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Big Brass at the DiscoGlobal Beat Fusion[21 November 2007] Shantel has accomplished the most daunting task imaginable in this genre: making an accessible pop record with tubas, trumpets and dumbeks, and our response remains among the greatest of human pleasures: we dance. by Derek Beres
There is much irony in this statement. When you hear the opening “Espirita” by a group of 20-some Italian 20-somethings basing their music on the traditional banda music of Sicily, the unique sound of Banda Ionica—as well as a number of incredible groups on the first edition of Bucovina Club—engage and invade your auditory senses with some of the most interesting rhythms and melodies on the planet. Now as much an institution as a CD, Shantel’s famed Bucovina Club nights have launched from his Frankfurt base to the far reaches of Europe. Yet upon the first outing, which featured a mind-blowing cast including Taraf de Haidouks, Fanfare Ciocarlia, Goran Bregovic, Gogol Bordello and Kocani Orkestar, it was an unconvincing sale. Indeed, the battle is far from over.
Shortly afterwards he was throwing down at a photo festival in Houston, Texas, and a similar trend manifested. It was a quick and, as it turns out, lasting love affair. The music of Romania, Macedonia, Hungary and Serbia has always worked amazingly well to get a dance floor cracking…when performed live, that is. On record, as Shantel points out, most albums retain a “world music” feel more appropriate for the ears of ethnomusicologists and not club kids fiending for a fix. Shantel took it upon himself to disprove the myth. Nearly four years after the release of Bucovina Club, he has seen the release of a second edition, numerous gigs in production with up-and-coming acts like Mahala Rai Banda, and the launch of his first solo effort, the excellent and adventurous Disko Partizani. “It was a kind of explosion,” he says from his home in Frankfurt. “These elements, these melodies and rhythms and character and harmony, they are something you have to create out of. It was quite hard to find good recordings of the ideas I had in those days. The problem was all these recordings sounded a bit flat. I missed the bass, and the bottom, which I found had to be upgraded. I found myself immediately in a production situation.” The situation was not a bad one, proving most fruitful to both his career and the direction of Eastern European folk music. Shantel began hanging around the style’s legends, refining and remixing their soulful creations with an understanding of what club-going audiences crave. He created a niche where none existed. While in America Balkan sounds continue to hover on the fringe, Shantel is leading his European adventure in the re-creation of a music endowed with a long history of fusion and cultural assimilation. Originally military music connecting the political paths of Eastern and Western explorers (and exploiters), the yoking of Middle Eastern percussion with loud, blaring brass and, for bands like Taraf de Haidouks, violins and cimbaloms, helped create a distinct sound where the low end is driven by tubas and horns create the rhythm. In the context of gin-inspired dance houses and festive weddings, this is some of the most danceable music imaginable. Enter Shantel and ProTools and a new era in the replication and distribution, as well as cultural understanding, is born. Shantel’s own knowledge of the importance and subtleties of these music forms proves equally commendable. He knew that to raise ears “it was not necessary to do all these crazy remixes, to beat a sample beat and bass line.” He sounds ecstatic when explaining that Marko Markovic, son of legendary Serbian trumpet player Boban, has included some of his compositions on his latest recording. It’s strong validation for Shantel. Sometimes criticized for splicing and dicing the Balkan genre into computer files, Shantel has taken extreme caution to avoid any such possibilities. When working on his first solo outing, this was of top concern.
![]() I can personally vouch for this success. Turned onto Shantel’s work from the Six Degrees-licensed Electric Gypsyland compilation in 2005—the first wave of this sound breaking to American audiences—Shantel’s remix of Taraf de Haidouks’ “Carolina” was on my regular rotation during DJ sets. The song never failed to move the dance floor, and when that epic guitar line signaled the beginning, cheers would commence. It is such a unique and inspiring take on what was such a different song (listen to the original on the first Bucovina Club), that when the bottom dropped in, shouting seemed an automatic reaction.
Every theory is only validated by repetition, and the more times I played it, the more this occurrence became fact. I’ll never forget DJing to 2,200 people waiting for Jamiroquai and watching the effects of this particular song. The folk music of Romania left a tremendous imprint on a completely unsuspecting crowd, something Shantel’s career is defined by.
Shantel Disko Partizani Global Beat FusionTen Years Dancing on the HudsonDerek Beres16.Jun.08 For the last decade, Turntables on the Hudson has held gatherings of positive music -- funk, hip-hop, soul, dance; African, Latin, and Balkan beats -- that thrive on human connection. Three Nights in FranceDerek Beres12.May.08 Beres hits Paris and Bourges to take in the eclectic sounds of Transglobal Underground, Les Primitifs du Futur, Watcha Clan, and Fat Freddy's Drop, and gets pulled into the "sacred space" that solders the connection between sound and human. Women of the (Music) WorldDerek Beres14.Apr.08 There is little in this world as beautiful as the female voice. Sometimes it’s necessary to stop and remind ourselves of this.
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