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    Di Naye Kapelye: Traktorist. Carpathian Klezmer (2009)

    Posted By: lajos
    Di Naye Kapelye: Traktorist. Carpathian Klezmer (2009)

    Di Naye Kapelye: Traktorist. Carpathian Klezmer (2009)
    eac/lame | ape+cue+no log OR mp3 160 vbr | 352 OR 97 MB | complete scan
    Oriente Musik | Catalog number Oriente RIEN CD 69 | 2009


    "Di Naye Kapelye is the band formed by American-of-Hungarian-ancestry Bob Cohen who headed off to visit the land whence came his parents many years ago, and never left.

    The band consists of Bob, fellow American Yankl Falk to represent the Left Coast, and the best local musicians he can find. Given that Bob has been traveling through the wilds of Eastern Europe for decades, jamming and collecting songs, this makes for quite a wild, skilled ensemble. The repertoire, of course, is of the region—songs from all over Eastern Europe from folk tunes to Hasidic nigunim to Communist-era propaganda (hence the title and wonderful Soviet-style graphic on the front cover). This may be the only klezmer album ever recorded that includes Hasidic nign and 1950s Romanian communist ode to the Yiddish tractor—the title track.

    Even as I try to put this music into some type of box to describe it, the boxes keep breaking. Listen to Michael Alpert wailing on "A briv fun Yisroel", another 1950s-era Yiddish communist ode, and then a few minutes later the kaval-like vioră cu goarnă. You got your wild hutsul music. You got your token 1915 Americanish klezmer tune (later a hit from Naftule Brandwein). You got cantor Yankl Falk's wonderful voice perfect on an Arkady Gendler tune, "Pirim." You have the gang—even 13-year-old Aron Cohen takes a solo— on "Az nisht keyn emine (one of the aforementioned hasidic nigunim). You have some of the most divine string ensemble playing, featuring an orchestra of instruments from tsimbl to viola, that you'll hear anywhere. Heck, one village band wasn't enough. They pull in whole village band of Tjaciv to supplement the regulars.

    The repertoire leave no part of Eastern Europe unscathed. There is even yet another recording of "Mashke," one of the band's signature tunes, even better than the previous recordings—Meyshke and Yankl are in top form here. Then they return the favor and close the album with Alpert's "Chernobyl," one of my favorite contrafactas (a melody applied to new words; this one many of us know better by the chorus, "hu tsa tsa"), an absolutely brilliant bit of writing by Alpert first recorded on the first Brave Old World album (an album that I still travel with). In Yiddish, the lyrics equate the Chernobyl hasidim, and their radiance-based mysticism, with the radiance of the local nuclear power plant disaster of not so long ago.

    I fear I slight the instrumentals, but only because I don't know where to begin. It's the band and their friends and amazing people they meet along the way. Especially notable is the "Hutsul Medley," which was, unfortunately, the last recording session for tsimbl player Misu Csernavec, who passed away only a few months later. And, as I mentioned caval earlier, there is a wonderful dance tune titled simply, "Modavian Caval," part of a medley attached to a doina-ish folk tune, "Pastekhl." The piece also features the cimpoi (Moldavian bagpipe).

    Bob, Yankl, and the band create magic. There are other great bands playing music from this region, but Cohen has a sense of breadth and balance that make Di Naye Kapelye concerts and recordings always exciting, always breathtaking. This isn't just this week's amazing batch of hutsul music; it's this week's amazing batch of hutsul music in context … a wonderous melange of music that best represents the mixed up world in which we live and makes it better. If I call this a "must have" CD I am being redundant, but I'll do it anyway."

    Ari Davidow, The KlezmerShack


    Di Naye Kapelye: Traktorist. Carpathian Klezmer (2009)

    Di Naye Kapelye: Traktorist. Carpathian Klezmer (2009)

    Di Naye Kapelye: Traktorist. Carpathian Klezmer (2009)

    Di Naye Kapelye: Traktorist. Carpathian Klezmer (2009)

    Di Naye Kapelye: Traktorist. Carpathian Klezmer (2009)

    Di Naye Kapelye: Traktorist. Carpathian Klezmer (2009)


    List of Tracks:

    1. Nit Bay Motyen
    2. Traktorist
    3. Pastekhl / Moldavian Caval
    4. Schwartz's Sirba / A Briv fun Yisroel
    5. Baj Van Medley
    6. Az Nisht Keyn Emine
    7. Hamanul from Dragomiresti
    8. Uncle Arpi's Nokh a Bisl
    9. HoAderes
    10. Sadegurer Hosid
    11. Hutsul Medley
    12. Mashke
    13. Pirim
    14. Moldvai Zhok
    15. "7:40"
    16. Chernobyl

    Di Naye Kapelye: Traktorist. Carpathian Klezmer (2009)


    Di Naye Kapelye:
    Bob Cohen (violin, vocals, koboz, mandolin, Carpathian drum, vioară cu goarnă (Stroh fiddle), cimpoi (Moldavian bagpipe))
    Jack "Yankl" Falk (vocals, clarinet)
    Antal "Puma" Fekete (kontra, Carpathian drum)
    Gyula "Kosztya" Kozma (bass)
    Ferenc Pribojszki (cimbalom, caval, Carpathian drum)

    with special guests:
    Michael Alpert (vocals, violin, percussion) – 3, 4, 6, 12
    Aron Cohen (vocals) – 6
    Josh Dolgin (accordion, piano) – 4, 10
    Imre "Kutyuli" Keszthelyi (chorus vocals) – 12
    Tom Popper (chorus vocals) – 12
    The village band from Tjaciv (Tecso), Carpatho-Ukraine – 5, 11, 15, 16:
    Joska Csernavec (bayan accordion), Misu Csernavec (tsymbaly),
    Jura Csernavec (drum, plonka, voice), Ivan Popovics (violin)