Voi-La Intruder
Artist(s):
Gogol Bordello
Label: Rubric Records
Publisher(s):
Rubric Records
Studio: Rubric Records
Manufacturer: Rubric Records
Binding: Audio CD
MPN: 38
List Price: $15.99
Our Price: $13.99
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Track Listing
1.
Sacred Darling
2.
Voi-La Intruder
3.
Greencard Husband
4.
Passport
5.
Start Wearing Purple
6.
Shy Kind of Guy
7.
Mussolini vs. Stalin
8.
Letter To Mother
9.
God-Like
10.
Nomadic Chronicle
11.
Letter To Castro (Costumes for Tonight)
12.
Unvisible Zedd
13.
Sex Spider
14.
No Threat
15.
Against The Nature
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Gogol Bordello are a completely original New York entitity. Rubric is reissuing their debut release, Voi-La Intruder, with the track order revised and an additional 5 tracks. This is Ukranian party music. Leader Eugene Hutz is a major NYC DJ at the Bulgarian Bar on Saturday nights. The place is packed weekly with Eastern European immigrants and the hipsters who love them. The music is best described as a sort of Pogues meets traditional Ukranian folk music in a sweaty dance bar. One foot in punk rock and one foot in traditionalism, Gogol Bordello have been packing clubs in NYC and have recently toured the Czech Republic and Switzerland. They?ve also shared the Central Park stage last summer with international sensations Manu Chao. This is sexy, uplifting party music that gives one hope for the future.
Customer Reviews
Gypsy Punk Underground Stylee
The Movie "Everything is Illuminated" is a good-one... they were on the soundtrack.
If you like old school punk, you should find this fun... altho it can get old after awhile (there is not a lot of variety in how the singer intonates, or the overall sound of the music)... I almost wish they had cut this album down to the five best tracks and just left it...the classics on it are amazing... but there is fluff, too, which detracts from the better stuff...
The vocals are snotty and true... the lyrics interesting (sometimes cliche)... the emotion genuine...
and it *doesn't* sound like anything else on the radioPunk Cookery, The Punk Rocker's Cafe Cookbook, Vegetarian Specialties
Voi-la!
Gogol Bordello is hot right now, with their raucous, wild gypsy punk music and rousing concerts. But they started off a bit more low-key with their debut, "Voi-La Intruder," which relies more heavily on the gypsy part of their music than the punk-rocker aspect. Still, it's a dancey, wild album with their current persona creeping up under the table...
It kicks off with a traditional-sounding klezmer tune that slowly turns into a dancier klezmer tune, with frontman Eugene Hutz sounding as dignified as he can. At the start, that is. When he starts with the chorus ("My DARLIN'/DARLIN'/my sacred darlin'!"), he starts soundng like his usual wild self.
The traditional East-Euro-folk sound continues throughout the album, with the frenetic patchwork "Voi-La Intruder," the urgent tight-paced "Greencard Husband," and their biggest hit to date: "Start Wearing Purple," a schizophrenic little delight. It sounds a bit different from the version on their most recent album "Gypsy Punks: Underdog World Strike."
They even dabble in acoustic balladry, with the plaintive "Mussolini Vs. Stalin," which ends with a mournful chorus of voices that all sound like Hutz. But as folky as this is, we start to see the punk elements that make up half their music right now -- there are hints of it in the snarly lyrics about women impregnated by "Unvisible Zedd," and the wild electric guitar of "Letter to Castro."
Basically this album -- which reportedly had a different lineup -- relies heavily on Eastern European folk and pop, rather than the wild punk sound they have now. More gypsy than punk, more folk than rock -- and surprisingly it isn't any less appealing from a musical standpoint.
Call it klezmer with a twist. Gogol Bordello packs it up with thuddy percussion, accordions, and some very restrained electric guitar. In songs like "Letter to Mother," it sounds like it's aching to explode into a rock song, but instead it sticks to being spirited traditional music. You can see how gypsy punk grew out of this sound.
Eugene Hutz does both vocal styles here. He does the raucous punk howls about half the time, as he wails bizarre lyrics like "Start wearin' purple/wearin purple... all your sanity and wits/they will all vanish/I promise/it's just a matter of time." But he has a very pleasant singing voice as well, as shown in the grand finale, the folky "Against the Nature."
Gogol Bordello sounded quite different when they debuted with "Voi-La Intruder," but there are hints of what they would become. An interesting and pleasant album.
Psst. Kid, want a piece of candy?
Best kick I've gotten from an new album in ages. A sort of sly, accordian-soaked, over-the-top gypsy celebration with tons of energy and drama. Listening to it reminds me of a cross between Mr. Bungle, Uzme Doma and 3Mustapha3. (Oh wait...those might not be helpful comparisons.) Eugene Hutz sings/wails and otherwise belts his way through each of these tunes like a harsher, wilder Tom Waits. This is a great CD.
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