Category: Culture/Art

  • Branle de Champaigne: La Sublime Porte: Voix d’Istanbul

    Branle de Champaigne: La Sublime Porte: Voix d’Istanbul

    16 tracks – MP3 192 Kbps

    01 – Taksim & Makam «Uzzäl usules Darb-i feth»

    02 – Kar-i Ses-avaz

    03 – Chanson et Danse «Siretsi yares taran-Noubar noubar»

    04 – Por alli pasó un cavallero (M. Figueras, L. Elmaleh)

    05 – Taksim & Makam «Bûselik usules» (Mss. Dimitrie Cantemir 335)

    06 – Hisar Agir Semai (Gürsoy Dinçer)

    07 – Taksim & Danse (kemençe & percussion)

    08 – Prière (Lior Elmaleh, kemençe & oud)

    09 – Taksim & Makam Rehavi Çember

    10 – Gazel (Gürsoy Dinçer)

    11 – Taksim & Makam «Hicâz usules Devr-i Kebir»

    12 – Punxa, punxa (Montserrat Figueras)

    13 – El Rey que tanto madruga (instrumental)

    14 – Hisar Buselik Sarki (Gürsoy Dinçer)

    15 – Plainte « En Sarer II » (duo Duduk – flûtes arméniennes)

    16 – Rast nakis beste « Amed nesim-i » (Gürsoy Dinçer)

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    Jordi Savall is a fearless performer who is fascinated with facilitating musical dialogues between Eastern and Western traditions. –Npr

    The Sublime Porte (Sublime Gate) was the name of the open court of the sultan, led by the Grand Vizier. It got its name from the gate to the headquarters of the Grand Vizier in Topkapi Palace in Istanbul, where the sultan held the greeting ceremony for foreign ambassadors. It was an ancient Ottoman practice to make the gates of cities and kings palaces places of assembly. Later the name came to refer to the Empire s position as gateway between Europe and Asia. Following the success of the album Istanbul, Jordi Savall crosses new boundaries between Orient and Occident. This time, the vocal traditions of the Ottoman Empire, Armenia and the Jewish Diaspora are brilliantly resuscitated. Instrumental interludes enable us to enjoy this journey through time and space. In addition to Hespèrion XXI, this album features the elite of Turkish traditional musicians under the inspired direction of Maestro Savall.

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    Gürsoy Dinçer: chant

    Montserrat Figueras: chant

    Lior Elmaleh: chant

    HESPÈRION XXI

    Pierre Hamon: ney

    Pedro Estevan: percussion

    Jordi Savall: lira, vielle, rebab & direction

    Et musiciens de

    ARMÉNIE

    Georgi Minassyan: duduk

    Haïg Sarikouyoumdjian: duduk

    Gaguik Mouradian: kemençe

    TURQUIE

    Derya Türkan: kemençe

    Yurdal Tokcan: oud

    Murat Salim Tokaç: tanbur

    Hakan Güngör: kanun

    Fahrettin Yarkın: percussion

    BULGARIE

    Nedyalko Nedyalkov: kaval

    ISRAËL

    Yair Dalal: oud

    GRÈCE

    Dimitri Psonis: santur et morisca

    MAROC

    Driss El Maloumi: oud

    via Branle de Champaigne: La Sublime Porte: Voix d’Istanbul.

  • Erkan Oğur – Bach – Aşk-Matthias Passion

    Erkan Oğur – Bach – Aşk-Matthias Passion

    Buy the album at: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B004RCMP3C/ref=as_li_qf_sp_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=jormundgard-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=B004RCMP3C

    High Quality:

    Erkan Oğur’s interpretation of the choral “Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen” from Johann Sebastian Bach’s “Matthäus-Passion”.

    For the original work:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DnZt5iXvGg8&t=63s

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erkan_Ogur

    via Erkan Oğur – Bach – Aşk-Matthias Passion – YouTube.

  • Les Variations d’Heybeli, Op.2, No.1 – Emir Gamsızoğlu

    Les Variations d’Heybeli, Op.2, No.1 – Emir Gamsızoğlu

    Piano Variations on a theme from
    Yesari Asım Arsoy’s “Biz Heybeli’de Her Gece Mehtaba Çıkardık”
    Composer & Pianist: Emir Gamsızoğlu

    Yesari Asım Arsoy’un “Biz Heybeli’de Her Gece Mehtaba Çıkardık”
    şarkısının teması üzerine Piyano Çeşitlemeleri
    Besteci ve piyanist: Emir Gamsızoğlu

    Album not to release !
    Check our website, contribute and be a part of it.
    www.allaturcaaroundtheworld.com

    Satışa sunulmayacak bir albüm !
    Websitemize bir göz atın, katkıda bulunun ve bu çalışmanın bir parçası olun.
    www.allaturcailedevrialem.com

    GAYA FILM’e teşekkür ederiz.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emir_Gamsızoğlu
    http://tr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emir_Gamsızoğlu

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  • How to drink like a lion in Istanbul

    How to drink like a lion in Istanbul

    By Kara Newman

    Mon Jun 25, 2012 7:31am EDT

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    (Reuters.com) – Bridging Europe and Asia, Istanbul has become Turkey’s financial, cultural and historic centre. In addition to quality local wines and beers, the city’s tipplers consume their fair share of distilled spirits – particularly vodka, tequila and whiskey – with a cocktail culture on the ascent.

    “The most popular drink in Istanbul is raki,” says Cevat Yildrim, bartender at local restaurant Lucca (<www.luccastyle.com/>).

    This clear, anise-flavoured spirit, widely considered the national alcoholic drink of Turkey, is made from grapes and distilled to an alcohol level comparable to vodka (40 percent alcohol by volume or higher).

    Most consume the spirit straight up as a shot, or diluted with water, which changes the colour of the spirit to a milky white (leading to its nickname “Lion’s Milk” – also a reference to the courage of those who dare to drink raki).

    According to Istanbul-based tour guide Burak Sansal, drinking raki has its own set of rituals. “Most important is what it is to be partaken with,” he writes.

    “White cheese is the main and unchangeable ‘meze’ of raki,” though cold vegetable and seafood dishes also are favoured pairings.

    The Bosphorus divides Istanbul in two, and most of the best places to eat and drink come with vast water views. Although many bars and clubs close their open-air terraces during the winter months, Istanbul is noted for its lively approach to nightlife and drinks flow freely.

    In addition to his own establishment, Yildrim also recommends venues such as Sunset Grill & Bar (<www.sunsetgrillbar.com/>), noted for its stunning views of the Bosphorus, strong wine list and affluent clientele.

    Other picks include Turkish-Italian restaurant Paper Moon (<www.papermoonmilano.com/>) and Ulus 29 (<www.group-29.com/>), a bar and club located on the hilltop of Ulus.

    In addition, he recommends the bars of five-star hotels such as the Four Seasons Istanbul (<www.fourseasons.com/istanbul/>) which boasts two properties: Sultanahmet, closer to the tourist attractions of the Old City, and higher-end Bosphorus, where nightlife flourishes.

    At these upscale bars and restaurants, raki will be available for the asking, but wine and fruity cocktails (such as the one below) fill out the menu listings. Be sure to raise your glass and roar: “Serefe!”

    RECIPE: Chilli Passion Margarita

    Courtesy of Cevat Yildrim, Lucca

    2 ounces Patron Silver Tequila

    1 ounce orange liqueur

    1 ounce passion fruit

    1 ounce lime concentrate

    3/4 tablespoon chilli pepper juice

    In a cocktail shaker, combine all ingredients with ice. Shake vigorously and strain into a Margarita glass. (Kara Newman is the author of “The Secret Financial Life of Food”, Columbia University Press; publication date autumn 2012. Any opinions expressed are her own.) (Editing by Peter Myers)

    via The Spirited Traveller: How to drink like a lion in Istanbul | Reuters.

  • ‘Taken 2’ Trailer: Liam Neeson Kicks Butt in Istanbul | Hollywood.com

    ‘Taken 2’ Trailer: Liam Neeson Kicks Butt in Istanbul | Hollywood.com

    By Brian Marder , Hollywood.com Staff | Thursday, June 21, 2012

    The brand-new trailer for Taken 2 was unveiled on Thursday, and it looks like we’re in for much more of the same Liam Neeson revenge action that made the first installment so popular — this time set against the beautiful backdrop of Istanbul!

    Much of the original’s cast and crew — with the glaring exception being Olivier Megaton replacing previous director Pierre Morel — has returned for Taken 2, which finds retired CIA Agent Bryan Mills (Neeson) on vacation in Istanbul with his wife (Famke Janssen) and daughter (Maggie Grace). Mills is soon forced back into action, however, when his wife is taken hostage by a revenge-seeking father (Rade Serbedzija).

    Check out the trailer below, and don’t miss Taken 2 when it hits theaters on Oct. 5.

    via ‘Taken 2’ Trailer: Liam Neeson Kicks Butt in Istanbul | Hollywood.com.

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  • Artik Sevmeyecegim – Antwerp Gipsy Ska Orchestra

    Artik Sevmeyecegim – Antwerp Gipsy Ska Orchestra

    About A.G.S.O.

    How is it that the Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra has left a trail of scorched stages, dumbfounded purists and crowds which have been whipped into a frenzy across Europe, from the south to the Balkans? Possibly because these formerly illegal globetrotters pimp their clash of sizzling hot gipsy and fast ska with trashy horns and fat beats? Their second album I Lumia Mo Kher – Serbian Romani for: The World Is My House – is teeming with energy, ambition and an appetite for life. Gipsy-ska never sounded this original and dazzling before!

    “Antwerp gipsies in the house, so watcha watcha watcha want
    Antwerp gipsies in the house, we play for you

    Hear the gipsies, hear the boys, hear the rhythms speak

    The floor will burn, so get up and dance if you don’t want to get burned”

    Bašalaja (freely translated from Romani)

    I Lumia Mo Kher marks the new course that the Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra has charted for itself. Guitar player Mukti Gabriels explains: “After a few years of testing the waters and experimenting we have now found our sound”. “Our debut, Tuttilegal (2007) sounded rather acoustic and introverted. DJs really couldn’t do much with it at the time. The new album is more dynamic and the Balkan beats, loops and samples are more apparent.”

    But Tuttilegal (2007) did not exactly go unnoticed. The album entered the German Radio College charts on 2 – between Oasis and Metallica! – with rave reviews for the group and performances throughout Europe. The Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra became a favourite festival act in no time at all.

    The genesis of this collective explains the unusual crossover of styles. Originally the Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra was an intercontinental family, with roots in Belgium, Serbia, Chile and Argentina. Its members were or are active in numerous other configurations, including Ambrassband, Donkey Diesel, Murga Armada, Gregor Terror & The Calypso Gigolos, Nathan Daems Quintet, Laïs, Belgian Asociality and Think Of One. 

    “Before this Mukti and I played in a ska-punk band”, says singer Gregor Engelen. “After that fell apart I discovered gipsy music through Emir Kusturica’s films. So I decided to start experimenting with the combination of gipsy and ska and this sound, which is continuously evolving, was the outcome. Although we do call ourselves the Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra our music also draws on drum ‘n bass, samba and dubstep. You need to constantly think of new angles to be original in the Balkan beats world.”

    But the Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra prides itself on being a real live group. “Even if you take away all the electronics the sound is still there. And anyway, not all our songs sound electronic”, Mukti hastens to add. He is proud that I Lumia Mo Kher includes some contributions by a number of renowned gipsy musicians. No artificial collaborations, but the inevitable consequences of warm backstage friendships.

    “We know these musicians personally”, Gregor emphasizes. “Kočani Orkestar from Macedonia joined us on Roma Project. Marko Markovic, the son of Serbian trumpet player, Boban Markovic played on Bašalaja. The technique of these guys is unbelievable. Miles Davis once said about Markovic: ‘I didn’t know you could play the trumpet like this’. The day after his gig in Antwerp Marko Markovic joined us in the studio. He is one of those young guys who digs what we are doing with gipsy music. Instead of their traditional music they also want to play innovative stuff like we do. Gipsy music is dance music.”

    “You don’t like gipsy‐reggae?
    I will shed no tears

    Go listen to Britney Spears”

    No Disco Boy

    The Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra’s approach is adventurous, unique and groundbreaking. “I don’t think we need to be too modest about it”, says Mukti. “Everyone thinks that every possible cross-pollination has already been tried and tested but we think that we are really pioneers in this genre, who are doing something different and new with this style.”

    Gregor likes to illustrate his point with Roma Project. “This is Romany gipsy-hiphop inspired by Gipsy.cz, the group which represented the Czech Republic at the Eurovision Song Contest. So we started thinking about making a gipsy song with a hiphop beat. The Kočani Orkestar’s musicians played the rhythms with their baritone tubas. Real crossover, in other words. The audience goes crazy every time we play it live.”

    Is the Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra venturing on thin ice with this crossover? So what? The future belongs to the brave. The group has even ventured into the lion’s den thanks to its solid live reputation. In last few years the Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra was even invited to the International Romani Art Festival in Romania. At the prestigious Sziget Festival in Budapest the group whipped the Roma tent into a frenzy as the only non-Eastern European act among renowned traditional gipsy orchestras.

    “At Sziget we were approached by the director of an old Bulgarian gipsy orchestra who told us that we are doing something positive for gipsy and Roma music. In their country they are attacked on the street and discriminated against. We enjoy their respect because of the way we interact with their music. We had to ask permission for Kerta Mange, our tribute to gipsy singer Šaban Bajramović, who died. We would have had to ditch this track if his heirs felt that our version sucked. But they gave us the go-ahead. ”

    Gregor is often considered to be an authentic Romani musician because of his presence and looks. Another factor that contributes to this is the fact that he expresses himself in a smattering of local gipsy languages. “I learned it using an English-Romani dictionary. I think it’s fascinating. I think that Serbian Romani is the most beautiful language for songs. It sounds like such a musical language. I also sing in Italian, French, English and Antwerp dialect. It’s boring and uninteresting to sing in one single language.”

    “When you think about it, it’s quite logical for the Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra”, Mukti notes. “Our music is also an amalgam; the different languages help make our music completely different and unique.”

    Gregor admits that his command of all these languages is far from perfect. “I know what I’m singing but speaking Romani is very difficult. It’s almost like a secret language and gipsies would prefer to keep it that way. I have them translate my lyrics and I check my pronunciation with the family members of our keyboard player, Suki. If he understands what I’m singing, then I’m satisfied.”

    “Le diable dit: écoute bonhomme, je te prie, ce terrain est à nous
    chaque samedi, nous nous réunissons, tous les diables, pour danser toute la nuit

    de toute manière, tu ne peux pas dormir”

    A la Truko

    Even the most adamant purists tend to review their opinion when confronted with the whirlwind known as the Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra. And the eternal doubters are generally swayed by the group’s energetic approach. “We used to have red mohawks and play punk music. Punk and gipsy are the same really”, says Gregor. “The Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra’s attitude is one of ‘I don’t really give a damn’, with a bit of gipsy-punk thrown in for good measure. I Lumia Mo Kher contains distorted guitars and songs that are perfect for headbanging.”

    A la Truko, our adaptation of a song by Taraf de Haïdouks and Kočani Orkestar is a clash of horns, guitars and drum ‘n bass rhythms. To me that’s punk. You can pogo to it. No Disco Boy is a parody of commercial gipsy acts. There’s a lot that can be said about us, but we are definitely not wussies. We have a statement to make and we have attitude.”

    That’s probably why the group quotes the punk veterans of Disorder in No Disco Boy (“Fuck your Nationality / Smash It To The Walls / Boundaries and barriers are the cause of all the wars”) as well as grindcore legend Napalm Death (“Multinational corporation / Genocide of the starving nations / That’s right we don’t want no more”). “These are significant references to our heroes from the late Eighties and early Nineties. Fuck it all!” Gregor explains. “But we have no problems performing a simple love song”, Mukti adds.

    “Is er dan zoveel gebeurd
    hemmek u hart zo verscheurd
    vallet echt ni meer te lijmen
    kwas zo stoem, om het ni in te zien
    zal ik dan eeuwig alleen blijven?”

    Te Laat (Too Late)

    In order to coin the right sound for I Lumia Mo Kher the band decided to collaborate with internationally renowned sound engineer/producer Michael Zimmerling. “We are a very dynamic group. That is why we wanted to work with a producer who was capable of conveying this. We needed someone who could think out of the box. Michael Zimmerling worked as the sound engineer of Simply Red for several years and collaborated on albums by Depeche Mode, Sigue Sigue Sputnik, Nina Hagen and Einstürzende Neubauten. He came to Antwerp to record our album with modern techniques, and then went to London where he mixed our album with analogue equipment. A producer should be a sound creator with a vision. Zimmerling was the perfect man for our album. Thanks to his experience he understands how important the sound of the drums is. As a result our album has become even more explosive and danceable.”

    And what title could have been better suited than I Lumia Mo Kher (The World Is My House). This is not an empty statement but a heartfelt message. “We are always on the road, either with the band or individually. At one point, we were all in different countries: Argentina, New Zealand, Italy… If globalization has a benefit then it has to be the fact that borders are becoming increasingly blurred. The world is literally our home, our house, like it is for gipsies.”

    It also says a lot about the growing ambitions of the Antwerp Gipsy-Ska Orkestra. “We want to perform all over the world”, says Mukti. “And people from all over the world want us as is evident from the requests from festival organisers in Moldova, Russia, Mongolia, Turkey, Japan, Canada, Mexico… Unfortunately this is not always feasible from a logistical point of view. We hope to bridge thi gap with this album.”

    (March 2011)

    The Musicians

    Gregor and Mukti are old friends, they played together in Moss, a hardcore punk trio with Gregor screaming and Mukti demolishing the drum kit. At the same time Mukti played the guitar in Tachyon, at that time also a punk band (he was also in Belgian Asociality from 1998 untill 2008)… One thing led to another and Gregor became the singer of Tachyon. After Tachyon split up in 2003 these friends found each other again in AGSO.

    Kosovo born Suki plays in Bazaar d’Oriënt and numerous gipsy-projects.

    Gregor leads the Ambrassband, a fanfare that grew out of the Antifare.
    And he recently founded the Antwerp Gipsy DJ Collective (AG/DC) and Gregor Terror & the calypso gigolos.

    Filip played bass with Le Trio Perdu. After their breakup, he formed the klezmer formation On Fidldikn Mamzer with the accordeonist. Among others Filip was an active member in the following bands Bobby’s Evil, Bacalhou (Fado), Tagsim (Arabo-Andalusisch) and Delicatessen (Free), Lais. These days you can catch him on shows of the Valerie Solanas, Andy and the Androids, Bazaar d’Oriënt & Jasper Huysentruyt.

    Roel Poriau is part of Think of One and Harvey Quinnt, he’s active as a producer (of Maroccan music amongst others) and sometimes plays with Vetex & Panic Attack.

    Filip & Nathan met each other on the stage of Nathan’s brother’s wedding, playing gipsy music all night long.
    Nathan Daems has two jazz combos: a trio called Mixed Languages (jazz/Indian classical music) & the Nathan Daems Quintet. He can also be found performing with Bazaar d’Oriënt, Vetex, Gregor Terror & the calypso gigolos, Maguaré