Romani language classes online. More details>>>

cforms contact form by delicious:days

Mona Molarsky – New York City Life Examiner

Dotschy-Reinhardt

The Gypsies are coming. They’ll be camped out at Drom, a club on Avenue A, near Tompkins Square. Guitarists and dumbek players, brass bands and belly dancers, cabaret singers and ethno-mesh D.J.s are just a few of the many sorts of artists who will be performing there as part of the New York Droma Gypsy Festival from Wednesday, September 24th to Friday, October 3rd.

Organized by world music enthusiasts Ilhan Sendar and Mehmet Dede the Gypsy Festival is now in its fourth year. For the first time, it will be held solely at Drom, a hip yet intimate club, where the music doesn’t get lost in the din of the crowd.

So… what is a Gypsy, anyhow?

Contrary to popular misconception, being a Gypsy is neither a lifestyle choice nor a fashion statement but something you are born into. The Gypsies, or Roma—as most Gypsies call themselves—are an ethnic group whose roots can be traced back to 11th Century India.  A nomadic people from early on, they traveled west, through the Middle East, North Africa, Europe and the Americas. Wherever they went, they were given different names: Cigány in Hungary, Kalé in Finland, Gitanos in Spain. In England they were called Gypsies because the local population believed them to be Egyptians.

Bound together at first by a common culture and mother tongue, Gypsies who settled in different regions developed distinct cultures and dialects over time. No matter where they lived though Gypsies produced more than their share of brilliant musicians.

Roma violinists became legendary in Hungary and Romania, the Gitanos in Spain created flamenco—one of the world’s great musical traditions —and in France, during the 1930s, Gypsy guitarist Django Reinhardt created his own distinctive style, which became known as “Gypsy jazz.” No matter what their nationality or musical language, the best Gypsy artists have been known for bringing an extravagant sense of style and rare emotional power to their performances.

Today a young generation of Gypsies around the world continues to thrill audiences and expand musical frontiers. The Droma festival brings together some of these Roma performers–along with some non-Gypsy artists who’ve been inspired by Romany music–to create a week-long carnival for the eyes and ears.

One artist worth special note is Dotschy Reinhardt, a young Gypsy singer-songwriter and guitarist from Germany, making her New York debut this Sunday. Dotschy comes from the sprawling clan of Gypsy Jazz great Django Reinhardt. The Reinhardt family was once concentrated in Germany, Belgium and France but today they are dispersed all over the globe.

Dotschy grew up listening to jazz records—to Django, of course, but also to Frank Sinatra, Doris Day, Wes Montgomery and Pat Martino. In her late teens, she fell in love with bossa nova, and her first album, Sprinkled Eyes (Galileo MC) is mostly an homage to that cool Brazilian beat that seems to float high above the sweaty jungles of human suffering. Unlike most jazz singers, Dotschy writes the majority of her own music and lyrics… often in Romany. Her voice has a warm, woody tone that suggests depths beyond the genre she is chiefly working in and she is possessed of a beauty and wit that promise a bright career.

So what is this relative of the Hot Gypsy Jazz king doing playing such cool, floaty riffs? Django fans and other Gypsy music lovers may well wonder.  Although nobody can see into the most secret part of an artist’s heart, perhaps part of the answer lies in the history of Dotschy’s family and her people.

Dotschy Reinhardt was born near the medieval city of Ravensburg in Southern Germany, a town of picturesque towers and gabled houses with red tiled roofs.  But Dotschy and her family–who are Sinti Gypsies–did not live in Ravensburg proper. They lived in Ummenwinkel, a small village ghetto for Gypsies, nearby.

The ghetto has been there for quite some time—long before Dotschy was born. During the early years of the Third Reich, the Germans built barracks in Ummenwinkle and forced the Sinti into them, “so that nobody would be in contact with the Gypsies,” as Dotschy puts it.

Later, after Hitler instituted his “Final Solution,” the Nazis shipped hundreds of thousands of Sinti and Roma to the death camps. In the Holocaust, more than half a million Gypsies died. Dotschy’s great-grandfather and many relatives were among them. Today, many Sinti still live in the place where the old barracks stood in Ummenwinkle–segregated, as Hitler intended, from the rest of society.

Dotschy grew up in this place, an heir to its stories of loss and suffering. She knows the history and she dedicated her first album to her parents and her grandmother, whom she calls, “the bravest woman I ever knew.”

But today Dotschy lives in Berlin. While she loves to return to Ummenwinkle to visit, she’s got a new life in the city and a new musical groove. And with a past like that, exhaling its sulfurous breath into your ear, who wouldn’t want to float awhile on bossa nova’s buoyant wings?  May her journey be a happy one, wherever she goes. Dotschy will be performing at Drom with her guitarist cousin Lancy Falta and two New York musicians.

To read article in full please click here

For information about Dotschy Reinhardt: http://www.dotschyreinhardt.com/

Popularity: 4% [?]

Post to Twitter

Related posts:

  1. Droma Gypsy Festival Preview
  2. The 2011 Montreal Jazz Festival – Coming June 25-July 4 – Jazz Police
  3. GRUBB’s Band Of Gypsies Illuminates Montreal Jazz Festival – ChartAttack
  4. Russian and Slavic Cultural Festival Coming to Howell – Patch.com
  5. Dorado Schmitt and Django All-Stars to bring Gypsy jazz to Weehawken – The Jersey Journal – NJ.com

2 Comments to “The Gypsies Are Coming! …So, Who Are the Gypsies?”

Post comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

cforms contact form by delicious:days

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!