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- MUSIC, Page 100Voices from Another TimeA Gypsy band and Bulgarian choir spark unlikely pop interestBy Jay Cocks
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-
- Score one for mystery. Score two, in fact: one for each volume
- of Le Mystere des Voix Bulgares. (Or, The Mystery of the Bulgarian
- Voices to you, Rambo.) In 1987 the weirdest album to appear on the
- reliably eccentric British pop charts was the first volume of folk
- music recorded by this choir of two dozen Bulgarian women. Journals
- recorded approving, indeed awed, comments from the likes of George
- Harrison. The group caught on, and a record that had roughly the
- commercial potential of Botha: Live in the Transvaal! became a
- surprise hit. Released in America by Elektra/Nonesuch, the record
- attracted so much attention that the "Voices" went on a warmly
- received U.S. tour and issued the second volume, released just a
- month ago.
-
- The group does nothing to hide its official name -- the
- Bulgarian State Radio and Television Female Vocal Choir -- but the
- copy on the label and jacket doesn't exactly brag about it either.
- Le Mystere is so much more mellifluous and -- no getting around it
- -- mysterious. Just like the music itself, in fact. The wonder of
- both Le Mystere excursions is provided by the range of the voices
- and the surprise of the melodies. The music sounds African, Middle
- European and otherworldly, like a collision around a sharp mountain
- turn between Peter Gabriel's score for The Last Temptation of
- Christ and Carl Orff's Carmina Burana.
-
- Folk traditions of quite another, although not dissimilar, sort
- animate a second fluky hit, The Gipsy Kings. The record, sung in
- a Gypsyfied merging of Spanish and French, sold well over a million
- copies in Europe and interested the intrepid Elektra in a U.S.
- release. All members of the same family, the Gipsy Kings make up
- a jolly band that combines the sly funk of salsa and the brio of
- flamenco with some of the blowout intensity of rock. The band does
- have mainstream appeal. The "adult contemporary" step-uncle of MTV,
- VH-1, recently chose the Kings' video of their Bamboleo single for
- its "Pick of the Week," and the band is hardly shy around
- sentiment. Its version of the French original that was the basis
- for the shudder-inducing My Way has enough panache, never mind
- schmaltz, to rate a permanent slot on the juke at any local Irish
- bar. Right next to the Bulgarian women, more than likely.