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"Cha Cha" from Balken Beat Box (JDub Records)
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"Shushan (Featuring Shushan)" from Balken Beat Box (JDub Records)
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Chicago Sun Times, Feature >>

Balkan Beat Box a band without borders

BY HEDY WEISS

Arts Critic

Saxophonist Ori Kaplan, a co- founder of the rollicking Balkan Beat Box, was running late when I called him recently. Chatting by cell phone he told me I'd caught him just as he was shop ping for sandals at a market in Jaffa, the picturesque seaport adjacent to Tel Aviv, and he would be back at his parents' house (and a land line) soon. He was on a brief stopover in Israel af ter a boating vacation off the Mediter ranean coast of Turkey. And he and his band were now gearing up for a U.S.

tour that is to include just a single per formance Thursday at The Empty Bot tle in Chicago.

This band clearly gets around -~ and so does its sound

Though born in Israel, Kaplan, 35, has lived in New York for more than 15 years and is now a naturalized US. citi zen. He came to this country to study (first at the New School, then at the Mannes College of Music) and to grow as a musician.

"Israel, as you know, is in the center of a tough neighborhood, and while there is a lot of talent in the country, there is not a lot of money to support the arts," Kaplan said. "Many of us feel

BALKAN BEAT BOL

When; 10 p.m. Thursday

Where: The Empty Bottle, 1035 N. Western

Tickets; $15 Call:*

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we've got to spread our wings." -

To get a sense of just how high and wide Kaplan has flown, you need only scan the resumes of the Balkan Beat Box's band members and guest artists, and to examine the vast array of musi cal influences (klezmer, Arabic, Turk ish, Romanian, Bulgarian, Greek, Span ish, North African, gypsy, punk rock,

hip-hop, classical ... and the beat goes on) the tend has absorbed.

"Our music is an ethno-mash, the sound of the new Mediterranean," said Kaplan. "And a lot of it is stuff I've been exploring since childhood. I was study ing classical clarinet when, at 1 first heard klezmer music. I was so at tracted to it that I began transcribing it by ear. Later I tried everything be bop, free jazz, punk rock. I'm enamored of gypsy dance music. And I love both the Eastern European sound and the North African and Sephardic music that is so much a part of what you hear in Israel. What our band has tried to do is blend all those sounds and give them a modern, electronic, dance-floor beat."

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BEAT BOX

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Myriad sounds mix for modern beat

Kaplan's co-founding partner, drummer-programmer Tamir Muskat (formerly of Firewater), is of Romanian descent and, like Ka plan, he was born in Israel but now lives in New York. Tomer Yosef, the group's vocalist and percus sionist, was originally from Yemen, but now lives in Israel where he also enjoys a career as stand-up comic. (Yosef has a dis tinct reputation for stirring things up on the dance floors of the clubs where Balkan Beat Box plays.)

Israeli-based Uri Kinrot plays guitar with the group. And on this tour Hagar Ben-Ari (an Israeli bass player who also lives in New York) and Peter Hess, an Ameri can sax and horn player, will be part of the mix.

Depending on the special style of the many different guest artists with which it works, the band tends to create each piece in a dif ferent way. The group's self-titled 2005 album (on JDub Records) features pieces .that were inspired by everything from the text of He brew trance prayers to a song sung cappella by the Bulgarian Chicks.

"Sometimes we write a melody

first and bring a singer in to per form it," explained Kaplan, who was previously a member of Gogol Bordello, the New York "gypsy punk band" founded in 1999. "Sometimes we give an existing piece our special electronic treat ment. In the end, it's all designed for DJs and nonstop dancing."

The music of Balkan Beat Box is easy for Kaplan to talk about, no matter how layered; so is the bond ing of musicians and audience that he witnessed during a recent tour.

"When the war in Lebanon and Israel began, we were just leaving for a tour of European festivals in Denmark, Sweden, Germany,

Belgium, Switzerland," he said. "It was a tense time, I can tell you; some of those in the audience came wearing Hezbollah arm patches and head scarves. But they soon re alized we were there for peace, that we want to have a dialogue. We had some very educational conversa tions in Paris, with refugees from North Africa who came to our show. I think they felt a real re lease. And we felt the same thing, just as we did when we played in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem later."

Kaplan said he would love to tour to Arabic countries, too, but this is not easy to arrange.

"We met an Iranian musician

Balkan Beat Box has a revolving door of band members and guest artists. "Sometimes we write a melody first and bring a singer in to perform it," says the band's co-founder, Ori Kaplan.

we'd love to work with, when we were in Sweden; we are making in quiries about participating in the Gnawa Festival in Morocco, and we hope to go to Turkey this winter," said Kaplan. "The influence of Turk ish-Ottoman culture is so strong on our music; it's the sound that trav eled into much of the Balkans, into Lebanon and to Israel.

"I'm not too much interested in politics, but all the interviews I'm do ing now are about the Middle said Kaplan, sounding both frus trated and weary. "I understand that. But in our music we try to erase borders. We hear a Utopian world." hweiss@suntimes.com
 09/03/06
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