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Dutch Strings, Hammers, and Bows
- From: r l reid <ro...>
- Subject: Dutch Strings, Hammers, and Bows
- Date: Fri 20 Feb 2004 16.15 (GMT)
Although the subject line brings to my mind an old Doris Day song, it
was decidely NOT Ms Day last night at the NY Workmens Circle, but
Di Fidl Kapelye, who were in town from the Netherlands to work with
Deborah Strauss (may she live long!)
It was a delightful evening! They sound like nothing I've heard before, and
while I can hear influences from thier teachers - Alpert, Strauss,
Bjorling, etc - they are clearly hewing thier own sound from these
sources. And it works, oh does it work.
Problem is I can't quite figure out how to describe the difference that is
them. It is a deep lucious sound. The instrumentation is 2 fidls,
a tsimbl (actually a small Rumanian tambal), a bass AND a cello, with
the bass occaisionally changing to oud. It has a conservatory air, it
has a friends making music at home air, it has a klezmer air, it has
a European air.
So we've got a lot of strings in a lot of registers. Now usually with
two fidls you'd expect a primo and a secund. In this case, sometimes
both were playing first violin. Call and response - done with a keen
sensitivity passing between Madelien Verheij and Jiska ter Bals - sometimes
outright counterpoint, no, not all that traditional but for these cats
it works right in and can I suggest -it *sounds* like it ought to be
traditional. Or sometimes they BOTH played secund. Mostly, the lead
moved around, sometimes phrase by phrase, over to the talented and learned
cimbalom player Pit "Maestro Piti the Singing Cimbalom Queen" Hermans,
to the cello, beautifully held and sung through by Djoeke Klijzing, and
to bass (and oud) player Gregor Shaeffer, who gets that great sawing bass
sound. I thought he was doing the traditional 3 string bass but it turns
out he had simply busted a string and was making do - quite well.
As a tsimbler I was interested to hear Pit Hermans and was enchanted. She
has her own sound and touch, moving effortlessly among the patterns
and chords, fills, echos, and leads. She also pulled off one of those
intense Moskowitz solo tunes - again, not like Moskowitz, but in her
own distict style. I bought the demo CD in part to be able to listen
more to her, as I would like to emulate her style to some extent.
Gregors oud playing is enjoyable but sometimes seems a bit "apart"
from what the group is doing. I wonder if they could integrate the oud
more with the ensemble, perhaps in the manner that mandolin players
can fit right in.
If you have a chance to catch these folks live (you lucky Europeans),
you should. They do have a demo recording, which is good, but the live
performance came through with a real energy that's hard to capture on
a recording (just like the Grateful Dead).
I hope there will be more extensive US tours in their future.
The web site is here:
http://www.xs4all.nl/~gregors/difk/e_frameset.html
respectfully submitted,
ronan tsimbler / roger reid
-------
r l reid ro (at) rreid(dot)net
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