NPR / EUGENE HUTZ, GOGOL BORDELLO'S GYPSY PUNK HERO
Eugene Hütz is the charismatic front
man of the gypsy punk band Gogol Bordello. The multinational, multiethnic group
includes a violinist, guitarist, accordionist and bass player.
Hütz himself hails from Ukraine; he
appeared in the film Everything
is Illuminated alongside Elijah
Wood.
Gogol Bordello's new album is
Super
Taranta.
TO HEAR THE INTERVIEW GO TO:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=12804958
July 18, 2007 ·
Gogol Bordello is a spectacle. The wildly
exuberant, multi-ethnic group from New York City makes frenetic music that's
part punk rock, part Gypsy folk, part Cabaret. Led by Eugene Hütz, a
Chernobyl survivor from Ukraine, the band is famous for its costumed live shows
that often stretch for more than two explosive hours. Gogol Bordello performed
at Washington, D.C.'s 9:30 Club, in a full concert originally webcast live on
NPR.org July 18
Gogol Bordello has been making supercharged
music since first forming in 1999, six years after frontman Hütz immigrated
to the U.S. Their philosophy was to "make the contradictions of life sound
harmonious," with a head-spinning mix of ska, punk, metal, rap, flamenco, roots
reggae, dub and any other sounds they could think of.
With their latest CD,
Super
Taranta, "Gogol Bordello is going to
conquer the world," says Hütz. "Everything on the album is taken to the
next level. It's more direct, more abstract, more focused, with more dark humor.
The dub parts are deeper; the fast parts are faster, its pure orgasmo
hysteria."
The album is Gogol Bordello's unique
interpretation of Tarantella, a ritual music from Italy. "I saw a painting in
Tuscany of a woman in convulsions and guy playing a violin. He's leaning over
her, playing music to cure her hysteria, put her into a trance and exorcize her
demons. It was sexual, mystical and cultural, almost obscene - all the qualities
of Gogol Bordello. It was another musical way of transforming negative energy
into positive. Our musical awareness isn't based on flirtatious moments of
musical fusion; we're constantly adding new stuff that compliments our root
— the gypsy music from the Carpathian Mountains of Ukraine."
Eugene Hütz came to the United States
after escaping the Chernobyl nuclear disaster of 1986. Hütz and his family
spent seven years trekking through Eastern European refugee camps before
settling in the U.S.
"It's an interesting story," says Hütz.
"But maybe not so interesting when it was happening. I was listening to BBC
radio when the DJ said: 'for the citizens of Ukraine: There was just a disaster
in Chernobyl and it's not likely your government will tell you about it.' I was
13 or 14 and into punk rock and didn't want to leave [Kiev,] but the evacuation
turned into another discovery. We visited the village my family came from. My
relatives introduced me to the essential foods and music of our gypsy culture.
My parents hid [their gypsy roots] in the city; in the countryside I was face to
face with it. My biggest musical influence was coming face to face with that
ancient culture."
Gogol Bordello features eight members: Eugene
Hütz on vocals, Sergey Rjabtzev on violin, Yuri Lemeshev on accordion,
Tommy Gobena on bass, Eliot Ferguson on drums and Oren Kaplan on guitar, with
two percussion dancers: Pam Racine and Elizabeth Sun.
"Our gypsy fiddler, Sergey Rjabtzev, was a
theater director in Moscow for 10 years," says Hütz. "Yuri Lemeshev, our
53-year-old accordion player, is from Sakhalin in Russia. Guitarist Oren Kaplin
is from Israel. The drummer is American Eliot Ferguson, the only sane person in
the band."
Posted: Thu - August 16, 2007 at 07:38 PM