Monday, 11 February 2013

Kumpania Tzigane Festival, Toulouse 2007


Kumpania Tzigane Festival, Toulouse June 2007



We were traveling through the Languedoc region of France the other summer and decided to check out this festival. After much driving around the Toulouse ring roads without much of a clue where we were going we spotted across the fields the hallmarks of a festival - marquees and a random assortment of vans, and made towards it. What we found down a little lane was the most splendid squatted buildings - "Terre Blanque".  We pulled up our van into the parking spot for the "Living in a White Van" tribe and set out to check out the place before the festival kicked off. 

We managed to find out that Terra Blanque is a long running community of radical artists and activists. What they had done with the buildings was amazing - some of them even had Gaudi - esque facades grafted onto the buildings. It just shows what you can achieve with a squatted space if you can hang on to it longer than a month! Around the land was an amazing assortment of live in vehicles and even a boat. The field out the back was where the festival was to take place with an outdoor stage, bar (also serving food for a few euros) and a large marquee. The assembling crowd was a happy mix of alternative types and mums and dads from Toulouse.

As the sun went down the bands took to the stage. Out of the three bands the stand out one for us was the first band - Traio Romano (Gypsies from Trannsylvania living in France - check out their myspace), playing Gypsy Jazz accompanied by an amazing woman dancer. Their children also kept trying to be naughty and climb onto the stage only to be told off by the band! Late into the night the beats kicked off in the marquee as Kumpania Tzigane DJ's took to the decks joined from time to time by the younger members of Traio Romano to do some impromtu vocals, and later in the night the older blokes in the band gave it a go as well. Finally by dawn we dragged ourselves, tired, danced out and mosquito bitten, back to the van for some kip.













Kumpania Tzigane are a long running collective promoting gyspy, balkan and klezmer culture, who do loads of other events as well as their annual festival -  check them out on at www.myspace/kumpaniatzigani



Wednesday, 6 February 2013

DEATHRAY TREBUCHAY Nazzine No.1 2007


East London's Death Ray Trebuchay bring many ingredients to the mix. They hit you in the head when they summersault between Balkan Brass Jazzy Punk blasts and samba surf ska melees. It's all punked up into a big band assault even though there are only six members in the band. They blitzed the Nazdrove crowd this summer with a deranged set of punked out brass, even more so when they pulled out a Kalashnikov cover!!! Scary face masks abounded to only add to their frenetic live performance. Certainly a band that you can't resist dancing to.



Could you tell us a little about the band's sound? There's quite a few things going on there. Tell us what went into that mix and which influences came to dominate?
I guess that the Balkan brass sound is the biggest influence, but it’s mixed up with quite a lot of other stuff... especially hardcore punk and experimental music.


Tell us about the band members, your musical roots and how you came together?
I always loved the sound of Balkan brass, but the idea for the band came after traveling to the Guca trumpet festival in Serbia. I don’t know if you have heard of it but it’s totally amazing, there’s about 150,000 people there and all the music is Balkan brass. They all go apeshit! I came back and decided to put together a band, then spent 6 months going to gigs and asking round to find the right people. I came from a classical background but most of the other dudes are hardcore jazz players.


You've played mostly in London. Tell us a bit about what's going on there. What club nights have you played and are pretty happening at the moment?
The best nights we have played have been at Shunt, you should check out shunt.co.uk is being closed soon, so go down when you can! The entrance to the club is an anonymous looking door in London Bridge Train station. You step through and into another world… 


You've also played a few festivals. Which have been your faves?
Secret Garden was amazing, they put so much detail into what they do. Glastonbury of course, and the Glade was cool as well. Bestival was good apart from the fact that the Sugarhill Gang’s tour bus crashed into our van.


Without wanting to pigeonhole things, would you say there a sorta Balkany punky ska style diy scene forming or would you say things are a lot more fluid or looser than that?
Sort of, in a way I think it is just this country catching up with what has been going on in the continent for years. I don’t know if I would put us with that scene though, there are a lot of differences. All the music is written out and then memorised for one thing.


Is there something behind the music? A message and ethos? What are you trying to say as well as play?
Enjoy yourself.


I heard something about a new record. Do you want to tell us something about that? Title?Label? Songs? Artwork?
We have got our first single coming out on Feb. the 2nd, produced by Seb Rochford from Polar Bear. The man’s some sort of genius. The tracks are Number 6 and I’m Gonna Kick You In the Ass.


Any tours or gigs to support the release of that? And what festivals are you hoping to hit next year?
We are doing some gigs with Acoustic Ladyland that may form into a mini-tour, check out the myspace for details, it’s myspace.com/deathrayband. We will probably do a few less festivals this year, we did about 20 festival gigs last summer and at the end I was about ready to eat my own head if I saw another pieminister. I think Secret Garden and Glastonbury are going to be for certain though.
Cheers Dudes,
Llywelyn 




Sorry, all photos copyright Nick Royles, not to be used without permission. Please contact if you require any.

Top 5 Tunes - Yuriy Gurzhy - Nazzine No.1


The Nazdrove music files

File contents: Russendisko Top 5 
Date: Dec. 2008

Name: Yuriy Gurzhy
Occupation: Russendisko
Last known location: Berlin
Last known URL: www.myspace.com/yuriygurzhy
                www.myspace.com/russendiskoberlin





























RotFront - Sovietoblaster
From the forthcoming "Emigrantski Raggamuffin"-LP. 

After 5 years of the band's existence we finally knew we were ready... in April 2008 we went to the Phlexton Studio with Kraans De Lutin, who produced our first album.
"Sovietoblaster" is a story of a DJ who goes to the Eastern Europe searching for the old records on the flea-markets, taking a train from Vladivostok to Moscow, getting drunk for 7 days and nights in the dining car, spinning there the vinyls he just bought, and falling in love  with the Dancing Queen from Kiev, Ukraine.   
Emigrantski Raggamuffin Power meets German finest reggae-dub producer inna Vodka Hits Nonstop-Stylee!  
www.myspace.com/rotfrontberlin


Konsonans Retro - Freilachs Nr. 5
The funkiest brass band from the Eastern Europe today! Forget all the sad and dull klezmer served to you recently, dig this - a family band from Kodyma, Ukraine - they learned their repertoire straight from their fathers who used to play in the mixed jewish-ukrainian-moldovan wedding bands before the World War II - these guys stay faithfull to those original tunes and arrangements. This is the unpolished, authentic roots music at its best! Featured on the newest Russendisko compilation "Ukraine Do Amerika".
www.myspace.com/konsonansretro 


Perkalaba - Boogay
Raw power from the Carpathian mountains - crazy hutzuls with a tsimbl and a horn section playing their very personal take on reggae and ska, doing so with the intencity of The Stooges - and, seeing their singer in action, I bet Iggy Pop would be wondering where to get the same drugs.Both their albums are strongly recommended - absolutely essential listening! 
www.myspace.com/perkalaba


GOLEM - Train Across Ukraine
New Golem record (to be released on JDub in February 2009) is hot! Playing at the weddings every weekend, this band from New York knows how to rock without electric guitars or computer beats. The bands sound is tighter than ever, and the album features mainly Golem's own songs and less coverversions. The highlights include a klezmer analogue of "Je T'Aime.. Moi Non Plus" (sung in Yiddish), and the title song "Train Across Ukraine", among others.
www.myspace.com/golemrocks 


Poimannye Muravyedy - Marlboro
Imagine Molotov would come not from Mexico, but from Russia - that's the fastest way to describe how the band with one of the most exotic names in the world ("Poymanie Muraviedi" means "The Trapped Anteaters") sounds. Musically it's latinocore with a shot of russian melancholy, lyrically 80% is about sex, 10% about revolution, and the rest 10 about sex and revolution.One of their revolutionary strategies is giving away their album as MP3s from their official website.Go and download it NOW! And feel free to donate, the bank details in Russian can be found on the same page.
www.myspace.com/poimannyemuravyedy

Trans Siberian March Band Nazzine 1 2007

Hey you! Looking now? Thankyou! We are being happy to show you some old interviews from time of being Nazdrove Zine. Do not worry about mishaps of the past as we will be installing another episode of Nazzine sometime in the very near future.

In the meantime we are taking this opportunity to give you many things. Yes we are that kind. People say they have desire to see Nazzine once more and as we have been saying only short time ago, we will be bringing it to you very shortly, please be patient. Yes, in the meantime, please stick yer yockers on these postings as we are being very nice in allowing you to visualise old interviews and happenings in Nazzine.

The first interview we are bringing to your attention is from the fiery Trans Siberian March Band. They played a Naz at the great venue that is known as The Shakespeare, a long time ago. This interview is from the very first embryonic issue of Nazzine. We think we shall place interviews in order of publication as we think that is making sense. No?

Ok, Ok, here is short introductory interview with the band that  is marching across Siberia in more ways than one I think. Yes?





Can you give us a lowdown on the band. How you guys came together and who’s in the band?

Well some of us were the wind section with the London Gypsy Orchestra, got fed up with taking turns with the strings, just joking. We were turned on by the Balkan Brass bands like Kocani Orchestra and Fanfare Ciocarlia; by many burlesque brass bands in continental Europe and by the Hungry March Band in NYC. 

We have Issy on Clarinet, Sally on sax, Kath, Pippa and Catherine on trumpet, Lucy on tuba, Bryony on French Horn, Donald on bass trombone, Nick on guitar and Rob on percussion. Six of us were in the LGO at some point. The LGO is great for that; it takes conventional musicians and develops them. A few bands have come out of the LGO.

Why did you decide to leave the LGO to form Trans Sibs? 

Well we are a lot more flexible on gigs thats for sure.

Can you tell us a little about the name?

Some of have worked in Siberia. Love the people. Love the idea of Tran Siberian Marching! We are unusual having a front line of girls. Never happens in the Balkans and there’s something pretty cool about women playing brass. Brashly and loud and out-doing the blokes! As we are an all-girl band, some wear dresses for the Burlesque effect. We do have one TV in the band but you’d never guess. So we like the Trans thing.

You’ve been called the Sex Pistols of Balkan Brass? How punk are you and do you see that as complimentary?

We love that label. We don’t try and imitate the Balkan bands. We are a bit punky in the sense that we take stuff and keep it simple and danceable rather than working it into a strange time signature that’s hard to dance to after a few drinks. We see it as a visual concept as well. We have crocodile suits, all sorts of costumes and so on. We can get people going big time.

Your set is a mixture of covers and originals?

We do a lot of our own arrangements and like taking old ottoman battle tunes and scaring people with ‘em; taking straight Balkan tunes and ‘ska-ing’ them up (Ska Maro means Ska-ladybird, I think); also taking stuff from ‘Fiddler on the Roof’ and reggaeing it up in a Balkan way (Politburo Reggae); making Balkan tunes sound like a Mariachi band (Kustino Oro) and so on.

Most of our set is brassed up, re-arranged covers of traditional folk songs. We have a tango we are just about to learn that’s original and too cool for words!! And we love ‘Besame’, though our fave song at the moment is ‘Meschachina (Moonlight) - a Balkan tune that has sort of been nicked by a Serb Nationalist. We were really worried about playing it in Bosnia but they loved having a London band come back and give the tune back to them. It went down a storm.

Some of your songs you describe as Ottoman Battle Punk. Sounds a little aggro? Can you  tell us about these songs that you play?

Simple tunes designed to scare people. Hypnotically, rhythmic and quite threatening. We march in with these tunes or play them if we are actually marching. Audiences don’t expect them and it’s always cool when we do them.

Can you tell us more about your influences? You may need to tell us about sub-genres here!!!

Klezmer Reggae - well that’s Politburo Reggae from Tradition. Opening number of ‘Fiddler On The Roof’. 

Yugoslav Mariachi - Kustino Oro - we sounded like a Mexican band by accident and liked it so much we left it that way.

Balalikal Brass - Well that’s back to some of us working in Irkutsk / Lake Baikal where there’s some great music and we are arranging some of the shamanistic orientated music to be a bit like the Ottoman stuff.

When you cover more traditional songs are keeping true to the originals or are they bastardized - so to speak!!

Bastardized for sure!!! We don’t want to imitate. We are very keen on musicianship. We don’t change stuff for it’s own sake. Often we do stuff that has not been brassed up before but it will work for (e.g. Bublistchki that Gogol Bordello did a version of).

Your Balkan tour. Any highlights, low points? Some people might say it’s like taking coal to Newcastle! But do tell us how it went down!!

Low point was coming home. It was great! They loved us and we loved them.We are a girl band basically and that was a blast for the audiences (normally fat blokes). No one is playing their brass tradition anymore. Lots of smaller groups, or Euro pop with a keyboard, drum kit and guitar. No colour.

Have you any recordings available?

One EP.

Finally, you are planning a tour of North and South Ossetia, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia next year. Looking forward to it and your motivations?

We have an interest in conflict resolution and some of us have worked  in the Caucuses region. We need to save money and hope its cool to get there. The music in the regions is great and we would do some songs to take with us. Its hard to be in conflict when you are dancing!










Sorry but all photos are copyright Nick Royles. Not to be used without permission. Please contact me if you require any.