PR Info Love Tree Neu Engl
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The SHARING HERITAGE Love Tree Ensemble Mitglieder des Ensembles bei der ersten Session in Hven, Schweden: Harald Haugaard, Mattias Peréz , Helene Blum, Tapani Varis, Julia Lacherstorfer, Nataša Mirković, Sérgio Crisóstomo, Etta Scollo (v.l.n.r.), Copyright: Still Words Photography Eleven outstanding musicians from all over Europe invite you to experience astonishing facets of European folk music in an extraordinary concert. After all, in 2018 Europe is celebrating its diverse cultural traditions – and the motto chosen by the EU is ‘SHARING HERITAGE’. Singer Helene Blum and violinist Harald Haugaard, two of the world’s most popular Danish musicians, have launched the SHARING HERITAGE Love Tree Ensemble in their roles as ambassadors of the European Year of Cultural Heritage 2018. The artists involved embody very different musical traditions from Finnish Karelia, Northern Ireland and the High Tatras to the Alps, Sicily and Portugal. The ensemble has gathered age-old songs and melodies from all directions, revealed their common origins, and breathed new life into them. With their similarities being unmistakable, regional heritage and a profoundly European vision can be heard to flow together. The same song known to Scots as a jig (actually derived from the French ‘gigue’) is also a nursery rhyme in Denmark and a tarantella in Italy. Even ‘The Love Tree’, the tune after which the band was named, has made its way around Europe for centuries in various guises. Known as ‘Folia’ in Portugal and Spain, in Danish it’s called ‘Kærlighedstræet’. In this simple love song in three-four time, the various versions of the lyrics usually deal with transience and pride. The SHARING HERITAGE Love Tree Ensemble has rediscovered these and other gems, and arranged and interpreted them in a contemporary style. The result is a concert programme rich in atmospheres and soundscapes which is touching and soulful, and combines exuberance with elegance. All the artists are in a musical class of their own and among the best in their field, both in their own countries and frequently beyond. Never afraid to experiment in unfamiliar genres, they relish transcending musical and national boundaries – and do so with virtuoso ease. Line up Helene Blum (DK) vocal + fiddle Harald Haugaard (DK) fiddle Albin Paulus (D) wood winds Brian Finnegan (NIR) flutes Etta Scollo (IT) vocal + guitar Julia Lacherstorfer (AT) fiddle + vocal Mattias Peréz (S) guitars Michal Zak (PL) wood winds Nataša Mirković (BIH) vocal + percussion Sérgio Crisóstomo (POR) fiddle Tapani Varis (FIN) double bass + jews harp Concert Dates January 8th 2018 Hamburg, Opening Sharing Heritage (non public) April 28th 2018 Flensburg, folkBALTICA Nov 2018 Leipzig, expo ‚denkmal’ (tbc) More dates in progress.. Infos www.lovetree.dk www.laviola.de/kuenstler/helene-blum-harald-haugaard www.heleneblum.dk www.haraldh.dk www.sharingheritage.de Booking & Contact Laviola I Anja Hövelmann I [email protected] I 0341-2158548 www.laviola.de Press Contact Miriam Rossius I [email protected] I 0172-30 517 60 Bios Helene Blum, vocals, fiddle (DK) Her deep familiarity with time-honoured melodies and lyrics give songwriter Helene Blum the freedom to keep exploring new avenues as a songwriter. Elements of jazz, pop and chamber music are elegantly and sensitively woven into her folk songs, while traditional words and contemporary lyrics beautifully merge into each other. A winner of a Danish Music Award, she has found acclaim not only in Denmark, but also on tours of Europe, Canada and Japan. Her album Men med åbne øjne was rated by the British Daily Telegraph as one of the ten best folk albums of 2013. Helene Blum’s fifth and current CD Dråber af tid (‘Droplets of time’) released in January 2017 was nominated for a German Record Critics’ Award. One track on the album, ‘Friheden Station’, was a number one hit on Danish radio. Harald Haugaard, fiddle (DK) With a pedigree including twelve Danish Music Awards, Harald Haugaard has long since carved out a worldwide reputation as an outstanding violinist and composer. He studied and then taught at the Carl Nielsen Academy in Odense, is the artistic director of the folkBALTICA festival, and established his own fiddle school in 2008, where he passes on with passion the skills he himself learned from traditional violinists such as his grandfather Johannes Kristensen. Although this repertoire makes up the heart of his music, Haugaard’s art is so vibrant and inspirational precisely because he persists in departing from traditions and reinterpreting them in a variety of new ways. It was for this very reason that his most recent album Lys og forfald (‘Light and decay’) received the German Record Critics’ Award. Tapani Varis, double bass & overtone flutes (FIN) Tapani Varis is one of the most sought-after bassists in Nordic folk. In the 1980s, he was a founding member of Värttina, probably the best-known Finnish group to perform new folk music. Tapani’s trademark is his rock-solid beat enhanced by a dry but full sound. His bass- playing has provided a strong foundation for plenty of folk productions, yet also more experimental ensembles such as the American Café Orchestra. It was at the famous Sibelius Academy that Varis studied the bass, Jew’s harp and various Nordic flutes, which also make up the core sound of his own band, the Tapani Varis Collective. Julia Lacherstorfer, violin, vocals (AUT) Julia Lacherstorfer gives familiar Alpine sounds both an unexpected aesthetic twist and new, expressive forms. Having grown up with the yodel, Wienerlied (Viennese song) and Austro– Bavarian Gstanzl, at university she discovered her passion for jazz and improvisation. Since then, she has accomplished her own musical vision “which, despite being based on the strong back of tradition, lives in the present and points to the future.” (Salzburger Nachrichten) Julia Lacherstorfer and her band Alma won the Austrian World Music Award in 2015 followed by the 2017 RUTH World Music Award. In 2018, she started co-directing the wellenklænge Festival in Lunz am See along with Simon Zöchbauer, with whom she also performs in the duo Ramsch & Rosen. Etta Scollo, vocals + guitar (IT) Etta Scollo’s singing can make the audience dance or cry, and reflects all the colours of life. Born in Catania, she now lives in Berlin and Sicily, although she’s actually at home in a string of musical worlds from the folk song to avant-garde. She received a gold disc for her Italian version of the Beatles song ‘Oh Darling’ as well as a number of awards for ‘Canta Ro’, a passionate, loving tribute to Sicilian folk singer Rosa Balistreri. Etta Scollo has also made a name for herself as a composer, including with film music for Korean director Kim Ki-Duk. Recently, she teamed up with actor Joachim Król to stage a literary and musical programme featuring songs and stories about love. Nataša Mirković, vocals + percussion (BIH) Nataša Mirković’s ability to put her voice, heart and soul into extraordinary music projects has been demonstrated in a wide variety of genres. One of her recent projects is En El Amor, a soulful programme of Sephardic songs from Bosnia-Herzegovina, which received a German Record Critics’ Award. Other works strikingly displaying her vocal flexibility were an interpretation of Schubert’s Winter Journey arranged for hurdy-gurdy and voice (recorded with Matthias Loibner) or unorthodox arrangements of pop hits from the former Yugoslavia. Her musical journey began as a child with Balkan folk songs and her father’s accordion- playing. After studying classical voice in Graz, she went on to perform in numerous operas and musicals. Her reputation spread as far as Hollywood: She performed the title song for Angelina Jolie’s directorial debut In the Country of Blood and Honey. Albin Paulus, woodwinds (D) Albin Paulus pounces on anything which is weird and unusual, completely undervalued or holds out the promise of fascinating unknown territory, such as the Jew’s harp, psychedelic, rocked-out Hendrix solos on the bagpipes, and virtuoso yodelling. As a child, he first underwent sound classical training on the clarinet. After studying music in Vienna and Cremona, he made a name for himself with for example the first recording of all J.G. Albrechtsberger’s concertos for the Jew’s harp. In 2011, Albin Paulus was crowned the world virtuoso of the Jew’s harp in Siberia. His band Hotel Palindrone has won several awards, including a German Record Critics’ Award. Mattias Pérez, guitars (SWE) One of Sweden’s top folk musicians, guitarist Mattias Pérez tours the world with a variety of line-ups. In the studio, he has contributed his enormous talent to dozens of albums. When his first solo CD entitled East was released in 2013, Swedish music magazine Lira gushed: “This music is light-years away from all the fake poses and attempts to be agreeable. It thrives on its own power like the forest or the river.” Despite Mattias Pérez’s special relationship with Swedish heritage, he relishes challenges outside it, including with his own band MP3. Mattias also teaches at the Ingesund School of Music at Karlstad University. Michał Żak, woodwinds (PL) A musician and marathon runner. His development as the former was moulded not least by intensive periods spent in France, Armenia and India, where he learned various woodwind instruments. However, he discovered the deep, precious foundations for his musicianship in his native Poland. To immerse himself in Polish heritage, Michał Żak went to its place of origin, the villages, and spent over ten years in rural Poland, repeatedly playing with various musicians. Not tied to any rigid frameworks, Michał Żak moves effortlessly between early music, folk, jazz and fusion, and is a member of ensembles such as Lautari and Janusz Prusinowski Kompania.