Goran Ivanovic: Press
Folk Tales
Eastern Blok | Self Published (2007)
By Budd Kopman
After the whirlwind experience of Goran Ivanovic Group (Balkan Song Records, 2006), the group, which has remained stable, changed its named to Eastern Blok. Incredible as it might seem, Folk Tales is tighter and more complex than the first album, while retaining the earlier energy and abandon.
While virtuoso guitarist Goran Ivanoic remains the nominal leader of the group and main composer, Doug Rosenberg (reeds), Matt Ulery (bass) and Michael Caskey (drums and percussion) are further integrated into the group sound. This sound is a mix of Balkan folk music and some Klezmer, with the jazz aesthetic of improvisation wrapped in an impossibly high-energy drive that also brings in very heavy bass lines.
The pulse moves relentlessly forward, always given a kick by the odd meter, odd phrase length or out of phase repeated note groupings. The effect is mesmerizing, the bass and drums acting as one to viscerally push the listener this way and that.
Over this extremely physical, almost brutal yet dancing underpinning, Rosenberg plays either unison with Ivanovic or flies over it all, seemingly free yet always in touch. Ivanovic plays many roles, constantly changing between supporting the rhythm, adding harmonic complexity and soloing.
The music can also be beautiful. “Sorrow's Secret” lowers the energy a bit, with long lines played by guest cellist Michael Freilich. The track builds to a romantic climax as Caskey pushes ever forward, cresting and then ending with a classical guitar tremolo.
The arrangements on Folk Tales are perhaps the main advance in that the players' roles are continuously inverted and mixed, creating different textures and sounds. Eastern Blok is most definitely a band to catch live, because the energy pouring from the speakers would only intensify in a club.
Visit Eastern Blok on the web.
Eastern Blok at All About Jazz.
Track listing: Tango Pajdusko; Songs From The Black Sea; Balkan Healer; Sorrow's Secret; Kopanista; The Moon in the Labyrinth; Sapik; Wisdom of the Sands; Tricycle.
Personnel: Doug Rosenberg: tenor saxophone, clarinet, bass clarinet, flute; Goran Ivanovic: guitars, bouzouki; Matt Ulery: acoustic bass, electric bass; harmonium; Michael Caskey: drums, percussion; Michael Freilich: cello (4).
Style: Latin/World | Published: February 25, 2008
Blazing virtuosity and sheer beauty.
Celine Keating - Acoustic Guitar Magazine
Relentlessly innovative work.
Howard Reich - Los Angeles Times
Goran Ivanovic is a talented jazz guitarist. A solid bandleader who surrounds himself with American musicians, Ivanovic embraces his traditional Balkan folk music overtly. He plays hot. [Eastern Blok] offers up fire rather than ice, and the guitarist’s amalgamation of flamenco, Balkan, classical, blues, and jazz keeps his band pushing forward almost all of the time on his eponymous album…Ivanovic’s group interacts on a heady and passionate musical plane...the ensemble playing is often breakneck and consistently challenging. The Group’s repertoire is loaded with dynamics, and they move from soft contemplative interludes to wholly original, speed-driven Balkan jazz.
- Downbeat Magazine
The Chicago music scene has become increasingly exotic over the years and the next two discs prove it. Eastern Blok’s sophisticated “Balkan fusion” sound on their disc “Folk Tales” (Easternblok.net) is sure to appeal to the growing following of acts such as Gogol Bordello and The World/Inferno Friendship Society.
Gregg Shapiro - Chicago Free Press (Dec 27, 2007)
This incredibly talented ensemble conceive a fiery blend of Middle Eastern exoticism and the folk traditions of the Balkans.
Instrumental music of any obvious complexity is tough to review—you don't want to lose half the readership by getting overly technical about what various instruments are doing, but you also don't want to make a quick getaway by just saying stuff like "this song is upbeat," "this song sounds kinda sad," etc. Eastern Blok certainly deserves better than that. This incredibly talented ensemble, who previously went by the name The Goran Ivanovic Group, conceive a fiery blend of Middle Eastern exoticism and the folk traditions of the Balkans on their exciting new album Folk Tales.
Although Eastern Blok can be accurately characterized as a band that welds classical and jazz together (Ivanovic himself is a classical guitar virtuoso), there's a wildly inventive mix of atmospheres on this record that transcends categories. The opening "Tango Pajdusko" serves up dazzling arpeggios and a vaguely ominous mood, like someone pushing forward through the darkness with intense concentration, trying to get clear of some unnamed threat. It's gripping as hell. So is "Songs from the Black Sea," which features Ivanovic's stellar bouzouki playing in its mix of instruments. "Sorrow's Secret" is an apt title for an evocative track that offers one of the album's most fluid, inspired arrangements. The clarity of the sound here is awe-inspiring and special kudos should be given to Downbeat Magazine Award winner Michael Caskey's remarkable percussion.
Stuff like this usually gets filed under "World Music," where it's doomed to be part of the esoteric set that only collegiate musicians and reviewers are privy to. That's especially true of longer musical excursions like "Kopanitsa" (an engrossing number that practically flies a "World Music" banner above your head as it plays) and "Sapik." The mesmerizing "Wisdom of the Sands" takes you to a place far, far away and drops you there for awhile, with a harmonium adding deep ambience to the string instruments otherwise painting the tonal colors. This track in particular could easily be utilized in the soundtrack of some film set in the farthest reaches of eastern Europe.
Without a doubt, Eastern Blok play with a sense of complete urgency throughout this record. Yet the unparalleled discipline of these players is balanced by a fine sense of aesthetics and the value of showcasing each instrument's sonic flavoring in the context of genuinely compelling compositions. You don't need to be a musician or a hepcat to appreciate the dynamic nature of Eastern Blok's work. You just need to sit back and let the powerhouse playing take you on a wild, mysterious ride.
Kevin Renick - PLAYBACK:stl (Dec 12, 2007)
Kevin Renik - Playback St Louis (Dec 12, 2007)
THE RADAR MUSIC
by MATT LEE
photography by JOSEPH MOHAN
BLOK PARTY
Talking inspiration from folk, jazz, classical and rock, Eastern Blok is back with a superb second album
“I studied classical music; I’m from Serbia and the Balkans and I only got into this folk stuff when I moved,” says guitar virtuoso Goran Ivanovic, 30, as he leans against the counter in his Lincoln Square apartment, waiting for a traditional Serbian dish of sataras to finish simmering. “So we actually all kind of got together at the same time and started studying different [Balkan] bands and composers.”
And that, in a nutshell, is the story of Eastern Blok, Chicago’s celebrated Balkan folk-jazz-classical quartet.
Comprised of musicians’ musicians Ivanovic, who studied classical guitar at the acclaimed Mozarteum University in Salzburg; saxophonist Doug Rosenberg, 28; bassist Matt Ulery, 25; and percussionist Michael Caskey, 30—degreed musicians all—this is one band intent above all else on following its own singular musical journey. That fascinating journey is documented most recently on their compelling sophomore release, Folk Tales, hitting shelves this month. A 50-minute romp through the soul of Eastern and Western musical cultures, Folk Tales dazzles with its wildly creative take on Balkan folk music reimagined with inflections of jazz, classical and hints off other folk traditions like gypsy and klezmer.
“The Balkans have always been a place where East and West converge,” says Ivanovic, a classic-guitar prodigy in Yugoslavia who immigrated to Chicago in 1997, to escape the war. “Turks occupied the region for four centuries; there are great traditions in terms of dances, music, groups of people adopting each others’ music on their native instruments.”
Ulery, who, like Rosenberg and Caskey, spends much of his time outside of Eastern Blok playing in jazz circles, agrees: “We’re really just carrying on that tradition, translating the music to a different part of the world,” he says.
“We just happen to be over here. We’re inspired by European and Eastern European music, but now we’re adding American music.”
A follow-up to 2005’s self-titled debut, when the band was called the
Goran Ivanovic Group, Folk Tales is the summation of the quartet’s
knowledge earned through hundreds of live shows since the first album, countless hours listening to records—some of which Ivanovic’s parents bring back from trips to the Balkans—and loads of improvisation. “There are songs on the record that we played 100 times before recording and
there are songs that we played almost no times and there are songs that were completely improvised in the studio,” says Rosenberg.
For Eastern Blok, the journey continues—on Folk Tales, and, in a more literal sense, on the road—with a long tour where they will play in concert halls, churches, universities and night clubs across the country.
And with improv-heavy shows that regularly see them expanding five
minute songs into half-an-hour jams, it’s safe to say that Eastern Blok’s concerts are even more interesting than their albums.
“A lot of bands have to play their stuff exactly as it’s written,” says Caskey, a Kalamazoo native
and five-time Detroit Music Award and Downbeat magazine Award winner. “With us, even the arrangements are up for grabs,” says Rosenberg.
Matt Lee - CS Magazine (Oct 1, 2007)
"Put Goran Ivanovic Group in your CD player, then sit down quickly and hang on to your seat. The energy that pours out of the speakers will literally bowl you over before you know what happened, or you might just want to get up and dance. But there is much more than sheer energy on this record. Yes, there is Ivanovic's technical prowess, as well as that of the rest of the band, but what is on display here is a real fusion of foreign folk musics with the improvisational esthetics of American jazz..."
Budd Kopman - All about Jazz (Jan 7, 2008)