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Beyond the Pale
at Skirball Cultural Center, Feb. 4, 2010
By Tom Cheyney
Photo by Bonnie Perkinson
Calling Beyond the
Pale a "klezmer band' would unfairly pigeonhole the Toronto-based group's
big-eared take on Eastern European, Balkan, and other musics. But then, that
characterization would be true of much of the klezmorim new wave, restless
reinventors who honor the tradition while pushing the boundaries farther
afield. While BTP doesn't overtly nod to rock, hip-hop, or kleztronica, the
combo still stretches out in ways beguiling and inclusive, both live and on
their latest recording, Postcards
(Borealis Records).
The version of BTP at
the Skirball was pared down to a quintet and featured a different accordionist
than on Postcards. Percussionist/violinist Bogdan Djukic was unable to
accompany the group for its California mini-tour. Milos Popovic, credited as
playing squeezebox on the album, was replaced by fellow Serbian expat Dejan
Badnjar, who joined the core four on stage-mandolinist/cofounder Eric Stein,
bassist/cofounder Bret Higgins, violinist Aleksandar Gajic, and clarinetist
Martin van de Ven.
Although the thwack of Djukic's hand drums might have
thickened the groove, the band did not lack for firepower. Performing a wide
swath of the new album as well as tracks from their previous work, the
fivesome's dynamic comfort zone ran from the downtempo melancholic, sparse and
spacious, to full-gallop horas and tempestuous Roma gypsy tunes-sometimes
within the same song.
BTP could have rested on their reinventions of traditional fare,
such as the tweaked bulgar Kamenetzer
and the jaunty bouncing Anthem, which
found van de Ven's laughing licorice-stick tangling with Gajic's taunting
violin, as Badnjar rippled up and down the keyboard. Trading four, fives, and
sevens or riding the melody in unison, pushing the tempo or reining it in,
pumping up the volume or bringing it down to a whisper--theirs was an
instrumental conversation reveling in the moment.
As entertaining as their take on the "old stuff"
was-including a pair of Mozart (as in Amadeus) pieces thoroughly stripped down
and successfully retrofitted as chamber music gone deliciously askew-the
group's originals (and they all write) revealed a striking genre-busting
creativity.
A prime example was Stein's Split Decision, a title chosen because, as he told the audience, he
couldn't make up his mind if the song should be performed by BTP or his rock
group. The intricately mysterioso composition twisted and turned toward jazz,
Americana, and a tinge of Latin while never uncoupling from the band's core
Eastern aesthetic.
Whether filling up the bucket of race-memory tears,
playfully putting the shtetl to the metal, or crafting luminous soundtracks of
as-yet unmade films, Beyond the Pale's rewarding performance asked and answered
the question, is there life after klezmer?
Tom Cheyney has been writing about the global and roots music
scenes in Los Angeles and around the world since fax machines were high tech.
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