The fastest Romani brass band returns to Prague with a new
album!
The world's fastest brass band has played more than
3,000 concerts around the world and released a number of highly acclaimed
albums in its quarter-century career. The band is preparing a new album for this
year, from which they presented the single „Me Sem Rom“ in 2024. And
there is one big surprise on the album…!
One of today's finest live bands comes from a remote village in
eastern Romania. It is easy to distinguish it from other Balkan brass bands: it
plays with a punkish commitment and jazz virtuosity. The band originated near
the Moldovan border, in the village of Zece Prajini, home to 80 Roma
families who have devoted generations to their fields and music. During the
totalitarian era, this was a region cut off from civilisation, thanks to which
music has been preserved here, which otherwise disappeared in other parts of
Romania. The roots of this music go back to the Ottoman Empire and draw on the
style of Turkish military bands.
The dominant instrument of these “Turkish musics” was originally the zurna,
an oboe-like flute whose sharp sound penetrated even the loudest battle. In the
18th century, military bands replaced the existing oriental instruments with
European ones, but retained the original Turkish way of playing. The band was
discovered in 1996 by German music enthusiast and later impresario Henry
Ernst – and when he brought it to London, the Times described its music as “a
hell of a blast”. Fanfare Ciocărlia recorded ten albums, many of which topped
the charts and inspired filmmakers – the renowned Turkish documentary filmmaker
Fatih Akin captured their triumphant concerts in Berlin clubs. Eastern European
music expert Garth Cartwright wrote enthusiastically about the band in his book
Princes Among Men, film enfant terrible Sacha Baron Cohen commissioned them to
score the film Borat, and their songs have been remixed and adapted by dozens of
DJs and bands.
On later albums, the band included radical arrangements of Western evergreens
– including the James Bond film theme and Duke Ellington’s Caravan – that
prove how insignificant the boundaries between musical genres are. The band also
excels in unique stage projects – Gypsy Queens & Kings is a showcase of the
greatest Roma personalities, and Balkan Brass Battle is a dramatic duel between
Fanfare Ciocărlia and the musically related Serbian brass band known from the
films of Emir Kusturica.
Event is promoted by Rachot Production