Tanz! Klezmer & Gipsy music Sirba Octet
Album info
Album-Release:
2015
HRA-Release:
14.10.2015
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
- 1 Hora de Bessarabie 01:36
- 2 Hora de Mana Pe Batai - Di Mashke 05:20
- 3 Fantaisie Roumaine 02:25
- 4 Les deux guitares 05:16
- 5 Doina Ciobanului - Sirba 06:43
- 6 Vu bistu geven - Der yid in Yerushalaim - Batuta de la Sarata 06:58
- 7 Oyfn Veg Shteyt A Boym - Avreml der Marvikher 04:06
- 8 Fantaisie Hongroise 02:55
- 9 Jalea Tiganilor - Opa Tsupa - Yom Shabes yom 09:15
- 10 A Gute Vokh 04:27
- 11 Hora Dance - Hora Flacailor 05:09
- 12 Doina clarinette - Ciganski Stakato 04:27
- 13 Ikh shtey unter a bokserboym, musique Chava Alberstein 05:22
- 14 Geamparale de la Babadag 01:56
- 15 Coraghesca 00:58
- 16 L'Alouette 03:26
Info for Tanz! Klezmer & Gipsy music
Tantz means „dance“ in Yiddish. La Dolce Volta presents here an expressive, mellow, dance-filled flight of inspiration in which the Sirba Octet, on its fifth album, performs a kaleidoscope of numbers marked by folk sonorities from the musical traditions of Russia, Moldavia, Poland and Romania: a chance to discover the Doina, the Hora, the Sirba, and many others – as many as the emotions and surprises that the klezmorim and gypsy musicians offered their audiences as they passed through villages to play for celebrations and weddings. While respecting that tradition, the eight musicians drawn from the Orchestre de Paris give this music a new distinction in unique arrangements played with dazzling interpretative freedom. A true musical treasure trove!
Richard Schmoucler, violin
Christian Brière, violin
David Gaillard, alto
Claude Giron, cello
Bernard Cazauran, double bass
Philippe Berrod, clarinet
Yann Ollivo, piano
Iurie Morar, cymbalum
Sirba Octet
Founded by the violinist Richard Schmoucler and featuring seven more musicians drawn from the ranks of the most prestigious classical formations, the Sirba Octet has presented an original reinterpretation of the Yiddish and Gypsy repertory since 2003. The unique nature of the project championed by the Sirba Octet places it in a musical universe all its own that belongs to an entirely new genre, that of classical world music.
Booklet for Tanz! Klezmer & Gipsy music