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Music > Reviews > Goran Bregović By Jayson HarsinAlkohol Is AddictiveFor many years now in the U.S., Goran Bregović‘s music has been limited to a small but devoted group of fans, mainly art film aficionados who had heard his music in the excellent soundtrack to Emir Kusturica’s films Arizona Dream (1993) and Underground (Cannes Festival winner in 1995), among others. Having established himself as an internationally renown film composer, he went off in the mid-‘90s in a solo composer and bandleader direction, making an album with Turkish singer Sezen Aksu, and then one with Polish singer Kayah, the latter a six times platinum record. In 2006 Bregović composed the soundtrack for the film Borat, for which his samples attracted a fair amount of interest. So, he’s big in Poland, and he does manage to pack in medium-sized venues in some major U.S. cities (I saw him in the amphitheatre of Chicago’s Millennium Park about five years ago), but most of his work has been available strictly as imports in the U.S. until this, Alkohol. Those of us familiar with gypsy music (again, not as though it’s an everyday phenomenon on FM radio—anywhere), will hear that influence. The vaguely middle-eastern vocal pattern seems on the verge of ululation, a distant cousin of the Alpine (and classic American country) yodel. Then there’s the brass, often driven by a steady “oom pah pah” tuba. There’s often something minor key about the vocals and the instrumentals, even though the majority are upbeat; one senses a touch of balefulness to these numbers, reminiscent of some of the Jewish music tradition. This is especially true of tracks such as “Na’tan Ixara Oikopedo,” which begins with a slow slurred woodwind that produces the musical equivalent of tears. The song then shifts after a few bars into a slightly chaotic beat. The trumpets at times sound like out of tune mariachis. The snare and tuba plough forward, making it hard to resist getting up and jumping around the room. 30 July 2009
Related ArticlesGoran Bregović: 14 June 2009 - Ravinia, Highland Park, ILBy Karen Zarker & Sarah Zupko26.Jun.09 Words by Karen Zarker and Pictures by Sarah Zupko |
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