New Folk:: The Phenomenon of Chalga in Modern Bulgarian Folk

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The paper discusses the emergence and development of chalga music in Bulgaria as well as its significance for minority groups. It explores how chalga music has been influenced by different musical traditions and how it has allowed minority artists to express their culture.

Chalga music emerged in the early 1990s as a new pop folk genre with simple lyrics and an 'oriental' sound. It was initially performed by Roma and Turkish artists and has grown significantly in popularity. While once seen as low culture, it has now established itself as a legitimate development of folk music in Bulgaria.

Many early and popular chalga artists were from the Roma or Turkish minority groups, whose distinct musical traditions were suppressed under communism. The genre has provided a platform for these groups to showcase their historical and cultural musical roots in Bulgaria.

New Folk:

The phenomenon of chalga in modern Bulgarian folk

Edno ferari s zviat cherven, edno za teb, edno za men Slavi Trifonov, chalga (One red Ferrari, one for me, one for you)

2004 Milena Droumeva

Milena Droumeva

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They were silly, kitsch, synthesized tunes, which started appearing in Bulgarian media, and in the general Bulgarian cultural life in the early 1990s. Now, chalga has successfully found a niche in the Bulgarian music scene with a new image and a new name: pop folk. Initially characterized by simplistic lyrics and oriental street sound, chalga tunes have become more popular in a few short years than any other developing music genre in Bulgaria. It is no coincidence that some of the first and most popular chalga singers and musicians were Roma1 or ethnic Turks. These two minority groups have distinct musical roots, very different from Bulgarian folk, which were suppressed by the state for over 45 years during the communist regime. Today, in a seemingly democratic environment, music styles in Bulgaria are thriving and folk music is reclaiming new ground after years of state control. I have to admit, I, too, was one of the skeptic connoisseurs of classical and Western popular music, who thought chalga was a low-culture Gypsy genre unworthy of attention. Having now been away from Bulgaria for four years and being immersed in Vancouvers diverse music scene, I have gained a more rounded cosmopolitan perspective on music. I dont see chalga or even Bulgarian folk as sporadic unrelated music genres anymore , but as interdependent events, richly influenced by each other, as well as by the music of Turkey, Greece and the rest of the Balkans. Returning to Bulgaria this summer, I saw that chalga has not only persevered, but it has flourished and changed and became even more popular. While for many this genre still represents cheesy synthesized folk-ish tunes, more and more individual music chalga artists are creating some fascinating fusions of Roma music and Bulgarian folk with Turkish, Greek and Serbian elements. This paper is an exploration of the socio-political conditions, which have affected the formation and development of chalga in modern Bulgarian folk. Briefly, I will discuss the history of Balkan folklore, Roma musical and historic roots, and the reality of Roma and Turkish minority music in Eastern and Central Europe. I will show how all of these aspects have played a part in the formation of contemporary trends of folk music in Bulgaria, the most popular and controversial of which is the chalga.

In this paper I will refer to the general population known as Gypsy, as Roma

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I am discussing all of this from the position of a first generation Bulgarian, who has grown up in Bulgaria with some local knowledge of Bulgarian music, customs and society. As well, I am presenting my own personal perspective. To world music fans, Bulgarian folk is probably Trio Bulgarka, the Filip Kutev choir ensemble and Les mystres des voix Bulgares. The complex polyphonic singing harmonies, however, are not the only musical gems that Bulgarian folk has to offer. Although geographically small, the musical richness of the Balkans have shaped quite a few distinct folkloric areas with unique sound, singing styles and instruments. Within Bulgaria alone we find over six distinct music areas. The earthly, almost plodding dances from Dobrudja in the northeast are quite different in character from the lightningfast dances of the Shopes, and the long heart-rending songs from the Thracian plains contrast with the pure melodies from the northwest.2 Along with those areas, the musical traditions of the Rhodope mountains in the southeast and those of Macedonia on the southwest make for a rich, diverse and sometimes tense cultural and music expression. One thing that all these areas share is the tradition of line/ring dancing the horo. Its rhythm is highly unique and its sound is unmistakable with the contagious trills and patterns of the gaida [pipe], tupan [drum] and kaval [wood flute]. The most popular ring dance, racheniza, is counted in 2-2-3, followed closely by the Shope kopaniza counted in 2-2-3-2-2.3 In Macedonia there are similar counts, with measures of 7/8 counted as 3-22, and even measures of 22/16 counted as 2-2-3-2-2-3-2-2-2-2 such as the song Pominisli Libe Todoro.4 Horo dances are generally lively, jagged-rhythm instrumentals, which require considerable skill to perform both from the musicians and from the dancers. The traditional instruments of Bulgaria give it its particular timbre and contour.

Burton, Kim. (1994) World Music: The rough guide. London: Rough Guides: Penguin Group. P74 Ibid, p75 4 Ibid, p92
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The gadulka [see picture on left], is a relative of the medieval rebec and has 3 or 4 bowed strings and as many as 9 sympathetic strings for resonance. It has no frets or finger positions. It is held in front of the body and played with a bow, allowing for a distinguishable resonant sound.5 It seems like a simple instrument but when mastered it could produce compelling speed and patterns.

The tambour [also known as dranakia, prominent only in some folkloric areas,

dzunga, or bailama] is especially the southwest

ones, Macedonia, which borders with Greece and Turkey. The type of tambour played in Macedonia has a very sweet, resonant mandolin-like sound to it, and it complements the melodic singing style of this area. The tupan is an instrument present in every folk orchestra and in every social setting. It has a diameter of 50 to 60 cm and is beaten form the one side with a big wooden kiyak and from the other side with a thin osier, simulating a bass drum and a small drum sound.6 Generally, its rhythms are measured in 5/8, 7/8, 9/8 etc. There are two main types of gaida in Bulgaria the high, djura gaida, and the mountain low kaba gaida. The kaba gaida is native to the Rhodope region and is mostly played as a drone or a sequence of resonant pitches complementing the voice of a singer. The most common drone tone for gaidas is G. The wooden kaval is a cousin to the nei in Turkey, with eight or nine holes on top. There are at least two other instruments that seem to have always been an essential part of a Bulgarian folk orchestra the clarinet and the accordion. Yet, it wasnt until the beginning of the 19th century when instruments started being manufactured and exported from Central and Western Europe that they came to the Balkans. 7 In the 20th century, the clarinet and accordion have more or less replaced the gaida and gadulka in folk music sound. They are particularly present in the modern horo instrumental and the so-termed wedding music. Because music in Bulgaria is so
Ibid, p77 Balkanfolk. Tupan. < http://www.balkanfolk.com/shopitem.php?code=040800> 7 Burton, Kim, p77
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traditionally intertwined with social customs, musicians develop naturally from within communities. Thus instruments, techniques, approaches to melody, rhythm and improvisational patterns are passed down to generations. Originally, men tended to specialize in musicianship, while women excelled in singing. The type of polyphonic sound that Bulgarian women ensembles are famous for throughout the world has come to life through womens sharing of social spaces and social customs together. Other important social rituals where music plays central role are weddings, christenings, name days, and the seeing off of young men to mandatory army service.8 Wedding music in particular has gained almost legendary popularity by the 1950s, and has been elevated to extraordinary technical heights by talented Roma musicians.9 Upon gaining independence from Ottoman rule and the advancement of industrialization in the late 19th century, Bulgarian folk music began to split. The old-time authentic narodna muzika (rural folk) remained seemingly preserved in its form, while new genres of moderna muzika (modern music) incorporating Western and/or oriental elements started gaining more and more popularity. Yet neither of these genres could sufficiently describe the wedding music genre a grassroots form, which developed as a participatory community genre, where the local chalgadjii bands played at country fairs and accompanied horo dancing.10 Their name comes from chalga (possibly from Turkish) high levels of technical virtuosity coupled with rapid-fire improvisation on traditional musical motifs and scalar passages, as well as extremely fast tempos, profuse ornamentation, very loud amplified sound, and the incorporation of multiple themes, frequent key changes, and the use of complex, sometimes chromatic harmonies.11 Wedding orchestras were subsequently diversified and popularized by Turkish and Bulgarian Roma musicians in the 1900s. They used some of the traditional instruments gaida, kaval, gadulka, as well as accordion, clarinet, electric and bass guitar, drum set, synthesizer, violin, saxophone and trumpet.12 Because wedding bands thrived on playing at expensive, lavish weddings and other social events, they soon became a token of urban life, prosperity and celebration. Many ethnomusicologists have commented on the legendary character of some of these bands. Donna Buchanan
8

Ibid, p75 Buchanan, Donna. (1996)Wedding Musicians, Political Transitions and National Consciousness in Bulgaria. Retuning Cultures: Musical Changes in Central and Eastern Europe. In eds. Mark Slobin. London: Duke Univeristy Press. p204 10 Ibid, p202 11 Ibid, p203 12 Ibid, p202

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examines the career of Ivo Papasov a Thracian from a Roma-Turkish family who formed the Trakya ensemble in 1974.13 Soon his band became extremely popular and highly requested for weddings, because of the virtuosity of the musicians and the originality of Ivo Papazov as a composer and arranger of traditional folk music. His repertoire included versatile improvisatory elements of narodna musica (folk) with stylistic elements of Greek, Macedonian, Serbian, Romanian, Turkish and Roma traditional music, as well as American rock and jazz.14 In order to understand the importance of the diverse ethnic elements that wedding music brought to the Bulgarian cultural life, it is important to trace the history of Roma music and its relation to Bulgarian folk and the state. The Roma people came to the Balkans in the late 14th century. Their diaspora started in Rajasthan, India when different tribes and strands migrated to different parts of Europe, Russia, Asia and North America. The ancestors of the Bulgarian Roma migrated through Azerbaijan, Afghanistan, Turkey, Greece and finally settled in the Balkans. 15 Thus, they brought with them the styles, customs, instruments and colourful music from parts of India, the Middle East, and the Mediterranean. Even in Rajasthan, the Roma were known to be good musicians and had a history of playing at weddings.16 Naturally, they quickly gained respect as musicians on the Balkans, yet, that was the only kind of prestige they did get. Seen as dark-skinned and lower-class imposters, they soon found themselves on the margins of Balkan societies, and were even enslaved in Romania and Hungary.17 With the onset of communism in Bulgaria in 1949, there was a preoccupation by the state with carefully designing a monoethnic society, based in authentic Bulgarian cultural and musical traditions. This period was marked by the formation and propaganda of state-sponsored folk ensembles, such as the Filip Kutev womens choir and others whose role was to assert a pure unifying Bulgarian folk tradition, untouched by outside influences. It is important to understand that these state-sponsored groups were not bad musicians or composers, but their presence was used by the state to negate any other underground music activity as un-Bulgarian.18 The state therefore imposed very strict standards for what could be considered Bulgarian folk, thus estranging folk from its
13 14

Ibid, p203 Ibid. 15 Strom, Yale. 16 Siddiqi, Jameela, (1994) World Music: The rough guide. London: Rough Guides: Penguin Group. p233 17 Strom, Yale 18 Burton, Kim. P78

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original meaning music for the people. As is evident in the works of many musicologists, including Timothy Rice, the state version of folk was not what the people wanted. This explains the extreme popularity of wedding bands during the years of communist regime. Their music was not only more fluid and open to various influences, but its diverse stylistic elements reflected the ethnic diversity of Bulgaria Turks, Pomaks (Slavic Muslims) Roma, Jews, and Bulgarians. This was precisely the diversity that the communist state wished to eradicate through carefully crafted ideas of unity, monoethnicity and cultural purity.19 Yet, there was particular zest in the states attempts to prohibit the music of [Roma-Turkish] wedding bands and the dancing of the Mediterranean kjuchek (Turkey) and sertaki (Greece). For centuries singing and dancing of the horo have served as central elements to the cultural preservation of Slavic ethnicity during Ottoman rule. Part of the communist states propaganda was the assertion that Bulgarian folk had somehow magically remained untouched by Ottoman influence, so any music which evoked Turkish, Greek or generally oriental themes were seen as a threat to national unity.20 Yet, as theorist Donna Buchanan points out, 21 it was exactly the same Ottoman musical influence, which gave Bulgarian folk instruments such as the zurla (a Turkish oboe), the duduk, and the daire (a tambourine from the Middle East); as well as its warm-timbre Mediterranean sound and deep vibrato singing style. Wedding bands, then, served as a negation to the states attempts to assimilate and homogenize Bulgarian folk. In the words of Timothy Rice, the fact that the personnel of wedding ensembles was predominantly ethnic minority and that wedding music asserted a new improvisatory, free-performance style, effectively challenged the homogenous notions of Bulgarian national identity and folk music authenticity.22 Not only that, it challenged the implications of the ethnic makeup of Bulgaria, the existence of Islam and of Roma minorities which the state had been trying to deny. Thus Ottoman, or Turkish musical symbols have been framed in the Bulgarian mind as carriers of orientalism and tokens of the 500-year Ottoman occupation. Wedding music is seen as the impersonation of these oriental musical symbols. Interestingly, the situation in neighbouring Serbia, Romania and Macedonia was similar. There was a proliferation of underground wedding music, performed mostly by ethnic
Buchanan, Donna, p206 Ibid, p.216 21 Buchanan, Donna. p216 22 Resmussen, Ljerka, p108
20 19

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minority musicians Turks and Roma.23 While they all shared a stylistic sampling of oriental music, each group had a distinct set of instruments, repertoire, traditional elements and singing styles. In Serbia there were the Gypsy brass bands, in Romania the talented cimbalom players, in Macedonia the tambour and dumbac [Turkish drum] players. In Bulgaria, as mentioned earlier, wedding musicians used traditional Bulgarian instruments, as well as Western and Oriental instruments. Even though their freeperformance style was innovative and reflected their ethnic and musical heritage, at least one Bulgarian musicologist has pointed out that the way they give life to wedding music is done in the same manner as traditional musicians construct horos by improvising on traditional motives or phrases called persenkove or kolena.24 Thus, the tradition of the chalgadjii or sviridjii accompanying the horo and other social rituals in rural Bulgaria, emerges as the foundation for wedding music, over which various ethnic and stylistic elements are overlaid. In Macedonia, wedding music was also known as chalgajiiska music whose most characteristic feature is the complete unison between the vocal and the instrumental parts. The voice and the instruments follow an identical melodic line that each one reproduces in the octave best suited for its range.25 It becomes clear that since both Bulgarian and Macedonian wedding music derived from chalgadjiiska music, modern Bulgarian chalga has descended from the wedding music tradition with the aide of Turkish arabesk, Greek rembetica and the new Serbian novocomponovana26 music. Novocomponovana Serbian music draws its appeal, not surprisingly, from Bosnian folk with its Turkish influences. Its pop version, the turbo folk, is the closest approximation to modern Bulgarian chalga as it emerged in the early 90s. The Serbian pop folk star Lepa Brena (pretty Brena) was an iconic figure, who became popular early in my childhood, long before chalga had gained any musical significance in Bulgaria. As Kim Breton points out, her music was criticized for being kitschy, unoriginal and most bizarrely, sadomasochistic, in reference to its Turkish influences.27 Lepa Brena was a bottom-up success story of a simple girl from Bosnia who represented the new folk the new music of the people, which explains her success all over the Balkans. She not only flirted with Turkish and Greek oriental elements, combined with Western sound, but she
23
24

Burton, Kim, p92 Buchanan, Donna, p220 25 Macedonia. Dumbec. <http://members.tripod.com/~dimobetchev/music/instruments.html> 26 Burton, Kim. p87 27 Ibid.

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also presented a highly sensuous and sexualized image of herself, in sharp contrast with the almost a-sexual puritan look communism projected. Thinking back, Lepa Brena developed a unique singing style a deep chest breathy alto sound, which was picked up by the majority of chalga singers in Bulgaria. In fact, the first popular chalga stars who emerged as early as 1992, Gloria, Extra Nina, Nelina, Petra, and others, could have been the mirror image of Lepa Brena dyed blond hair, big cleavage and a Western, but familiar look. Yet, in the context of Bulgaria, chalga had a particular path of development and a unique socio-political relationship with music. Donna Buchanan mentions that famous wedding musicians became very wealthy even during the communist period, because of the importance of music in weddings and other social occasions to regular Bulgarians. However since they were repressed and played underground they could not openly tour, perform concerts, advertise or appear on the media - they were constrained to the wedding party. After 1989, the emergence of chalga was strongly associated with the new riches class, who emerged suddenly in the midst of privatization and right away favoured chalga. They were thought to have become illegally wealthy, in a rugs to riches scenario, and chalga, with its simple lyrics and Mediterranean orchestration, catered to their uneducated musical taste. Another element, which also points to a relationship between wedding music and chalga is the fact that chalga right away settled in the musical niche of the mehana - a taverna-like restaurant with lavish live performances. With a decline in weddings and a general worsening of peoples economic situation in the 1990s, socializing in a mehana setting proves to be one of the last traditional social rituals in Bulgaria. Chlaga is therefore fulfilling a social need earlier provided by the wedding bands, but not sanctioned by the state at the time. As a form, however, chalga has undergone some structural changes. In contrast with the highly improvisational ultra fast horo sequences of wedding music, chalga is characterized by a heavy-heart medium to slow rhythms, evoking more sensuous, oriental dances, such as the Turkish kjuchek or the Greek sertaki. We can also see how this performative setting has pre-determined some of the stylistic elements of chalga specifically the choice of instruments. Because chalga bands are small and they emphasize the singer [the musician/s are often invisible] in an attempt to evoke a star-image, it is not efficient to carry lots of instruments to perform at different settings. Thus commercial chalga musicians have largely reverted to using a

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drum machine set and a synthesizer to simulate the sound of many traditional folk instruments. As a result of this, skill and musicianship are somewhat sacrificed for the sake of an overall shiny package with the singers often overtly sexualized image. As far as originality, chalga did start as a copycat of Serbian new folk, Lepa Brena style, with very simplistic lyrics and forced rhymes: We know each other for a long time and we hate each other, like a cat and a dog.28 Yet, this genre has many important cultural implications and a lot of musical potential, as is becoming clear in the last few years. Its importance for ethnic minorities in Bulgaria is also indisputable. The communist legacy of assimilation and ethnic invisibility in Bulgaria left Turks and Roma people and their cultural heritage on the margins of society. It is no surprise then that the chalga genre is populated with Bulgarian Turks and Roma musicians and singers. Via this genre, they have been able to raise awareness about their historical, cultural and musical existence in Bulgarian culture. Most of the top chalga performers are in fact Roma or Turkish. Probably the most controversial and glamorous figure from this league is the pop folk star Azis [see graphic on the left] a Roma singer, who is probably the first commercially famous Bulgarian performer to also sing in Romany the Roma language. Some of his repertoire has a distinct Greek sound with the resonant trills of the bouzuka and the low breathy chest voice; other have a Turkish touch syncopated bass drum, layered with dumbac rhythms, along with the sound of the daire [tambourine]. He also incorporates traditional horo music, in a wedding music spin with rapid improvisation intertwined with Turkish motives. His singing style is very distinctly oriental and Roma with longing sliding vowels, frequent vibrato and high-pitched angst.29 While wedding musicians had to conceal their ethnicity and cultural references, Azis is proud to be Roma and his presence in the music scene is empowering for other Roma performers and individuals. Reihan, another new Bulgarian pop folk star has pushed the envelope even further her entire album Inan Sevgilim is in Turkish. As I was reading some message boards on a Bulgarian pop folk site, it became

28

Gloria, Kato kuche I kotka. <http://pop-folk-chalga-music.bulgariancds.com/cgibin/p.cgi?p=pr&id=485&st=1&si=4> 29 Azis: The Best. Sunny Label, 2002

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clear to me just what the implications of this are. The fact that most people found it strange and even reprehensible that she sings in Turkish, even though she is Bulgarian30 did not surprise me. She is in fact a Muslim Roma, another invisible minority. However, the fact that her album exists, reflects the very existence of Mulsim Roma and Turks, and it is a sign that maybe Bulgaria is on the way to becoming the multiethnic space that it is. Ultimately, chalga as we know it today may not be the most musically compelling genre, but its cultural and political importance for ethnic minorities in Bulgaria and the Balkans in general, is crucial. In addition, even though it is looked down upon by Bulgarian folk music purists, chalga is a legitimate development of underground wedding music, reflecting diverse musical influences in Bulgaria, yet still founded in forms and conventions of traditional Bulgaran folk. And its popularity with audiences in Bulgaria confirms its status as folk music for the people.

References:______________________________________________________________
Azis: The Best. Sunny Label, 2002 Balkanfolk. Tupan. < http://www.balkanfolk.com/shopitem.php?code=040800> Accessed March 2003 Burton, Kim. (1994) World Music: The rough guide. London: Rough Guides: Penguin Group. Buchanan, Donna. (1996) Wedding Musicians, Political Transitions and National Consciousness in Bulgaria. Retuning Cultures: Musical Changes in Central and Eastern Europe. In eds. Mark Slobin. London: Duke Univeristy Press. Gloria, Kato kuche I kotka. <http://pop-folk-chalga-music.bulgariancds.com/cgibin/p.cgi?p=pr&id=485&st=1&si=4> Accessed March 2003 Macedonia. Dumbec. <http://members.tripod.com/~dimobetchev/music/instruments.html> Accessed March 2003 Reihan Comments section. http://pop-folk-chalga-music.bulgariancds.com/cgibin/p.cgi?p=pr&id=639&st=1&si=4> Accessed March 2003 Resmussen, Ljerka, (1996) Central and Eastern Europe in transition. In eds. Mark Slobin. London: Duke Univeristy Press. Siddiqi, Jameela, p233. (1994) World Music: The rough guide. London: Rough Guides: Penguin Group.

30

Reihan Comments section. <http://pop-folk-chalga-music.bulgariancds.com/cgibin/p.cgi?p=pr&id=639&st=1&si=4>

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