CD: Širom - A Universe That Roasts Blossoms for a Horse | reviews, news & interviews
CD: Širom - A Universe That Roasts Blossoms for a Horse
CD: Širom - A Universe That Roasts Blossoms for a Horse
Boundary-breaking Avant-folk from Slovenia
Avant-folk differs from traditional music, as it isn't rooted in place but draws its inspiration from a cultural universe without boundaries.
The instruments played by Itzok Koren, Simo Kutin and Ana Kravanya include various banjos, gamelan, hurdy-gurdy, tampura, violon, frame drum and other forms of percussion. There is something both exotic and magical about music that feels as if it might have been created to serve the needs of an as-yet-not-invented religion, the echoes of loci of power, spread across the network of a psychogeographical inner universe. There are moments of recognition – the mournful sound and microtonal indeterminacy of a bowed string, the limpid and soft percussion of a balafon, or a keening voice that recalls South Asia.
“Sleight of hand with a melting key” is typical of the tracks on the CD: a musical suite in several movements that is as poetic as its title suggests: both archaic and sophisticated, the piece segues from a trance-like dialogue between hurdy-gurdy and drums to a bewitching sequence of banjo, percussion and Chinese-inflected violin. We are well away from the world of tempered scales here, and the journey that Širom take us on is a kind of surrealist dream, full of surprises and with little obvious feel-good comfort. There is never the resolution that makes so much popular and folk music appealing, but there is a constant challenge to the ear that is, in spite of the cliff-edge it frequents, enchanting, and bears repeated listening.
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