manager, agenzia, agency,
management, booking agent
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Jasminder
Daffu - dhol
e dholak
Herinderpal
Panesar - dhol e tabla
Sarha
Moore - sax
soprano
Will
Embliss - tromba
Kay
Charlton - tromba
Ros
Davies - trombone
e flauto
Dave
Jago - trombone
Mark
Allan - sax baritono e videoproiezioni
Alice
Kinloch - susafono
Philippe
d'Amonville
- batteria
Nick
Cattermole - percussioni
a richiesta
ballerina indiana
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La londinese Bollywood
Brass Band è una formazione multirazziale anglo-indiana composta
da undici versatili musicisti alle prese con strumenti a fiato e
con strumenti a percussione della tradizione del subcontinente indiano.
I fiati sono affidati
a ben quattro donne (forse l'unica brass band al mondo). Primo sax
soprano, prima tromba, primo trombone e susafono (il gigantesco
basso tuba).
Nelle percussioni
si alternano una parte dei musicisti della Dhol
Foundation.
Il repertorio prevede
hit filmici vecchi e nuovi tratti dal cinema di Bombay, musiche
popolari del Punjab, grandi classici di musicisti indiani, tradendo
poi influenze samba, reggae, funk, jazz, balcaniche e world music;
il tutto mescolato con disinvoltura inglese.
Ne risulta uno stile
originale, irriverente e ipnotico, dove gli intrecci eleganti dei
fiati sono accompagnati da incalzanti ritmi bhangra (genere musicale
nato in Inghilterra alla fine degli anni Settanta,
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nell'ambito della comunità
indiana, dalla fusione tra folklori del Punjab e disco-music).
Dinamico e suggestivo
è anche l'impatto scenico, che prevede l'impiego di bellissimi costumi,
l'accompagnamento con passi di danza, e immagini tratte dai blockbusters
di Bombay e proiettate sullo sfondo in sincronia perfetta con le esecuzioni
dal vivo.
Impossibile resistere
alla loro carica esplosiva. Ballate quindi, lasciatevi trascinare.

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Movie
Masala - Emergency Exit Arts
-
Emporio
Armani Caffè 2 - Sony Music
-
Rahmania
- the music of AR Rahman - Emergency Exit Arts
-
The
Bollywood Brass Band - Emergency Exit Arts
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SONGLINES
- Trumpets and soprano saxophones blast out popular tunes and current
or classic Hindi film hits, backed by drum-kit, raucous trombones,
[and] improbably funky sousaphone bass-line …as popular as chicken
tikka masala - Punjabi flavours and locally available ingredients
mixed with Anglo-Saxon ingenuity.
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THE
INDIPENDENT - One of the weekend's indisputable highlights (WOMAD's
10th Anniversary) was London's Bollywood Band who, despite reeling
under the weight of tubas and Indian dhol drums, turned out to be
a Jack in the Box like bundle of 11 cavorting musicians intent on
blasting the genre into the 21st century.
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ARTSWORLD
- The Bollywood Brass Band is one of the rare examples of Western
contemporary culture being influenced by the East. 'It is also,
beyond the sheer fun and pleasure of their performances, a genuine
functioning example of cultural exchange between peoples living
in the UK. (In its wealth and variety it is without parallel in
Europe) 'They take their inspiration from Bollywood blockbusters
and translate them into their own unmistakable style. It's a noisy
mixture between Indian and European, Jazz and Latino, set to the
bhangra beat, with saxes, trumpets, trombones, sousaphone, snare
and bass drums, and the ubiquitous tabla and dhol drums. '…a truly
exhilarating, rambunctious affair, with hypnotic Punjabi drumming,
wailing soprano sax, Qawwalis, extracts from Bollywood films on
a video screen in the background, and a band which obviously and
noisily enjoyed themselves - and so did the audience'
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FOLKROOTS
- 'Bursting with energy and style … Sound track to the summer
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GLOBALVILLAGEIDIOT.NET
- A.R. Rahman is one of the great modern Indian composers, and this
second CD from the Bollywood Brass band certainly does his music
justice, with some fabulously stirring arrangements, and great dhol
playing to back up the brass. They know when to rage, and when to
hold back, and they offer a new perspective on the music which is
familiar from many films. Add to that four excellent remixes, and
you've got an instant classic to keep the senses boiling and smiling.
Absolutely stunning!
-
FOLK
WORLD - If you like brass based folk and world music, you should
give the Bollywood Brass Band a try. This is a magnificent and impressive
album.'
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THE
SUNDAY TIMES - CLIVE DAVIS - As traditional as bhangra
and chips, some purists might say, but the repertoire of the Bollywood
Brass Band forms a vibrant bridge between east and west. A multiracial
set of strolling players, they have found a niche as Asian wedding
specialists, as well as venturing onto the international festival
circuit. Their new project nimbly plugs into the craze for over-the-top
song-and-dance, Hindu-style: think of it, if you like, as a curtain-raiser
for Rahman's forthcoming musical, Bombay Dreams. Irreverent, perspiring,
kitsch-free and and never dull, the arrangements are the rumbustious,
Ealing Rd equivalent of New Orleans's Dirty Dozen Brass Band.
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THE
TIMES - NIGEL WILLIAMSON - THIS IS a timely release given
the fact that A. R. Rahman - to whose music this album is a tribute
- is about to hit the West End next month as the composer of Andrew
Lloyd Webber's latest blockbuster, Bombay Dreams. Back in India,
Rahman is the biggest name in Bollywood, and the London-based Bollywood
Brass Band have hit upon the ingenious idea of arranging a dozen
of his best-known film tunes for their eight-piece brass ensemble.
They are supported by a thunderous percussion section, but the melodies
cavort with a playful inventiveness that reflects Rahman's compositional
versatility. As bold and brash as you could wish
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