Warsaw Village Band ( ) is a
band from Warsaw
, Poland
, that plays
traditional Polish folk
music tunes combined with modern elements.
About the band
According to the band's creative
manifesto, it was formed as a response to
mass culture and narrow-mindedness, "which in
fact leads to [the] destruction of human dignity."
Indeed, after the fall
of the Berlin
Wall
and the expansion of the European Union to most of the former Warsaw Pact countries, Poland's economy has
grown dramatically, while at the same time ushering in investment
by a number of multinational
corporations, leading to concerns of globalism and loss of Poland's cultural
identity.
Warsaw Village Band was intended to be a response to this trend by
exploring Poland's musical traditions and making them relevant to
its new capitalist economy. Member Wojciech Krzak has stated that
"after the nightmare of Communism, we still have to fight for our
identity, and we know that beauty and identity are still in our
roots." Krzak has further stated that the band are "trying to
create a new cultural proposition for the youth in an alternative
way to contemporary show-biz." The band's very name appears to
evoke what troubles Krzak about Poland's new capitalism: many large
Polish cities do not have suburbs in the traditional sense, leading
to unsettling transitions directly from city to field. To this end,
in their most recent release,
Wykorzenienie (Uprooting),
the band traveled throughout Poland to find and record older
musicians who still played almost-forgotten styles of music,
thereafter incorporating those melodies into new songs and
expounding upon them.
The band also incorporate socially-conscious folk lyrics in their
songs. The song "Kto się żeni" ("Who is Getting Married") on their
second album,
Wiosna Ludu (People's Spring), discusses a
young country girl who refuses to be married off, opting instead to
"sing,dance, and be free rather than being dependent on
someone."
Warsaw
Village Band have appeared at several international music
festivals, including the 2005 Roskilde Festival
in Denmark
, the 2004
Masala Festival in Hanover, Germany
, and the 2000 International Ethnic Music Fest in
Germany
.
Most recently, Warsaw Village Band recorded part of the
soundtrack for the
computer game Myst IV: Revelation.
Instrumentation
Notably, Warsaw Village Band have revived several musical
traditions that were all but lost in Poland.
The band use
instruments rarely heard in modern music: frame drums, the hurdy-gurdy and the suka, a Polish folk
fiddle stopped with the fingernails rather than the fingers,
similar to the Bulgarian
gadulka, the sarangi, or the rebec.
The
suka was practically unknown to the Polish people
until member Sylwia Swiatkowska began to play it in the band's
concerts, and, later, on their albums. Additionally, many of the
band's vocals are sung in a loud and powerful style remakably like
the "open-throated" singing styles in
Bulgarian music, called
biały glos
(white voice). This style of singing was used by
shepherds in the Polish mountains to be heard for
long distances.
Warsaw Village Band have also used modern elements in their music.
Wykorzenienie contains
scratching by the Polish
hip hop artist DJ Feel-X, most likely as a nod
to the phenomenal popularity of
hip hop
in Poland. The same album also includes electronic
siren sound effects by the band's sound engineer,
Mario "Activator" Dziurex, leading to a peculiar juxtaposition of
new sounds upon old melodies.
Albums

Cover to Warsaw Village Band's third
album,
Uprooting
- Infinity - 2008
- Wymiksowanie (Upmixing) - 2008
- Wykorzenienie (Uprooting)
- 2004
- Wiosna Ludu (People's Spring) - 2002
- Hop Sa Sa (released in US and UK as Kapela ze wsi
Warszawa) - 1998
Awards
Warsaw Village Band were nominated for the "Newcomer" award in the
BBC Radio 3 World Music Awards in 2003,
and won it in 2004.The band also won the Polish musical competition
"New Traditions" in 1998.2005 - "Fryderyk" - the best Polish Folk
album of the year "Uprooting".
References
External links