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Play audio sample from this album “Dvojka”

Buy Kal CD Musicians:
Dragan Ristic – vocals, guitar, shargjia
Dragan Mitrovic – accordion
Vladan Mitrovic – accordion, backing vocals
Djordje Belkic – violin
Dragan Runic – double bass
Neat Junuzi – percussions
Rambo Amadeus – voice
Label – Asphalt Tango Records, Germany
Released 2006

From record label:
“Kal are the hottest Gypsy band from the suburbs of Belgrade, rock’n'roll in attitude, fuelled on urban beats and rooted in the Balkan blues. In their wit, imagination and ability to throw disparate sounds together they mark themselves as both part of Balkan Gypsy tradition and 21st Century lifestyle. Kal – the word is Romani for ‘black’ – were formed by the Ristic brothers, Dushan and Dragan, to confront the prejudices and clichés the Roma face. Ristic’s vision of how Kal embrace 21st Century Roma music is a generous one: bhangra rhythms underpin one song, a violin dances around a two-step rhythm played on double bass, weeping Hawaiian steel guitar drifts over a lovely waltz tempo, an accordion feeds tango flavours, Montenegran rock satirist Rambo Amadeus delivers an acerbic, hiccupping rap whilst the striking voices of Zumrita Jakupovic, Adil Maksutovic and Dragana Berakovic lend earthy, sensual qualities to the songs. Recorded on a bare bones budget at Dragan’s ramshackle home studio this brilliant, intuitive album shifts Gypsy soul into cyberspace. To help achieve this mix Kal employed Mike Nielsen to mix, arrange, find beats and produce the album. Nielsen’s experience involves everything from mixing Dizzy Gillespie’s live sound through working with Maori and Turkish musicians to producing/ engineering Underworld, Jamiroquai and Natasha Atlas.”
Led by brothers Dragan and Dusan, Kal represent the new high energy contemporary Romany (Gypsy) music from Serbia. The exciting music of this group of Gypsies from Northern Serbia combines harmonic twists of Romany folk music with typical Northern Serbian rhythms, heavy, passionate and vibrant.

“Probably the best Gypsy band east of Paris”.
David Altheer – The Times
Members of Kal also teach at the Amala Summer School in Valjevo, Serbia. This summer school is a learning centre for Rroma (Gypsy) culture and art.

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Serbian band Kal headlines a lineup of Roma-influenced musicians at Accordion Fest
By John DeFore An article published by Current – San Antonio


Going into this week’s International Accordion Fest (and beyond), it’d be helpful for “world music” fans to make a little permanent mental adjustment: Take all the good, funky associations you have with the word “gypsy” and shift them over to the label “Roma.” Then ignore it when promoters, record labels, and the musicians themselves sometimes use the former.

“It’s a catch-22 for Romani artists,” says Sani Rifati, who will be at the fest with Kal, a group he manages which fuses the Roma tradition with other kinds of world music. “If you want to get noticed and get exposure, the ‘gypsy’ label is your best bet — but it just perpetuates the myths and stereotypes.” It’s one thing in the U.S., where people frequently have romantic associations with the word. But when touring in Europe, where the stateless ethnic group has suffered a long history of persecution, Rifati (president of the advocacy group Voice of Roma) says he’s often busy “showing them that we are legitimate citizens, beyond our musicianship, that we are smart, honest, aware, etc. — and not dirty, thieves, con artists or beggars.”

Organizers of the Accordion Fest, for their part, are less interested in labels and stereotypes than in trying to make sense of this sprawling musical tradition. They’ve gathered Romani masters from multiple countries to highlight the musical threads connecting people who (as the 1993 movie Latcho Drom conveys so eloquently) have spread across the globe, often not by choice. Fest Director Pat Jasper traveled the Balkans in search of performers, eventually staying in the homes of some and even attending one’s wedding — more thrilling than it sounds, as the tradition is known for raucous wedding music. (The public-radio program The World did a feature on her last fall, when her first attempt at this was quashed by difficulties obtaining work visas for the guest performers.)

The “Roma Accordion Convergence” will star Kal and two other accordionists: Bulgarian Neshko Neshev, known for the wedding band Trakia (formed with his cousin, clarinetist Ivo Papazov), and Romanian Andrei Mihalache, a third-generation master who now performs with his sons. In addition to the expected concerts, the men will participate in workshops.

While the latter two men are traditionalists, Kal is anything but. Based in Belgrade, Serbia, the band incorporates rock, rap, flamenco, and even Punjabi bhangra beats into a lively, seamless hybrid. Their first album, a self-titled disc on Asphalt Tango Records, opens with tracks that could play in your local pan-ethnic disco (Mike Nielsen, knob-twister for groups like Underworld, Natacha Atlas, and Jamiroquai, was enlisted to swank it up) but soon develops a more organic heft — the plaintive vocal on “Lili,” the wheedling violin of “Papusha,” and the comically sleazy narration of a Serbian rapper known as Rambo Amadeus on “Komedija.”

The group is led by Dragan Ristic, son of a school teacher who, according to Ristic, “was the first openly Roma teacher to graduate from teachers college.” Ristic, whose background is in theater, plays guitar as well as shargjia, an instrument he says isn’t much used by today’s Roma performers: Originally from Turkey, it has three double strings and “sounds like a banjo sometimes or bouzouki. It gives a player an opportunity to play melodic groove riffs.”

Ristic says that his group, formed in 2001 with his brother Dusan (no longer a member), is considered in Serbia to be “the most progressive European Romani band” and is mainstream enough to be played in cafés. (A press release boasts that their album topped the European world music charts in 2006.) While Kal’s sound is cosmopolitan and draws on myriad modern influences, the singer is no fan of much of the pop around him: “Today,” he gripes, “Balkan music is a sexy girl in a short skirt singing badly over an electric keyboard.”
Ristic, who says he listened to everything from Leonard Cohen to B.B. King in his youth, recognizes a kindred spirit in somebody like Manu Chao, who manages to make widely accessible music without homogenizing his influences. As he put it to another interviewer, “So many young Roma are just making pop crap, because Balkan society, especially Serbian society, has, after the collapse of communism, allowed the lowest common denominator to rule. … I hope we set an example of young Roma musicians using beats but staying true to Romani culture and music.” With any luck, his band will get to cross-pollinate while in Texas with some accordionists from completely different traditions.

Festival-goers who get carried away by the music this weekend have plenty of options to learn more about Roma. Not only does Rifati’s Voice of Roma have an active campaign to enlighten the public, and Ristic is associated with a program for the supremely culturally curious with a bit of vacation time to burn: The Amala Summer School is a “Romany (Gypsy) Music Dance Language Summer Camp” held each year in the Ristics’ home village of Valjevo.

“This is a project of my brother Dusan,” Dragan explains, “where he teaches our traditional music and language. Most of the students are teenagers and adults. They come from New Zealand, Australia, Israel, U.S., Italy, and other countries. They live amongst us, in our Romani neighborhood, which also provides them an opportunity to learn a real culture. “

And, if they’re as lucky as the Accordion Fest’s Pat Jasper, maybe somebody will get hitched while they’re there.

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Workshop dates for 2012

14 days workshop
July 17 - July 31
7 days workshop July 17 - July 24
July 24 - July 31
APPLY here

Amala Tube

Song Introduction

Cororo
Original author of the song is Dusko Petrovic. Dusko Petrovic wrote, compose and song for the very first time Cororo at 1969. Here is the sample sing by Romanian Roma singer Nicolae Guta
Enjoy!