograph album, an album in
which all the pictures keep moving, looping and merging, playing across
the ear like travelogues of sonic imagery - a flickering impression of
scorching beaches, roads bathed in uncultivated green, and a sun whose
chiaroscuro draws bizarre, protean shapes across a landscape reverting
to nature. Kottarashky is a 21st century digital master musician with
his hands sunk deep in the past - vintage Balkan field recordings,
classic jazz and blues, psychedelic sounds, club beats and
extraordinary, archetypal Gypsy voices, guttural shouts and lyrical
laments are all molded and thrown into new shapes. The songs sound like
tales told by a people who have all the time in the world: time to
contemplate, enjoy, engage and dream; to take pleasure in unexpected
twists and turns; to be inspired by the details and vividness of
marginal existence. Traditional instruments such as accordion,
shepherd’s pipe and clarinet are set against the electronically
generated, sampled and looped. The result is a mixture that transcends
the mundane for the heartfelt poetry and music of place - where
Kottarashky finds himself in the here and now of 21st century Bulgaria,
yet also in the context of age-old traditions. As you listen, there’s
that curious sensation of being at the crossroads of many times and
places - you hear what sounds like a distant shout from the fields, a
trumpet snaking from the airshaft of a 1950s jazz club, a shrill
shepherd’s pipe pealing across terraced hills and pointed towards the
east, to Arabia, India. Kottarashky is an architect by vocation, which
perhaps explains the palpable sense of place in his music. Summer trips
to small villages and the marginal regions of Bulgaria were key source
of inspiration for the album, and his music samples a broad palette of
sources and influences - enigmatic field recordings by artists unknown
alongside Boris Kovac, Les Yeux Noir, Fanfare Ciocarlia, Jony Iliev,
and compelling Hungarian singer Mitsou. The resulting digital
pick-and-mix hits you like a panoramic puzzle of sounds collected and
put together from a night’s walk through the streets of Sofia. It is an
ethno-music born of a city lacking cultural identity that is torn
between contemporary European globalism, Balkan provincialism and a
living if largely forgotten folk tradition. It’s a music inspired by
that environment but also in reaction to it, a journey down roads less
travelled, through the Bulgarian backwoods and back via the laptop to
the 21st century.
Source:
Soul Seduction
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