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Posts Tagged ‘Gypsy’

Coachella 2011: Arcade Fire, Kings Of Leon, Kanye West

The 12th Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival is set for Friday, April 15, Saturday, April 16 and Sunday,
April 17 at the beautiful Empire Polo Club in Indio, CA and the 2011 line-up includes headlining performances from
Arcade Fire, Kanye West and Kings of Leon. While music serves as the centerpiece for
Coachella, this year’s festival will feature an expanded commitment to art, culture and community via a unique
partnership with The Creators Project–a global initiative that supports leading and emerging artists.


Arcade
Fire

Kanye
West

Kings of
Leon

The full 2011 line-up will feature: !!!, 12th Planet, Afrojack, Alf Alpha, Andy C, Angus and Julia Stone, Animal
Collective, Arcade Fire, Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti, A-Trak, Axwell, Beardyman, Best Coast, Big Audio Dynamite,
Black Joe Lewis & the Honeybears, Bloody Beetroots Death Crew 77, Bomba Estereo, Boys Noize, Brandon Flowers,
Brandt Brauer Frick, Breakage, Bright Eyes, Broken Social Scene, Cage the Elephant, Caifanes, Caspa, Cee Lo Green,
Chromeo, Chuckie, City and Colour, Clare Maguire, Cold Cave, Cold War Kids, Crystal Castles, CSS, Cults, Cut Copy,
Daedelus, Death From Above 1979, Delorean, Delta Sprirt, DJ Hype, DJ Kentaro, DJ Marky, DJ Zinc, Duck Sauce, Duran
Duran, EE, Elbow, Electric Touch, Eliza Doolittle, Ellie Goulding, Emicida, Empire of the Sun, Erick Morillo, Erykah
Badu, Excision, , Fat Freddy’s Drop, Fedde Le Grand, Fistful of Mercy, Flogging Molly, Foals, Foster the People, Francis
and the Lights, Freelance Whales, fun., G.Q., Gayngs, Glasser, Gogol Bordello, Good Old War, Gord Downie, Goth
Trad, Green Velvet, Gypsy and the Cat, HEALTH, Here We Go Magic, High Contrast, Hurts, Interpol, Jack Beats, Jack’s
Mannequin, Jakes, Jenny and Johnny, Jimmy Eat World, Joachim Garraud, Joy Orbison, Kanye West, Kele, Kings of
Leon, Klaxons, Kode9, Kyle Hall, Laidback Luke, Leftfield, Lightning Bolt, Lil’ B, Lorn, Los Bunkers, Magnetic Man, ,
Mariachi El Bronx, Marina and the Diamonds, Mary Anne Hobbs, MEN, Menomena, Monarchy, Mount Kimbie, Moving
Units, Ms. Lauryn Hill, Mumford & Sons, Nas & Damian Marley, Neon Trees, New Pants, Nosaj Thing, OFF!, OFWGKTA,
Omar Rodriguez Lopez, One Day as a Lion, Ozomatli, Paul van Dyk, Phantogram, Phosphorescent, PJ Harvey, Plan B,
Ramadanman, Raphael Saadiq, Ras G, Ratatat, Riva Starr, Robyn, Roska, Rye Rye, Sander Kleinenberg, Sasha, SBTRKT,
Scala & Kolacny Bros., Scissor Sisters, She Wants Revenge, Shpongle, Skrillex, Sleigh Bells, Steve Angello, Sven Vath,
Take, Tame Impala, Terror Danjah, Thao and the Get Down Stay Down, The Aquabats, The Black Keys, The Chemical
Brothers, The Drums, The Felice Brothers, The Henry Clay People, The Joy Formidable, The Kills, The London Suede,
The Love Language, The Morning Benders, The National, The New Pornographers, The Pains of Being Pure at Heart,
The Presets, The Radio Dept., The Rural Alberta Advantage, The Strokes, The Swell Season, The Tallest Man on Earth,
The Twelves, Thunderball, Tinie Tempah, Titus Andronicus, Tokimonsta, Trampled by Turtles, Trentemoller, Twin
Shadow, Two Door Cinema Club, Warpaint, Wire, Wiz Khalifa, Yacht, Yelle and Zed Bias.

Three-day weekend passes, along with camping passes for Coachella go on sale Friday, January 21 at 10:00 AM (PT)
through Ticketmaster.com, by phone at 1-800-745-3000 and at www.coachella.com. Three-day weekend passes are $269.00, plus
surcharges and camping passes are $75.00.


Barbra Streisand “Gypsy” Remake?

Barbra Streisand is in chats to appear as Rose in a Warner Bros. remake of the classic 1962 movie musical Gypsy, The New York Times said Wednesday. Babs recently met with Stephen Sondheim and Arthur Laurents about the prospect of appearing in a new film adaptation of their 1959 Broadway play. The original film — [...]

Las Tortugas V: Daily Schedule Themes, Adds, Camping Update

PREMIERE INTIMATE CALIFORNIA HALLOWEEN FEST FAST APPROACHES

ALO’s
Zach Gill :: Tortugas IV
By Chad Smith

Las Tortugas – Dance of the Dead V has just announced it’s day-by-day schedule. Check it out here.

Taking place October 28-31 at Evergreen Lodge in Yosemite, CA, Las Tortugas has added Five Eyed Hand, DJ No Parking on the Dance Floor, Who’s DunFour (i.e. Nathan Moore and Big Light) and The Trespassers to an already rich lineup that includes headliners Yonder Mountain String Band, ALO, 7 Walkers, The Mother Hips, Tea Leaf Green and Cornmeal for more
than 30 acts over four days.

One of the great pleasures of Las Tortugas is the daily pageant of costumes that attendees bust out in an elongated celebration of the Halloween spirit. This year’s themes are:

Thursday, October 28 – GYPSY CIRCUS: There are many roles in a circus and many types of gypsies in the
world. What is your interpretation of a Gypsy Circus? Gypsy pirates, dancers, carnies, ringmasters…the list goes on
forever.

Friday, October 29 – DECADE DANCE: Represent your favorite decade in any way you like. Retro cinema,
political statements, historical figures and pop culture are all fine starting points. Time is your plaything!

Saturday, October 30 – MONSTERS vs. ALIENS: Are you a monster or an alien or a monster-alien? Join
your fellow species to unite, multiply, divide or whatever else it is monsters and aliens do.

Sunday, October 31 – THE MASQUERADE BALL: It’s Halloween so come as you wish. Some good ideas
suggested to the festival include Solid Gold, glitter & glam, midnight in the garden of good & evil, wild animal
kingdom, and psychedelic superheroes. Let your imagination roam and then come freak freely with the rainbow
flock!

For those that can’t make the full festival, new ticketing options are now available, with 3-Day Tickets (Fri-Sun) and
2-Day Tickets (Sat-Sun) offered here.

While on-site camping has sold out, the National Forest Service has granted the festival a permit for a unique
camping opportunity just steps away from Evergreen Lodge in what they are calling the Emerald Forest. This
camping area was a huge success last year, and it will provide our guests with a safe and controlled camping area
across the street from Evergreen Lodge. Just like on-site camping, the cost is $15 per camper per night, and there is a 3 night minimum stay required. There is also a one ticket requirement per camper (either the three night or four night ticketing options will satisfy this requirement). There is limited availability for off-site camping, so call the Lodge asap at 209/379-2606 to reserve your off site spot in the Emerald Forest.

Las Tortugas V Artist
Lineup

Las Tortugas V Schedule
Las Tortugas V General
Info

Las Tortugas
Photos

JamBase review of Las Tortugas IV


Romanies and terminology: Words not deeds

Finding the right words to describe people is tricky

FEW subjects excite more controversy among Romani activists than terminology. The traditional word “Gypsy” is seen as pejorative by some and inaccurate by others though some Romanies robustly defend its use. Outsiders often use it to mean anyone with a traditional itinerant lifestyle (it retains that meaning in English law). It is now largely out of fashion, especially in bureaucratic circles where the favoured new term is “Roma”. Strangely in an age that prizes gender-neutral language, that is the literal plural of “Rom”, a Romany word meaning man or husband.

The old adjective “Romany” or the newer “Romani” can be used as a noun, which is better (and preferred by this newspaper), but still tricky. In many languages it is all but identical to the word for “Romanian”. Everyone involved finds that tiresome. One way round that is to double the “r”, producing words like “Rromani”. That is a handy way of representing the two different “r” sounds in some Romanian dialects. But it looks too odd to catch on. …

Primus & Gogol Bordello | Red Rocks | Pics

Words & Images by: Mike Hardaker

Primus/Gogol Bordello :: 08.12.10 :: Red Rocks Amphitheatre :: Morrison, CO

Gogol Bordello and Primus returned to Red Rocks Amphitheatre earlier this month. Primus features Les Claypool (bass, vocals), Larry LaLonde (guitar) and multi-talented drummer Jay Lane, who left touring with the latest Grateful Dead act, Furthur, to join Primus on the road in 2010. Primus formed in Northern California, with musical influences like Pink Floyd and Frank Zappa. There musical style is hard to define, and Primus has been referred to as psychedelic polka, thrash-funk, alternative rock, and much more.

Gogol Bordello’s eight band members hail from across the globe. The band formed in 1999 on NYC’s lower east side, and is known for theatrical stage shows and catchy polka sounding punk songs. Much of Gogol Bordellos sound hails from Gypsy music, and features violins, accordions, guitars, drums and other noisemakers. The last time Gogol Bordello played at Red Rocks Amphitheatre the band sat around with Manu Chao and played music outside of Red Rocks Park until the sun came up in true gypsy style.

Primus Setlist
Pudding Time, In The Flesh (Pink Floyd cover), Here Come The Bastards, Behind My Camel (Police cover), Groundhog’s Day, Those Damn Blue Collar Tweekers, Golden Boy, American Life, Big In Japan (Tom Waits cover w/ Gogol Bordello), Over The Falls, Drum & Whamola Jam, Eleven, Jerry Was A Race Car Driver, Over The Electric Grapevine, Harold of the Rocks. E: Tommy The Cat

Gogol Bordello Setlist
Intro (Illumination), Ultimate, Not A Crime, Wonderlust King, My Companjera, Tribal Connection, Trans-Continental Hustle, We Comin’ Rougher, Break The Spell, Immigrant Punk, When Universes Collide, Pala Tute, Start Wearing Purple, Break The Spell (reprise). E: Sun Is On My Side, Punk Rock Parranda, Sacred Darling

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=114″);}); 8/12/10 – Primus & Gogol Bordello @ Red Rocks Amphitheatre (Morrison, CO) View Photos

Primus Tour Dates :: Primus News :: Primus Concert Reviews

Gogol Bordello Tour Dates :: Gogol Bordello News :: Gogol Bordello Concert Reviews

JamBase | Rockies
Go See Live Music!


Parents, guardians abuse Roma child beggars

Roma (Gypsy) children who beg in Belgrade do not dare to go home unless they bring RSD 1,000 every day – otherwise they are subjected to beatings. A reporter of the Belgrade daily Blic spoke to a boy who spends every day at an intersection in downtown Belgrade, begging for money from drivers who stop at the red light, together with another boy who is only four.

Gogol Bordello: “Pala Tute” Video

GOGOL BORDELLO DEBUTS NEW ANIMATED MUSIC VIDEO FOR “PALA TUTE” TODAY ON VEVO; CO-HEADLINING TOUR WITH PRIMUS KICKS OFF JULY 29

Gypsy punk rockers Gogol Bordello released a new animated video today on Vevo. Directed by acclaimed Russian video director Aliaksei Tserakhau, the video for their single “Pala Tute” is a mixed media collage blending stop-motion animation and live action with lead singer Eugene Hutz and Gogol Bordello band mate Elizabeth Sun featured as claymation, star-crossed lovers in passing caravans venturing through time and space in re-imagined classic stories ranging from the Garden of Eden to Dracula’s Transylvania. Check out the video below.

Gogol Bordello’s co-headlining tour with influential alternative rock icons Primus kicks off on July 29th in Burlington, VT at Midway Lawn. Click here for all dates.

Gogol Bordello
Tour Dates

::
Gogol Bordello News
::
Gogol Bordello
Concert
Reviews


India’s largest car maker Maruti Suzuki increases prices of its cars

On Friday, due to raise in input costs and implementation of new emission norms, the India’s leading car manufacturers, Maruti Suzuki India has announced to hike the prices of almost all its cars by up to Rs 10,000.
The associate said, “Due to sharp increase in the input costs and also introduction of BS IV (emission) [...]

Evening Crunch Crumbs: Drake Album Gets A Release Date; Peaches Geldof Dumped By Ultimo; Wango Tango Lineup 2010

-Jesse James’ sideline ho, Michelle McGee, tried out for the TV show Cheaters. How ironic….
-Lindsay Lohan’s friends, family — and even the local police — think it’s time the troubled star went back to rehab…..
-The world’s Superman comic sells for $1.5 million…..
-NYC celebrity haunt Cain closes its doors…
-Peaches Geldof’s nude heroin pic scandal got the [...]

Al Di Meola’s World Sinfonia | 02.27 | S.F.

Words by: Eric Podolsky

Al Di Meola’s World Sinfonia :: 02.27.09 :: Palace of Fine Arts :: San Francisco, CA

Al Di Meola on his Prism guitar from aldimeola.com

In the current landscape of performing jazz/fusion guitarists, there are very few that are considered to be true legends of their time. Few will argue that Al Di Meola is one of them, as his fretboard virtuosity and unique gypsy/flamenco style have been influencing musicians for over 30 years now. Since Di Meola has put aside his highly publicized one-shot reunion with Return to Forever (which proved to be better than most expected), he is able to get back to playing his own music, which is a signature blend of clean, acoustic world-style compositional jazz. In executing this unique sound, Di Meola’s own World Sinfonia band creates music which extends and compliments the immaculate, pristine tone of his guitar.

Di Meola started off his show at The Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco’s Marina District with some hushed acoustic compositions, which set the tone for the night and introduced the well behaved, mostly middle-aged audience to his stellar ensemble. Right off the bat, the interplay between Di Meola and accordionist Fausto Beccalossi jumped to the forefront of the music. Beccalossi’s accordion not only defined the music with its European feel, but his incredible mastery of the instrument inspired some breathtaking duels with Di Meola, as Beccalossi proved to be Di Meola’s musical foil all night long with his complex lines. One composition entitled “Cafe 1930″ was comprised solely of a delicate guitar/accordion duet until the very end of the song, at which point the full band joined in to bring it home. As can be inferred from this song’s title, Di Meola’s music specializes in evocative soundscapes, bringing the listener to a foreign place with his carefully chosen instrumentation and sonic textures. Throughout the night, the notes coming from Di Meola’s nylon-stringed acoustic guitar were often colored with MIDI sounds to add some extra sonic brushstrokes. This concept was also accentuated through slow-motion projections behind the band of evocative landscapes from around the world.

After some more lyrical, intricate acoustic numbers, Di Meola arose from his seat and strapped on his rainbow-colored electric Prism guitar. The band then launched into the “Elegant Gypsy Suite” from Di Meola’s landmark 1977 fusion album Elegant Gypsy. Thus began the electric portion of the show, where the music really began to groove and develop some bite. Much of these songs felt more like prog rock than jazz at times, as the band ran through different sections of rapid-fire, complex rhythm changes under Di Meola’s bright, searing guitar leads. His longtime percussionist Gumbi Ortiz jumped to the forefront at this point with passionate conga playing, leading the groove with his sharp polyrhythmic hits. In building his solos, Di Meola showed professional restraint. He started out simple and thoughtful, and saved his machine-gun marvel runs up and down the fretboard till the climax, being careful to rein in his jaw-dropping virtuosity until the music called for it. With this approach, it was inspiring to witness him coax such emotional peaks from such technically complex music.

Al Di Meola by Susan J. Weiand

After a set break of crowded, polite mingling in the lobby, the second set began in recital form once again, with an acoustic piece called “Michelangelo’s 7th Child” (named for his father, Michelangelo being his grandfather’s name). This piece saw guitar and accordion weaving bright counterpoint melodies with each other, complimented by subtle rhythm accompaniment from second guitarist Peo Alfonsi. The tune was followed by some furious compositions, which saw Di Meola unleash the lightning flamenco in him, running through foreign-sounding scales like nobody’s business. With all the regional influences inherent in the music, it was impossible to try to pigeonhole the sounds this band was creating. With a Latin rhythm section and Italians on lead instruments, this band could go in any direction. At times it was a blazing Spanish/Middle Eastern tango, other times it was slinky Italian folk music, as with the tune “Umbra,” which stood out with its on-a-dime changes and fluid, ebb-and-flow ensemble playing punctuated by flourishes of guitar and accordion.

At the encore break, Di Meola took a moment to acknowledge his love for San Francisco and its attentive and enthusiastic audience. He mentioned that this year was the thirtieth anniversary of the recording of his landmark Friday Night in San Francisco album, a massively popular collaboration with Paco de Lucía and John McLaughlin that “played a huge role in spreading the popularity of acoustic music,” in his own words. The band then broke out the surprise of the night: an immaculate instrumental reading of “Strawberry Fields Forever.” Di Meola played electric for this one, and the intonation on his melodic variations was pure, crystalline beauty, peppered with harmonics for good measure. The accordion phrasing was lush, and the band was amazingly sympathetic to every nuance of every note. It was an instant highlight of the night. This was followed by the instantly recognizable first track to Friday Night in SF, Di Meola’s well-known acoustic composition “Mediterranean Sundance.” If I had to play one song to introduce a friend to Al Di Meola, this would be the one. The tune is Di Meola in a nutshell, at his most energetic. It’s pure gypsy flamenco, and a perfect showcase for his scintillating fretwork. His clean, rapid leads peaked the tune out right, and put the cherry atop a pure, refreshing night of flawlessly executed melodic precision.

Al Di Meola Tour Dates :: Al Di Meola News :: Al Di Meola Concert Reviews

JamBase | Worldly
Go See Live Music!


European Court: Croatia violated Roma rights

The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that Croatia discriminated against Roma (Gypsy) school pupils by putting them in Roma-only classes. The Croatian state had argued that the separate classes were intended to help Roma catch up with other pupils.

Shakira opens up about decision to cast Rafael Nadal in music video

Shakira says she decided to cast Rafael Nadal opposite her in a new music video because she “identifies” with the Spanish tennis star.
The 33-year-old Colombian singer sparked romance rumours with Nadal when both of them were snapped meeting shortly before they filmed a racy promo for Shakira’’s new track Gypsy.
Nadal’’s rep rubbished the rumours earlier [...]

Shakira makes her hottest music video ever with Rafa Nadal

Colombian singer Shakira is said to have made the hottest music video ever of her career with Spanish tennis star Rafa Nadal.
Shakira, 33, and Nadal, 23, appear almost naked in a desert on the promo for new single ‘Gypsy’, reports the Daily Star.
A spokesman for Nadal recently denied the two were dating.
The sexy [...]

Larger Than Life in 3D Dave Matthews, Ben Harper

IN THEATRES ONE WEEK ONLY – DEC 11-17

Dave Matthews Band

Movie theaters from New York to Los Angeles will present the 3D release of “Larger Than LifeÂ…In 3D” Featuring Dave Matthews Band, Ben Harper and Relentless7 and Gogol Bordello for a limited-run engagement – one week only from December 11-17.

Filmed by inconcert3d utilizing digital technology that can only be viewed in theaters, this one week event will allow fans to experience a stunning 360-degree view of each live performance. The three featured acts were captured at critically acclaimed music festivals across the country this summer: Dave Matthews Band – the highest-grossing American act of all time – at the 2009 Austin City Limits Music Festival in Texas; Grammy-award winning artist Ben Harper and Relentless7 at the Mile High Music Festival in Denver; and internationally acclaimed Gypsy punk band Gogol Bordello at All Points West Music & Arts Festival in New Jersey.

Cinedigm Entertainment Group will deliver the film to digital theaters nationwide. Theaters already on board include five theaters in Manhattan, ten theaters throughout suburban Los Angeles, six theaters in Chicago, and multiple locations in Boston, Detroit, Atlanta, Nashville and Dallas. More than 350 other theaters have already been confirmed. To find full theatre listings pop over here.

For a sneak peek of this film go to inconcert3d’s website. This marks the first in a series from the joint undertaking of Action 3D Productions and AEG Network Live. The series will be distributed by Cinedigm Entertainment Group.


Child thieves

By Sam Bagnall
This World

Across Europe thousands of Roma (Gypsy) children are being forced onto the streets to beg and steal, and law enforcement agencies are seemingly powerless to prevent it.

Cash machines in Madrid are a particular target for street crime. The cardholder is distracted at the crucial moment by one person, allowing a child to dive in, grab the money and run off.

Thirteen-year-old Daniela says she can make 300 euros (£260) from a single successful robbery without any risk of being punished.

child stealing from cash point

"It’s only the police that catch us. They take the money we have on us. They take us to the day centre, and the centre lets us go.

"I give [the money] to my mother so we can go to Romania to build a house. But I hide some of it for myself. I give her 150 euros, and I keep 150."

Madrid police say that 95% of children under 14 that they pick up stealing on the streets are Roma from Romania.

Because the age of criminal responsibility in Spain is 14, there is little they can do.

More than 1,000 Romanian Roma live in just one of the many camps that lie on the outskirts of Madrid.

The conditions are appalling – rats roam freely amid the rubbish, and there is no sanitation.

Every day children from the camp head out into the city to steal and beg, and many are beaten by their minders if they do not return with money.

Organised crime

Nowhere in Europe has there been more controversy over crime in the Roma community than in Italy, where the government recently declared a state of emergency following various high profile crimes blamed on the Roma.

"In a month period, each kid earned about 12,000 euros"

Francesco Messina, Milan police

In Milan in 2007, just after Romania entered the European Union, police noticed a surge in theft and pick-pocketing carried out by Roma children.

They launched a major investigation involving phone-tapping and surveillance, which revealed that a criminal gang was using the children to generate huge profits.

"In a month period, each kid earned about 12,000 euros (£10,500). Then, 12,000 euros times by 50 kids, and if we do the maths, we reached an astronomical amount of money," says Francesco Messina, who led the police operation.

Members of the gang were jailed for up to 14 years in prison for enslaving and exploiting the children, many of whom were discovered locked in a shed when police raided the camp.

The rescued children were taken into care, but the BBC’s This World programme discovered two of the boys had gone back to the streets of Milan, and were stealing again. Even this huge police operation had not saved them from a life of crime.

Discrimination

The roots of the problem lie in Romania, where Roma have faced discrimination and hostility for generations.

The pop star Madonna commented on the problem during a concert in Bucharest last week, and was jeered by the audience.

Poverty among the Roma is widespread. In 2007, Unicef reported that up to 70% of households had no running water.

"The thieving is no longer a national problem – it’s happening on an international scale"

Breliante, underworld boss in Craiova, Romania

Breliante, a powerful underworld figure in Romania

Many Roma end up leaving the country in search of a better life in the West. Some resort to begging and stealing.

In Milan, Italy, this resulted in a strong backlash. Some Roma camps have been bulldozed and there calls are heard for all Roma immigrants to be deported.

"The right wing says that Romany Gypsies are just people that exploit their children and women for stealing for begging and maybe there is a bit of a truth in this," says Donatella DeVito, who works for a charity that tries to help integrate the Roma into Italian society.

"But the real problem is that some of the Roma actually beg and steal because that’s the only chance that they have for surviving."

Fabulous villas

While some crime is driven by poverty, a worrying amount is the result of child exploitation, organised by professional criminals.

Breliante is a powerful underworld figure in the Romanian city of Craiova, where many of the Roma criminals in Milan originated.

He told the BBC many of the fabulous villas in the city were built on the proceeds of crime committed all over the world.

Gang bosses traffic people, including children, abroad to beg and steal and get fat on the profits.

But even he believes the sheer scale of the crime has gone too far and will have serious repercussions.

"The thieving is no longer a national problem. It’s happening on an international scale. Our children need to study, because if they carry on like this, if the new generations which grow up now continue in the same way, no-one will have us.

"Our country won’t understand us any longer, the Western countries will chase us away."

Liviu Tipurita, who has made films about Roma and child trafficking for many years, has similar fears.

"My fear is that without immediate help the Gypsy child thieves I’ve encountered in my journey will grow up into hardened criminals," he said. "And the cycle of abuse and exploitation will spiral out of control."

This World will be broadcast on Wednesday 2 September, at 7pm BST, on BBC Two.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Roma settlement in central Belgrade dismantled

The Roma (Gypsy) families who lived in a ramshackle settlement under a Belgrade bridge have been relocated this Monday. They left behind the remains of a dump that was piling up next to the settlement, dubbed “unhygienic”, which the city services are now working to clean up.

Growing marginalisation of Hungary’s Roma

Dominic Hughes investigates the rise of the far right anti-Roma Jobbik party in Hungary and finds parallels between the Roma and another impoverished community, Australia’s Aboriginals.

Relatives mourn the death of Gypsy woman Maria Balogh

On the far side of railway tracks, on the outskirts of the city of Ozd, in northern Hungary, is what must be one of the most deprived villages in Europe.

Home to around 400 Roma or Gypsy people, corralled on the edge of town, is what is essentially a slum.

They live in buildings that once provided homes for workers from the nearby steelworks, but conditions are truly dreadful.

Many windows have no glass; tiles are missing from the roofs; some buildings have collapsed altogether.

Just a handful of communal toilets and taps serve the whole community.

Under the hot summer sun children play barefoot in the dust, but it does not really lighten up the grim, and if I am honest, slightly threatening, atmosphere.

Perhaps that is not surprising given over recent months there have been a series of attacks on Roma communities – homes burnt, a father and son shot and killed, another man shot dead as he walked out of his house.

So far no-one has been arrested, but many Roma fear they are being targeted by extremists.

Difficult questions

But we are with Barna Budai, a local Roma man who grew up here, and so we are safe.

It could have been very different. Earlier in the day we met the mayor of Odz, Benedek Mihaly.

Jobbick party supporters

I was asking him about the rise of Jobbik, the far-right party that campaigns on a platform targeting what their leaders call Gypsy crime.

He was no fan of the party, or the Hungarian Guard, the civilian militia closely associated with them.

But he did say he thought the Roma were abusing their rights, living outside the rules of Hungarian society.

The mayor came across as a very reasonable man, trying to find solutions to difficult questions.

But when we stepped outside his office, things took a strange turn.

Waiting for us there was Lajos Berki, a Roma member of the local council.

White haired and smartly dressed, he stood up as we approached.

As he did so, the mayor started addressing him in Hungarian – not quite shouting, but clearly telling him to go away while he talked to us some more.

He sort of punched him on the arm and then cuffed him over the head – not aggressively, but as you might do with an irritating younger brother. Only Mr Berki looked some years older than the Mayor.

Mr Berki though did not seem bothered. He smiled meekly and retreated down the corridor.

Internal divisions

The mayor then turned to us and said: "I’m very proud of this one. He has worked for 40 years!"

Later, as we were interviewing Mr Berki, our guide to the Roma village, Barna Budai, turned up. Relations between the two Roma men were clearly frosty.

"Some of the old bigotries – racism, anti-Semitism – have resurfaced. The Roma in Hungary are not even regarded by many as true Hungarians "

Barna Budai told us if we had arrived at his village in the company of his fellow Roma Lajos Berki, we probably would not have left in one piece.

Given the angry response of some residents when we tried to film them, I believed him. Why would we have had trouble I asked – isn’t Mr Berki a respected member of the community

Barna Budai laughed. Mr Berki was hated by the Roma villagers, we were told – he was believed to have said some very uncomplimentary things about his fellow Roma to other reporters.

Who knows where the truth lies But the bitter internal divisions within the Roma community, the abject poverty they lived in, their apparent dislocation from mainstream life – it all reminded me of another story.

A story I covered nearly a decade ago – that of the Aboriginal community in Australia.

For four years I was the BBC’s correspondent in Sydney – and this was the one story that really left me feeling it was all a bit hopeless.

Convenient scapegoat

Problems of institutional and individual racism, compounded by a divided and weak leadership from within the community.

A seemingly unbridgeable cultural gulf. Generations left neglected, with high rates of unemployment and imprisonment.

A lower life expectancy and educational achievement, more crime and substance abuse.

Roma family in Hungary

These are all problems shared by Australian Aboriginal people and Hungarian Roma.

The big difference is in modern day Australia Aboriginal people are generally regarded very much as true Australians.

Aspects of their identity have been adopted into the broader Australian culture.

And even though reporting the story often left me feeling dispirited, at least the Australian government seems determined to try and help.

You do not get that feeling in Hungary. The smothering blanket of communism has been stripped away, exposing ugly fault lines in central and Eastern Europe.

Some of the old bigotries – racism, anti-Semitism – have resurfaced.

The Roma in Hungary are not even regarded by many as true Hungarians.

And as we drove away in a cloud of dust from the crumbling Roma village on the outskirts of Odz, it struck me that as Hungary struggles with the impact of economic downturn, the Roma seem to have become a convenient scapegoat.

And even though there are no easy answers to this complex story, precious few in Hungary seem to be looking for them.

How to listen to: From our own Correspondent

Radio 4: Saturdays, 1130. Second weekly edition on Thursdays, 1100 (some weeks only)

World Service: See programme schedules

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Dancing on the Danube

Belgrade’s clubs offer everything from Gypsy folk to Balkan bling, but whichever one you end up in, you’re guaranteed a good time

Saturday night and the boat I’m on is rocking, literally. Gypsy fiddlers leap on to tables and among dancers. As more people board the boat, moored on the Danube in Belgrade, one of the musicians launches through a window and towards the roof. For a moment I’m certain he will end up in the river but, no, soon he’s dancing above us, calling to people on the shore: come join the party!

Serbia’s capital may never be celebrated alongside Prague and Budapest as a beautiful eastern city, but Belgrade is defiantly No 1 when it comes to clubbing. And with the rise of two (very different) Serbian festivals – the rock and techno Exit festival and Guca, where hundreds of Gypsy brass bands entertain 300,000 revellers – Belgrade is now on the western European music fan’s radar.

Every night of the week it is home to a huge variety of clubs and parties. You can dance in old fortresses and on boats, in underground caverns and cocktail bars. And there’s a great array of musical styles to dance to: from ragged Gypsy fiddlers to blinged-out turbo-folk singers, from banging techno through heavy metal, and more, much more.

As with most emerging club scenes, it’s international DJs who are at the forefront. An increasing number of big-names are heading to Belgrade, drawn by the buzz of a city in love with dancing. Radio 1′s Gilles Peterson has been visiting the city for two decades and in October plays at Dom Omladine (domomladine.org), a spanking new and very large arts centre. Others include Brooklyn’s superstar DJ David Morales, who has graced the decks at the chic Club Magacin 3 and returns to headline the Pena Festival on 29 August at the Belgrade Arena.

But where to head to? The city is divided by the Danube and Sava rivers into New and Old Belgrade. As the former consists largely of housing estates built in the concrete brutalist style favoured by communist regimes (alongside ugly strip malls thrown up when capitalism took over), newcomers should look to Stari Grad (Old Town).

Belgrade avoids the mass tourism that has turned Prague into an adult Disneyland, but it does offer a pleasant mishmash of architectural styles and reasonably priced cafes, bars and restaurants. Stari Grad is also home to a large concentration of clubs.

Plato Jazz Club, in Belgrade University’s philosophy department, is a relaxed place to start your evening, enjoy superb views and browse in the city’s best bookshop. Nearby is Informbiro, a basement bar in the Belgrade Philharmonic building that specialises in urban dance music. From Informbiro, you can walk to The Tube (thetube.rs), celebrated for its house music and its large, dark corridors.

The Serb parliament lends the Tasmajdan Park area an upmarket tone. To see Serbia’s elite at play, go to Absinthe or a club called Mr Stefan Brown on the ninth floor of a glass tower opposite Tasmajdan Park. Here excellent cocktails are served and Belgrade’s beautiful people dance on tables as the city’s lights shimmer in the distance.

Techno and house took off here in the 1990s as a rebellious alternative to Milosevic’s regime, feeding off the city’s prodigious nervous energies. Belgrade has dozens of techno clubs – connoisseurs recommend Sound and Plastic – while long-established rock club Akademija (akademija.net) still pumps out the power chords.

But what marks Belgrade as an exceptional clubbing city is its waterways. Several kilometres of the Sava and Danube rivers are home to anchored rafts shoring up cafes, restaurants and clubs called splavovi (moored floats). Divided into three different groupings of boats, some splavs are open all year, although most do business only in summer. I found the area called Ada Ciganlija (Gypsy Island) most fascinating. Here boats recreate the atmosphere of a kafana: working-class bars where Gypsy musicians entertain at tables. The most notorious is Cmi Panter (Black Panther), which achieved a degree of international fame last summer when The Police, fresh from rocking Belgrade’s Arena, turned up to check out the boat band. A fire earlier this year destroyed the Black Panther, but the owner promises to relaunch. Gypsy Island’s boats offer knockabout musical mayhem with musicians right in your face.

The second area of floating boats, offering many different musical genres, spreads along the New Belgrade promenade of Sava. At the three-storey Lucas, moored on the Sava near Brankov Bridge (Brankov Most) in New Belgrade, turbo-folk reigns. This fusion of Serb folk song, Europop and Turkish Arabesque music was associated in the 1990s with Milosevic’s regime – Ceca, the genre’s Madonna, married warlord Arkan – and it remains unashamedly garish and trashy. A few hours spent here offers real insight into Balkan bling.

Across Belgrade, bar prices vary but are always reasonable compared with those of the UK, while smoking remains legal and popular. Entry to clubs is often free, the taxis are relatively cheap and there is little crime to speak of. Best of all, the Serbs are remarkably friendly. If Belgrade guarantees anything today it is good tunes, good value and great times.

• British Airways (0844 493 0 787, ba.com) flies Heathrow-Belgrade from £263 rtn inc tax. Lufthansa (0871 945 9747, lufthansa.com) flies to Belgrade, via Munich, Frankfurt or Zurich, from Birmingham, Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle and Glasgow from around £300 rtn. Stay at Le Petit Piaf (petitpiaf.com), doubles from €130 or Hotel Moskva (hotelmoskva.co.yu), doubles from €130.

• Garth Cartwright is the author of Princes Amongst Men: Journeys With Gypsy Musicians (Serpent’s Tail, £12.69).

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