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Vlad Pîrvu's video: Taraf de Haidouks - Nici nu ninge nici nu ploua No snow no rain

@Taraf de Haidouks - Nici nu ninge, nici nu ploua (No snow, no rain)
vocals: Gheorghe Manole (son of Ion Manole) album: "Of Lovers, Gamblers & Parachute Skirts" (2015) iTunes : http://smarturl.it/oflovers_itunes http://www.crammed.be/index.php?id=37&rel_id=426 *** For the first time since the sad demise of their oldest vocalists (Ion Manole, Neculae Neacsu, Cacurica and Ilie Iorga), Taraf de Haïdouks are revisiting some of their ancient styles, and are taking a retrospective look at their career. Some of their former collaborators have been re-enlisted, such as superb vocalists Tsagoi (the son of the legendary, late Neacsu) and Gheorghe Manole (who has mastered the repertoire of his father, the great Ion Manole), as well as the flamboyant Viorica Rudareasa, the woman who sang the band’s iconic song “Dumbala Dumba”. Thus does the Taraf de Haïdouks’ music keep morphing: far from being a fixed, monolithic canon, it has been absorbing and recycling old & new elements. The band was formed back in 1990, by individual musicians who, until then, had only been playing in various combinations at the village’s social rituals (baptisms, weddings, funerals, harvests etc). By then, ‘foreign’ accordions had already found a place amidst the violins and cymbalums, and the repertoire of the lautari (traditional Rom musicians) was peppered with cabaret flavours from the city. Then came Turkish melodies and rhythms and, more recently, the influence of popular urban manele (which actually derives from manea, an old ‘oriental’ lautar style). The harmonies and structures became more complex, the playing more virtuosic, and the balance between vocal and instrumental pieces gradually shifted in favour of the latter. In this anniversary album, Taraf de Haïdouks have weaved it all back together into a rich tapestry of styles, which pays tribute to their parents’ generation. *** Described by a UK daily newspaper as “The best Gypsy band in the world”, Taraf de Haïdouks are considered as the epitome of Gypsy music’s fabulous vitality ever since the release of their debut album and their first visit to western Europe back in 1990. They’ve relentlessly toured all around the globe, have released acclaimed albums, and their countless fans include people like the late Yehudi Menuhin, Kronos Quartet (with whom they’ve recorded and performed), actor Johnny Depp (alongside whom they appeared in the film “The Man Who Cried”), fashion designer Yohji Yamamoto (who invited them to be models-cum-musicians for his Paris and Tokyo shows) choreographer Pina Bausch, Stephan Eicher and many more. Their music was used in numerous films, such as Terry Gilliam’s “The Brothers Grimm” and “Train of Life” by Radu Mihaileanu. Meanwhile, the band members seem to have been relatively unaffected by all this attention, they’ve retained their sense of humour, and their way of life (they still reside in their modest village of Clejani, in the Wallachian countryside).

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This video was published on 2015-02-06 15:15:23 GMT by @The-Circle on Youtube. Vlad Pîrvu has total 2.3K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 81 video.This video has received 313 Likes which are higher than the average likes that Vlad Pîrvu gets . @The-Circle receives an average views of 31.5K per video on Youtube.This video has received 14 comments which are lower than the average comments that Vlad Pîrvu gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

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