Anna Maria Jopek - vocals
Krzysztof Herdzin - piano / arrangements
Sinfonietta Cracovia
EMI 5099901770827
By Adam Baruch
In autumn of 2011 I had the pleasure of being present at the opening concert of the Singer's Warsaw Festival, which featured Poland's most prominent World Music ensemble Kroke and their guest, superstar vocalist Anna Maria Jopek. Jopek, who in recent years discovered World Music herself, as evident on her latest recordings, was nevertheless quite a surprising partner for Kroke, and considering she only landed in Warsaw a few hours before the concert and managed only a brief rehearsal with them, things were quite tense. But when the lights went out and the music started, it was obvious that magic was in the air that night and for the next two hours the audience was completely mesmerized. Obviously the very same magic prompted Kroke to include Jopek on this, their next studio album.
Kroke, which consists of viola
player Tomasz Kukurba, accordionist Jerzy Bawol and bassist Tomasz Lato,
started in the early 1990s as a Klezmer band, one of numerous such bands
established in Poland
as a result of the Renaissance of the Jewish Culture in the country. They
started to perform at Krakow's old Jewish
district Kazimierz, which became a fashionable tourist attraction, and in time
their reputation grew. They were lucky to gain international attention and soon
became the resident ethnic stars. In time they left Klezmer music almost
entirely and embraced World Music originating in many different cultural
spheres and added noticeable Jazz influence to their music.
For this album Kroke joined
forces with, in addition to the a.m. Anna Maria Jopek, also the excellent
drummer Slawomir Berny and pianist / composer / arranger Krzysztof Herdzin, who
co-produced the album, composed and arranged some orchestral intros to the band's
music and conducted the Sinfonietta Cracovia, which performed the orchestral
parts. The album presents twelve pieces, eleven of which are original
compositions by the band's members and one is by the pioneer of modern Klezmer
music Harry Kandel. As the title suggests, the band intended to "take a
step" into a more "symphonic" sound for their music, utilizing
the orchestra.
Unfortunately, intentions
aside, the album fails to achieve the same level of excitement and spontaneous
inspiration, which characterized the live concert I witnessed. Although Jopek
delivers some superb vocal parts, they constitute only a small contribution to
the entire project. The orchestral arrangements sound quite out of place in
this case, turning the free spirit of World Music into a housebroken animal,
which is a pity. Some things simply don't go well together. Overall there is
plenty of great music here and even if the album sounds very commercial at
times, it was created by excellent musicians, who meant well.
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