Tuesday, 12 March 2013

Chavo Interview Nazzine December 2010


We found out about London band Chavo whilst searching for bands to play Nazdrove. We were totally surprised when we heard their songs and thought 'Oh my!! We've got to get them to play Nazzers!'. Anyway, on with the interview. Photos of chavo are from them playing at Nazdrove. Photos by Nick Royles. 



Ok, can you introduce the band and its members to our readers?

Sure. It’s Jim O’Brien on Mandolin/Accordion/Vocals , John Viola on Viola/Violin/Mandolin/Vocals, Ido Basso on Bass/Trombone, Dave Price on Percussion, Uncle Nola on Guitar

You formed the band 5 years ago. What were your initial reasons and inspirations for starting the band? Are those reasons as relevant now as they were then?

Three of us met up after not seeing each other for a few years, it was a wedding actually. Turns out we were all still into the same thing, I had been looking for the right people to work on a Romani/Klezmer project, and Nola and John who’d until recently been working together as a viola and guitar duo in Tabasco agreed to help out. In fact we played together that night, always prepared we’d brought our instruments and so proto-Chavo began. We played as a three piece for a year or so but every time we were invited to play a club or something large we always felt we didn’t have the power to pull it off. So began the search for the drum and bass combo that is now well and truly the backbone of the band. Even now I sometimes forget they’re their, slowly introducing a piece on mandolin until it’s their turn to up the ante, it still gets the hairs on the back of my neck and does wonders for your confidence.

Can you tell us about your musical backgrounds prior to the band?

Most of us have been playing this music or something like it for years, John Viola is a composer first and foremost, writing for film and TV for the past ten years, he was also a founder member of the late great Menlo Park, and part of the US/UK outfit The High Class Family Butchers a sort of Bluegrass crossover. Jim joined them on mandolin and accordion while he was studying Romani music at Goldsmiths. Alon and John had been playing their own Klezmer compositions as Tabasco for a few years too. Dave Price studied percussion with Stanislaw Skoczynski at the Chopin Academy in Warsaw before returning to London and getting involved in the world famous Gecko theatre company as well as being the drummer for Aqualung. We don’t know where Ido comes from, he doesn’t talk about his past.

We should talk about your album that was released this year. Can you tell us about it? When and where was it recorded? Was it fun to do?

“Boundary Lane” is the closing chapter of a sound that we’ve played together for the past five years, it’s a homage to the traditional music that has influenced our musical careers. Early on in the year we started to write music that would widen the sound and experiment with the form. But we realised we didn’t have our own record of the traditional sounds that we’d worked so hard at developing, sweating it out playing Serbian weddings and Balkan club nights. So before we recorded the new, wider sound we thought we’d make an album of the traditional stuff, we picked our favourite tunes, some our own and some traditional, chose a good variety of tempos, went into the studio and recorded live with just two room mics. Sitting in a circle and doing live takes is the single most beautiful aspect of being a musician.


 Can you tell me which of your songs on the cd are your favourites, not only musically but lyrically as well?

Tarantella Caltabellotta is a good one. This is an old tune from a mountain town called Caltabellota in Sicily. Every Easter the town brass band play this same tune from 4am in the morning until midnight, no other tune is played. At midday they take a brief break when a local army band march in and play one or two military tunes. Soon as the army band finish the Caltabellottese band strike up again and literally chase the army band out of town. The crowd goes wild and the party carries on. Happens every year. Tarantella Caltabellotta is not the real name of the piece. It’s called La San Michelata but after seeing those guys play that tune over and over again there was only one name for it. I was down there the other week. Our version had already gotten there. As soon as they found out I was in Chavo they bought me all sorts of weird and wonderful Sicilian liquors.

Another favourite is Syrtos, it’s a traditional Greek dance which we turned our own over the years, credit has to go to Uncle N for pushing through a strong arrangement. There’s this section about half way through (around 2 mins) that we call the ‘elephant groove’, for it’s heavy plodding feel, it gets lighter as the instruments play solos. I love playing it. Sometime in clubs, when the crowd are up for it, it’s not always advisable to slow the music down but with Syrtos they seem to go wilder.

Lyrically I think the Romani lines in Ásél Láké that loosely translate as

I have been caught by Hungarian men.
They’ve been drinking for a week,
Let me die!

are a particularly favourite. This is not as it may first seem a description of possible violence but rather that they are forcing him to take part in a drinking binge.



There is a connection to things Romany. In fact, I'm told that there are Romany members in the band. Can you tell all? How important is this in the band's makeup and identity?

There’s a small Romani connection. My mother is of Italian Romani descent. Her family moved to Liverpool from Naples. She’s a Deponeo you can find them all over the north west of England but nowhere else in the world. Over in Italy the name Deponeo doesn’t exist, apparently the original name before migration was D’Apollonio, clearly of Greek origin. That’s really how I became so embroiled in all things Romani. I don’t think it defines our identity but for me personally it is what drives my interest in the various musical styles and dialects of Romani culture.

Can you explain the name of the band and your reasons for choosing that name?

Erm…touchy point. Is it always this way with band names? It’s always been a sticking point largely for what it represents in English but it basically means boy or son in Romani, in fact now that Kalderash Romani is standardizing Romani across the globe it should really be spelt Shavo but I like the controversy around it as Chavo. People really have an opinion on it; they either despise it or love it.  Sometimes they just laugh, I rather like that.

You sing in Romani as well as English. Is that important to you? 

Yes it is important but not for reasons of affinity. I just love those old songs. And it has taken (is taking) me many years to learn how to deliver them properly. But it’s brilliant how people respond to them regardless of whether they understand the language. It’s an interesting fact that many people often respond more positively to vocal music regardless of whether they understand the lyrics.

It is my understanding that while Romani Vlax is the most widely spoken Romani language, Romanies in Britain speak a more anglicised version. Has mainland Romani or our own tweaked Anglo-Romani influenced your lyrics?

No it hasn’t, although I’ve always wanted to write a song using Anglo-Romani and English, I’ll probably need to seek out an expert first though. 

Do the band members who are Romani have much of an insight into their Romani ancestry? For example I am always fascinated to find out more about when my family came to the UK, where they have travelled and where they feel most connect to.

Speaking for myself (Jim), when my family migrated to Liverpool they became sedentary almost at once and our Romani past was hardly ever mentioned until I was about 11 or 12. It’s a sad fact not just amongst Rom but all migrants that a new country means a new life and indeed in some cases a new identity. This is what happened with my family, and while all stories are not lost, the gap in the generations where the denial took place means a lot of information has simply gone with them to the grave. I say write down or record everything you can of the older generations. That is a mistake of mine I’ll always regret.

Again, for the Romani members....is being a Romani a large and visible part of your identity? I recall when we were younger, we were told not to tell people that we were Romani as there was so much prejudice, but as an adult I am much more upfront about it being a large part of who I am.

I wouldn’t say it was a major part of our identity as a band since we also have a Jewish population as well as good ol’ Anglo-Saxons. But for me I’m very proud and open about my Romani roots, yet that is also because my livelihood and safety no longer depend on it. There are millions of Romani living today that face such racial prejudice and violence that roots are not high on the daily agenda, and while nearly all European governments are either actively involved in this discrimination or are turning a blind eye, I hope that the growing interest amongst people wanting to know more of their Romani past might switch them on to the plight of the Rom in the present.

Obviously Gypsy music has influenced you. Can you be more specific and tell us which Gypsy musicians in particular have influenced you?

So many…, obviously the ‘Taraf’ go without saying, The Hungarian, Romani Rota are a big influence for us too. Ando Drom and Parno Graszt two other Hungarian string bands are masters of playing Romani dance music from that region, in our early days we worked hard to develop the easy energy they are capable of switching on at a moments notice. We’ve still a long way to go.

We’ve got an old vinyl copy of a Vujicsics Ensemble album called Southern Slav folk music it’s not Gypsy music officially but we loved the way they would play fast harmonies with two prim-tamburas (a small Balkan lute) and we’ve used that technique, but with two mandolins, for much of our own material.


It's not just all about Gypsy music. What other European folk music has inspired the band. [I have read that you have been influenced by other European folk musicians from Spain, Italy and other southern countries.]

We just love to play knees-up music. While we mainly nod to the south east of Europe we’ve sometimes dropped in an Irish medley or an Italian Tarantella, we don’t claim to be experts at playing this stuff but the important thing is that the audience are into it, bizarrely the Irish stuff almost always invariably goes down well. We’ve always wondered whether it was something like the change in the rhythms that spurs this or the switch to a major key but it’s probably just that everybody likes an Irish tune when they have a beer in their hand.

Do you see Gypsy and Klezmer as musical cousins, given that migrant Gypsy and Jewish communities over the centuries seem to have lived and travelled in close proximity?

Yes certainly, we feel there is much shared history between the two musics, and musically speaking there is much that is related. Some have suggested that a lot of Jewish music survived the Holocaust due to Romani musicians keeping it alive but we mustn’t forget that Romanies were the only other population besides the Jews who were targeted for extermination on racial/ethnic grounds in the Final Solution, known as ‘O Baro Porrajmos’ or the ‘Great Devouring’ in Romani. 

It’s difficult and probably not worth trying to pin down a Gypsy music as a genre in itself. The Rom have historically used music as a means of income amongst other trades, with instruments passing down the generations. But as professional performers they would mostly find employment outside of their own culture, other groups such as Serbs, Croats, Slovaks, Muslims and Jews who would often want to hear their own music. This is how Gypsy musicians developed their reputation, by learning to play everything for everyone. If I was trying to pinpoint the real differences in Klezmer and Gypsy music I would say listen to the fiddle players, their techniques are often defined by their culture and can be quite unique. We play, steal and adapt songs from both cultures and find that they evoke similar emotions although Klezmer can sometimes be really dark.


You're described as a folk dance band. Is it important to get people moving at concerts? Which of your songs really gets the crowd swinging?

Certainly, we like to see people moving that’s what keeps our energy up too but they don’t have to if they don’t want to. Sometimes it can get too fast and you can see the entire audience running on the spot. That must be knackering. The key is to sway to the music, swing to the um-pa, like a belly dancer and not try to keep up with your feet. You can go on forever like that.   

What have been some of your favourite gigs? And why?

My favourites are the club nights. We played a Balkan beats here in London once and the crowd were really up for it. Boshing all sorts of stuff. You could see it in their eyes. The DJ was playing some Serbian brass with fat beats underneath, probably a German thing, which is a big sound. There’s at least twenty odd musicians on that record so it’s quite daunting to follow up as a little five piece...no four piece at the time as we had no drums. But it didn’t matter. As soon as we struck up the crowd were behind us, instantly. I don’t think it was our band necessarily. This audience wanted to have a good time. And once that enthusiasm gives you some room to breath and get down to it, it’s a snowball effect. They make us happy, we do a better show and make them happier and so on and so on. I never want to come off stage on those days. We had a good Larmer Tree festival, probably our biggest crowd to date and I’ll never forget the time one show organizer turned up with a home made papier mache cock as a hat. Complete with balls, with her own hair as the pubic hair of said knob, didn’t matter how the show went that day it was a favourite.


Is this album your only recorded output so far or are there other recordings that we should track down?

There’s our take on an old Bulgarian tune called Ganka’s song out on the Bellowhead compilation album Umbrellowhead. Our old friend Andy Mellon from Bellowhead has played trumpet for us a few times at gigs and on recordings. Bellowhead decided to put out an album of music that the members of the band were involved in outside of Bellowhead time so Andy kindly put us on. I believe it’s a popular tune amongst the Bellowhead folk.

Can you tell us where we can get your cd from and finally what's next for Chavo?

Yeah sure. Just go straight to our website chavo.co.uk there’s a few ways to buy the ‘Boundary Lane’ album on there via iTunes, CDbaby or Amazon.com

We’re currently in the middle of recording our difficult second. Except that it’s not that difficult really, rather we’re having loads of fun playing around with the songs, changing the instrumentation, widening the sound and bringing in other cherished influences; Western revenge films, early Rock’n’Roll and Blues. While Boundary Lane was a collection of songs, hopefully what we’ll have at the end of the second is something more thematic, filmic even. But then again it’s not finished yet so who knows.

                                Chavo at Nazdrove with Penny Metal DJ


DJ Penny Metal Interview NaZZINE December 2010



Do we need to introduce Penny Metal? Not really!! Just a fab DJ that dabbles in many things of artyness!! From designing posters to t-shirts to running her own club night and DJ globe trotter. Penny is long overdue a booking to DJ at NaZdrove! Consider it a certainty early next year!!



Bearing in mind that we live on an insular little island; How and when did you have your eastern european music epiphany?! What was it that prompted you to start playing the tunes you do?

I was off my head in a field dancing to techno when I stopped and thought: “this is shit!” I was so bored of the repetitive beat, the coldness of the electronic sounds and the insular way people danced. It was just not my rhythm!. I went back to the classical music which I grew up with and rediscovered Brahms Hungarian dances; remembered why I liked playing the Sabre Dance on the piano; my instinctive love of Eastern European graphic design and vodka and went from there. I went researching! That is when the vinyl collecting began. And I was in a position to play the tunes as I was making parties with people who encouraged me to play them. It was the start of my mission to ‘play tunes no one has ever heard and ought to’! The music continues to surprise and inspire me.

What were your musical tastes prior to this? I may be wrong but I was thinking that (like me!) you were a bit of a punk in days gone by and also possibly into the new age traveller, dubby techno festie world.....

Yes to all those!

I recall your first gig was Djing under a railway arch (was it in Italy?). How did that come about and how did it go?

It was in a squatted railway arch next to the bus garage in Camberwell, south London about 14 years ago. I had two cassette tapes of Romanian folk music and 30 bottle of vodka. It wasn’t really DJing, more to see if I could get a reaction with the music. Needless to say there were some very crazy drunken people having a great time but I really put that down to the vodka! I bribed them! It was also where the phrase ‘Mad Tunes’ came from.

After that first gig, what came next? Please tell us a little about your gigs in the early days of your DJ adventure and people's reactions! 

I was running around with the LSDiezel Sound system who were based in said squat so there were lots of opportunities to play… usually at 7 in the morning when everyone was either dubbed out or in a K-hole. I got the same reaction as I do now – amusement and bewilderment! My first regular DJ gigs were with Stranger than Paradise.



Can you tell us a little about the tunes you are currently playing? It would be interesting to know how you gel all these styles together and what forms the bedrock of your set. I guess there is an emphasis on all out speedy folk tunes? (Can you tell us about some of the music styles you play - from Ukrainian folk tunes to wedding songs - help our readers understand these styles a little!!!)

Gosh that is really difficult to describe! And I have yet to meet anyone who can describe what I do! Just by definition of Mad Tunes my sets are eclectic. The audience determines what tunes I play and my audiences vary wildly! I’m big into surf, Finnish rock and Israeli folk dances at the moment, and my ever expanding collection of weird electronic cartoon tunes. I usually start off quite something ‘safe’ like The Barry Sisters, Diablo Swing Orchestra, Cabernet Deneuve… something with a recognisable rhythm… and then take it from there. I have to build them up to the extreme Mad Tunes like speed accordionist Branimir Dokic and some of the Romanian tunes, and then I have a few cute crossover tunes which will spin the audience into the electronic world of moogs and theremins and back again into a world of bouzoukis. Its unpredictable, fun and dependent on what alcohol I am drinking! 

Which of your songs are bonafide dance floor fillers!

Macedonian Hora - the BluTones, The Twilight Zone – The Ventures, Hiszpan – Lao Che

What is the craziest song in your set? Is there perhaps one song that you know is so off kilter that it will just completely confuse the dance floor! ( It often makes me smile to see that look on people's face when they suddenly think "How the hell do I dance to this crazy tune!!!")

There are many! Probably Gossipo Perpetuo by Jean Jacques Perrey, though most people look confused when I play!

Is there an Eastern European song that you just know you could never get away with playing in your set?!

Anything the other Dj has played.


Tell us about some of your club nights you have run in London. I'm thinking Soviet Reunion, Cossack Disko......

Soviet Reunion was great until I had to change the name to Cossack Disko! It was never the same and I gave up after being continually asked to play Shantel.



Polka Club and Radio Gargarin are great little nights. But my favourite nights are with The Last Tuesday Society which are wonderfully decadent. I usually play on top of a coffin surrounded by pig heads and chicken feet, or in front of naked men and women lounging in cake! And I’m usually drunk on champagne.

I get the impression that you have a personal affinity with a lot of this music beyond just how it sounds? Is there another, perhaps personal/ political, dimension to what you do?

Communism!

Have your previous music scene involvements influenced you as a DJ? Are there ideas or aspects from other scenes that you have tried to weave into your current musical endeavours?

Yes, only in the aspect that a lot of my friends make obscure music. I try to stay unique in what I do. And I have a penchant for short crazy electronic tunes inspired by my love of cartoons.

You've DJ'd at some of the major European mainland club nights - Balkan Beats, Nuits Tsigane etc. What have been some of your highlights? (Any favourite club nights/DJs?)




Nuits Tsigane in Paris was a real highlight – it was my first ‘big gig’ and I was playing with Dj ClicK, Gaetano Fabri and DJ Tagada and sat there wondering how the hell my set would fit in to what they were playing! And they sat there wondering how the hell they were going to follow my set! It was also the first time I showed my Soviet commercial design slideshow so to me it was special. The Kopi in Berlin was funny – I had a room full of punks bouncing off the walls to cheesy Ukrainian wedding tunes! I also love playing at balkanXpress with Kosta Kostov. But my most enjoyable gigs are at the Escheloraque in Berlin with my favourite DJ Miss Vergnuegen – I am always astounded at the tunes she plays!

So....Djing from London to Budapest via Vienna and Helsinki to Istanbul. Can you tell us in which city you had the craziest reaction and what it was like?

At a bar in Naples to a completely unsuspecting audience! They were expecting house music. I did play some pretty obscure tarantellas…



I've seen you listed to DJ at some slightly strange cultural events. What is the strangest non-music event you have been a dj at?

The launch of Grand Theft Auto 4.

You have the vinyl obsession! I take it you have some record hunting stories to tell us? (Greatest finds etc or funny related stories to finding vinyl).

In Bucharest I was rather upset to find that my regular dealer had disappeared so I recruited my friend to search out some. We ended up at a bookstall next to a metro station. It took him a while to convince the stall holder to open the metal cabinet behind him…”but Sir there is nothing in there except rubbish”…. out fell about 30 musty, warped records. Romanian folk, famous singers from the 50s, disco etc. I bought 20 of them - they smelt of communism! They still stink! But they sound great!



When did the 'condition' that is record collecting first come on? Is it a condition that you can manage, or has it taken over!

Haha great question! About 15 years ago when I went on my voyage of discovery of Eastern European music. But I have always been a collector – my vinyl has to compete with collections of circular saw blades, graphic design books and dead bumblebees! But finances and space does limit me and sometimes when I get the urge to go hunting and I don’t find anything I am rather grateful. But when I do I am always throwing everything unessential out of my bag to fit in a few extra records. My last bag broke hauling 52 vinyls back from St Petersburg.

What release is the holy grail of your record hunting? 

That has yet to be determined! I thought I found it 7 years ago when I got Romanian Dances by the BluTones but I keep on finding astounding records.

Favourite places to hunt out records?

Berlin.



But you are not just a DJ! Can you tell us a little about all your other projects? - the Compilation CD series you have been releasing - Mad Tunes Radio Show on the airwaves......

The Mad Tunes CDs: the best tunes from my vinyl collection. I wanted to introduce people to the tunes, most of which you couldn’t find on CD. And the audiences I was playing to at the time had no clue about the music so the Cds were a good introduction. 10 years on I have just made Vol 16. I am up against iTunes as record companies are uploading their back catalogues but this just makes me more determined to find more and more obscure tunes. I have given away so many Mad Tunes Cds over the years and love it when people excitedly tell me they ‘have Vol 4’!



The Mad Tunes Show on wirelessfm.net: I started the internet radio station Wirelessfm with a couple of friends about 7 years ago and have doing a show ever since. We used to broadcast out of St Agnes Place until it got evicted and demolished. Now I broadcast from my front room. Its rather random, like my DJ sets, but it gives me a chance to discover new tunes. It does get a bit difficult when I can’t pronounce what I am playing though!

Slideshows: I started making simple slideshows when I was running Soviet Reunion. I have a vast collection of Soviet advertising posters which I found on the internet and they made a great backdrop to the music. I go against the trend of movies and cutup videos as I like to present the image as a whole rather than be ‘arty’ about it. This attitude probably explains my dislike of remixed music! I also like to tailor-make each slideshow to fit the gig. I did a vintage food poster slideshow to show in Italy. And I have a new Czech matchbox slideshow…

The Tower of Beebel is an installation of dead bumblebees, currently standing at 137ft tall. Another of my collections! My ambition is to show it in Tate Modern, with a soundtrack of my 59 versions of Flight of the Bumblebee, and an exhibition of my photographs and information about bumblebees.

You also have a deep interest in the world of design? You say your influences range from dada, punk and soviet graphics - can you tell us a little about those influences?

Dada and punk went hand in hand – they were both confrontational and I have always been on the rebellious side so they really spoke to me and determined my outlook on life. I also have an interest in propaganda and advertising and always admired the strength and simplicity of Russian graphics, the essence of which I have adopted in my DJ sets. Design and music define a country and the more I explore the music the more I understand the design. Currently I am into Czech matchbox design and print processes.

Am I right in thinking that you have designed your own posters and you are also running a clothing line?

Well my other job is as a graphic designer so it made sense to design my own posters! The clothing shop came about when I had no money and no work and needed to expand my design style by finally learning Illustrator (most of my design is photo based). I had accumulated this huge collection of Czech and Polish matchbox covers from the internet and some of the images were ripe for interpretation. I was admiring a t-shirt of an owl in Cologne recently when the guy who was wearing it said ‘it’s yours!’ Doh!

Tell me about your fascination with the design of record covers and your recent exhibition of LP sleeves in Scandinavia - how did that go?

Theoretically, as a designer I feel I should try and portray a product realistically. With the majority of the record covers they seem to dispel that theory! I find great covers with bad music, and bad covers with great music. But as a whole my attitude is: if the record is bad its not a problem as the logo is great/cover is great/sleeve notes are funny or any combination of these! In Uppsala it was the first time I had shown them and it was well received. It was really nice to talk people through the designs, pointing out font use, photo use and styles defined by decade. Then I sold them a Mad Tunes CD! I would love to do a bigger exhibition.

Phew that's a lot of activity for one person, is there anything else we should know about Penny Metal?

I am a bumblebee specialist.

Where are you going in 2011?

A Na Zdrove Party?