BARBEZ - Barbez
imprec036 - CD - $10
Barbez includes a brilliant theremin player who smokes cigarettes
and a full throated Russian singer who comes across like Joan
of Arc with a sense of Humor. They cover everything from Bertolt
Brecht to Black Sabbath, but the real attractions is their melodically
haunting originals. With a folk-music sound located somewhere between
turn-of-century Eastern Europe and modern America, its arty
rock that moves between brooding and winking.
-The New Yorker
Imagine Kurt Veill chewing sausages with the Residents underneath
the Williamsburg Bridge while watching a Russian wedding dance and
you have some approximation of Barbez, Brooklyn's one-of-a-kind
post-cabaret punk chamber ensemble. Provoked by such musics as Slavic
folksong, Argentine tango, post-war classical and pre-mtv punk,
Barbez wrings these disparate worlds into the band's own unique
soundscape.
The group began fiver years ago, with members whose backgrounds
were in dance, rock, jazz, electronics and avante-garde classical.
Comprising this Brooklyn-based punk chamber ensemble are: voice/dance
Ksenia Vidyaykina, guitar Dan Kaufman, marimba/vibes Danny Tunick
(Bang On A Can Allstars), theremin Pamelia Kurstin (Geggy Tah, the
Kurstins), palm pilot/electronics/bass Dan Coates, and drums Shahzad
Ismaily. Barbez draws its unusual instrumetation into a haunting,
original sound that can evoke everything from Swans and P.j. Harvey,
to Lotte Lenya and Eastern European folk music.
This self titled release was produced by Martin Bisi (Swans/Sonic
Youth/Brian Eno)
Frequent collaborations with other musicians, both live and in
the studio, have included Eszter Balint, Nils Frykdahl (Sleepytime
Gorilla Museum), Anthony Nozero (Drums And Tuba), and the Lonesome
Organist. They recently wrote and performed music for Chang In A
Void Moon, by legendary avant-garde director and MacArthur genius
grant winner, John Jesurun. They will be touring constantly to support
this release. -Barbez is also a constant, vibrant part of the New
York music scene, and has shared the stage with such performers
as Cat Power, godspeed you! black emperor, Sleepytime Gorilla Museum
and the Angels Of Ligh tand Devendra Banhart
MP3s
Sacrifice
Poles
Wisconsin
West Rogers
Park
Reviews
"The old world meets art rock in this Brooklyn band, which melds
instruments from Marimba and vibes to Theremin and Palm Pilot for
it's post-cabaret stew." Time Out New York
"A tight post-punk outfit with vague ethnic insinuations to
their riffage and a suitable
frontwoman named Ksenia." The Village Voice
"A Brooklyn based collective that considers cafe decadence
from a European point
of view. Barbez takes the violin and accordion of tango and the
sultry vocals of
cabaret to skewed extremes; it's repertory includes the music of
Kurt Veill
and The Residents." The New Yorker
"Compelling as she can be, Vidyaykina rarely overshadows the
rest of the sextet. Despite
their Balkan-Folk leanings, these players aren't authenticity junkies.
They use rock-band
dynamics to give their music heft while fleshing it out with all
manner of instrumental antics."
Time Out New York
"Tango and Palm Pilots. Theremin and Kurt Veill. Marimba and
Russian Folk music. If anyone
know's the meaning of cultural detritus it's Barbez: New York's
chamber punk sextet." The Portland Mercury
"Have you ever wondered what it would be like if the composers
Erik Satie and
Kurt Weill were still alive, and decided to form a rock band?"
Indianapolis Nuvo
"Uses traditional eastern European and klezmer influences
as easily as it does more traditional rock band instrumentation."
The Onion
"Seeing Barbez live is a little like seeing the Elephant Man-
something disfigured but beautiful." The Brooklyn Rail
"The worlds greatest living theremin player." Bob
Moog about Pamelia Kurstin
"A deviant strain of Europhile romanticism seems to have taken
root in the artistic
underbrush of the US where a few musicians yearn for a lost epoch
of Dada Cabaret, sleazy
Parisian touts, accordion dirges wafting from the Gypsy camp at
the edge of the city, drop dead
gorgeous Polish exiles with a weakness for opium and a taste for
danger. Brooklyn's Barbez ventures down this musical back alley."
Willamette Week
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