Lautari
Musica Lautareasca Nova
Label: Czas Kultury, 2002 (Poland)
Catalog Number: CZK-5
Format: CD
Tracks:
1. Lautari
2. Prologos
3. Cyryl
4. Delta
5. U Jeziorecka
6. Danajki
7. Polne
8. Oberek In G
9. Huculka
10. Hoyra
Line-up:
Maciej Filipczuk - violin, vioara cu guarna, derbouka
Jacek Halas - piano
Michal Zak - wooden flutes, clarinet, shawm and folk wind instruments
Recorded:
at studio S1 of Polish Radio, September 21-24, 2002
Performed by:
Maciej Filipczuk - violin, vioara cu guarna, derbouka
Jacek Halas - piano
Michal Zak - wooden flutes, clarinet, shawm and folk wind instruments
About:
Musica Lautareasca Nova involves instrumental compositions inspired by the traditional music of the Polish lowlands, the eastern and southern regions of the Carpathian mountains, the Balkans, and the Black Sea coast. The sources of our music are musical notations (Kurpie), archival recordings (Greece, Macedonia, the music of Ashkenazi Jews), our own musical compositions and, most important, close and direct contact with village musicians still practicing traditional performance techniques (Poland, Romania, and Ukraine).
The basis of the album is our belief that the most interesting aspects of folk music originate in "borderland" areas where many cultures interpenetrate each other (e.g. Bukovina, Transylvania, Bessarabia, and Dobruja). In such environments musical motifs cross geographical borders and, arriving from distant places, join together to become statements of understanding without losing their original identities.
The musical structure of Musica Lautareasca Nova is dual. On the one hand we emphasize unitedness, homogeneity, and harmony of sound, on the other hand we leave space for individual expression and improvisation. A unique timbre - in which tradition encounters modernity - is deliberately created by the juxtaposition of violin and folk wind instruments (birbina - traditional Lithuanian clarinet; telenka - shepherd flute) with a jazz-like piano.
Musica Lautareasca Nova originated in 2000 in Wroc?aw, and originally included the musicians Rafa? Habel (birbina) and Marcin Ciupidro (piano), who also performed in the group's first recording, Muzica Lautaresca Nova.
What the press says:
Lautari is one of the biggest hopes of the Polish musical stage. The fact that they remain unknown to the general public proves once again how sick the situation of Polish music is. The group plays music of a completely new, original and wondrous quality. Their music is inspired by various traditions - Romanian, Macedonian, Polish and Gypsy - that fuse into a brilliant, subtle and refined whole. The instruments add to the uniqueness of the group's music. Lautari is an instrumental trio: we hear violin, piano, and birbina - Lithuanian clarinet. This form, created by Maciej Filipczuk, the leader of the group, changes their music into emotional, though not sentimental, journey.
Tomasz Janas
Gazeta Wyborcza Pozna? 4/10/2002
An excellent record and definitely the best production of all the records put forth for the competition. The music, inspired by diverse, even distant, traditions of Central and Eastern Europe, is transformed by the group into a spontaneous, quasi-improvised performance. The combination of folk instruments with klezmer-style jazz-like piano shifts the compositions of the trio into an entirely new, unprecedented dimension. Unrestrained musical expressions can refer to the traditional folk manner of music performance as well as to the refined aesthetics of jazz improvisation. Paradoxically, the diversity of interacting influences does not create any sense of chaos or excess in Lautari's music. The musicians improvise with discipline and moderation, aiming at underlining the integral ideas of the music rather than displaying their undisputed technical mastery. A discovery.
Jacek Hawryluk
The review of "Muzica Lautareasca Nova" record within the contest
"Folkowy Fonogram Roku 2002"
("The Folk Recording of the Year 2002")
It was worth coming to Studio S1 if only to listen to three groups: Lautari, Sarakina and Goscie z Nizin. They each presented a high level of performance combined with well-studied, mature output and refined expression. In their music I found the most important features: a degree of expressiveness unusual for folk music, originality and spontaneity, depth of experience, carefully chosen instrumentation, excellent vocal technique, folk improvisation, style, and ornamentation, and, wherever needed, tempo rubato. What thrilled me most was the Lautari Folk Band concert. I was extremely interested as soon as I saw the instruments - piano, violin and birbina. During their performance Lautari combined great respect for tradition with a natural ability to modify it; the effect was extraordinary. I was enchanted by their multi-leveled realization of rhythm, a unique sense of rubato, and an inner pulse. The style and expression of the violinist were excellent, on the one hand close to traditional thinking and on the other showing an expression of individuality.
Piotr Matwiejczuk
Czas Kultury 2/2001
For me the most extraordinary group were Lautari - simply a revelation. Their music pulsed with calmness, fineness, harmony, orderliness, even magic. I was under the impression that each sound was indispensable and that deleting any of them would spoil the entire concert. This is a project with tradition: a fusion of Chopin, klezmer and medieval bard.
Pawe? Luto
Muzykant - mailing list, December 2001
An interview with Maciej Filipczuk, the leader of the Lautari
Gazeta Wyborcza Pozna? 2nd April 2003
By Tomasz Janas
Lautari, one of the most interesting Polish folk bands, until recently from Wroc?aw, will now reside in Pozna?. The leader of the group, Maciej Filipczuk, has moved to our city and invited musicians from Pozna? to play in Lautari. Today the first concert of the new Lautari in Pozna? is being held in the Jesuits' Gallery.
Tomasz Janas: Where does your fascination with traditional music come from?
Maciej Filipczuk: From when I was a teenager and was roaming around various places. At that time many people were discovering Beskid Niski and its nearly lost but still tangible culture of the Lemko people. Tourist songs alternated with the old songs of the Lemks, sung very often by people unaware of their meaning or origin. This music made such an impression on me, however, that I decided to find out more about it.
TJ: You were once a member of Orkiestra ?w. Miko?aja. You've travelled a long way from Orkiestra to Lautari. How would you describe the difference between the two experiences?
MF: The Orkiestra taught me to see the richness and abundance of traditional culture and its unceasing relevance. It was a time of intensity and commitment to tradition without asking unnecessary questions. Lautari is a radically different story, though we act within the same traditionalist framework. Lautari is a small group, a trio, in which each member takes responsibility for the final shape of the music. There is more work and less enthusiasm in Lautari, but there is also great passion, risk, and an acceptance of musical challenges.
TJ: The creative activity of Lautari draws largely from the tradition of the Carpathians and especially from the Romanian tradition. Why?
MF: The name of the group, signifying an itinerant musician, was taken from the Romanian tradition. Historically, this word referred to a group of Gypsies, originally slaves, whose primary occupation was to play music. In forming this group and choosing this name, I elected to acknowledge this history and to express my absorption with the musical traditions and culture of Romania, which I continue to discover, step by step, during my repeated journeys there.
TJ: Lautari's first recording, Muzica Lautareasca Nova, has been recognized as one of the three best folk recordings of the year. Are you satisfied?
MF: Naturally. I admit that I had doubts as to whether the material was ready to be recorded. Now I know it was ready, and I am excited and looking forward to further work.
TJ: When the recording was released the original line-up of group - that is, the musicians who had taken part in the recording - no longer existed.
MF: Yes, that's true. In fact, we decided to release the recording because of our plans to part. We wanted to preserve what we had achieved during our two years of work together. The reason for parting was mundane - performing this type of music in Poland one must accept that there are a small group of enthusiasts and therefore always only a small number of concerts. Inevitably the result is that one earns an insignificant amount of money. One has to be a bit of a madman and able to subsist on great passion, something with which, perhaps, I was unable entirely to infect my colleagues. Each of us chose his own path - I, for instance, moved from Wroc?aw to Pozna?. I think it was the right moment for such changes. I don't regard it as a failure, but as the closure of a certain stage of development.
TJ: Will the changes in the line-up of the band influence your conception of performing music and the sound of the band as well?
MF: I was fortunate to meet excellent and very active musicians shortly after I came to Pozna?, with whom I quickly found common interests. Lautari is now comprised of me, Jacek Ha?as, well known in the folk community as a pianist, and Micha? ?ak, who plays wooden flutes, carinet, and bombards, and who is also the leader of Bal Kuzest and Tredrez, groups performing Breton folk music. As we create we continue to draw on what Lautari created earlier, but, obviously, the creative stances and temperaments of Jacek and Micha? influence the music and add new qualities to it.
TJ: Because of a few pop bands, such as Brathanki or Golec u Orkiestra, the term "folk" has acquired bad connotations - Polish audiences associate the term with shallow stage versions of feast songs. The essence of folk music is, however, entirely different from that. Its genuine representatives do not, however, have much opportunity to appear in the media. How do you see this situation? Do you regard yourself as a folk musician?
MF:Thanks to my engagement with Orkiestra ?w. Miko?aja I feel well connected to the folk movement. It still carries the same values and meanings for me as it did when I started. There is a lot of truth in what you say about the essence of the folk movement. I think, however, that people who are creative, sensitive, and searching, should not waste their time and energy on a struggle over semantics, but should regard the music as the way to mark out new paths. People whose arts refer to traditional art forms express themselves in many, often very different, ways. I see the type of music created by Lautari as an independent, creative force, easy neither for the creators, nor for the audience, who must work if they are to understand it fully.