Shantel - Planet Paprika [2009]
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Also known as Stefan Hantel, German DJ, singer
and musician Shantel is a controversial figure. His remixes of
Balkan gypsy music scored in the 2006 BBC Radio 3 Awards for World
Music, but his appropriation and commercialisation of these and
other native sounds have raised hackles among purists.
That said, this latest album doesn't pretend to be anything more
than it is, offering some enjoyably silly dance tunes (think:
Macarena in the Balkans), throwaway humour and several heavyweight
guest artists.
In Garth Cartwright's 2005 book Princes Amongst Men, one member of
Romanian gypsy brass band
Fanfare Ciocarlia memorably described
Shantel's work on theirs as “dogshit”. There is an undeniable whiff
of said substance about what he does, but he has also given music
from Turkey, Romania, and the Bucovina region of his parents a
youthful, clubby audience well beyond the world music ghetto.
“There's too much death and too little sex,” he raps, tongue firmly
in cheek on the Balkan ska of Citizen of Planet Paprika. This guy
doesn't take himself too seriously, and neither should you.
On the irritating sing-songy chorus of Being Authentic (which starts
with the kind of acoustic guitar strum Flight of the Conchords use
between skits) he openly declares: “Absolutely inauthentic / My
style is egocentric,” attempting to wrong foot his critics.
Nevertheless, the same song also includes Dario Ivkovic's virtuosic
accordion solo and a burbling Balkan brass section featuring
trumpeter Marko Markovic, a rising star of Serbian gypsy music.
Other notable guests include Canadian singer Brenna MacCrimmon –
whose sincerity in adopting Turkish music as her own is beyond
question – and, on Sura ke Mastura, a voice from the grave in the
form of Greek rembetika singer Anestis Delias.
Shantel’s limitations as both a composer and lyricist are laid bare
on the puerile Wandering Stars, and in several other samey melodies,
which call into question how much he relies on folklore for his
tunes. But the impressively OTT auto-tune job on Sorin Konstantin's
vocals during Binaz in Dub is a guilty pleasure to rival the
trashiest Balkan turbo-pop hit.
Jon Lusk,
BBC Music
Buy Planet Paprika from Amazon.com
Send your CD and concert reviews to
info@balkanbrassworld.com
