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HomeClassical MusicPianist Pouya Hamidi Talks About Ladom Ensemble & Their Newest Launch: Sofreh...

Pianist Pouya Hamidi Talks About Ladom Ensemble & Their Newest Launch: Sofreh Tisch


Ladom Ensemble, L-R: Adam Campbell, percussion; Beth Silver, cello; Michael Bridge, accordion; Pouya Hamidi; piano (Photograph: Bo Huang)

Ladom Ensemble might be performing their distinctive fusion of Jewish and Persian music on the launch celebration for his or her new album. Titled Sofreh Tisch, the launch takes place on June 2 at Lula Lounge.

The 4 musicians of Ladom Ensemble name themselves a mini-orchestra. Made up of pianist Pouya Hamidi, percussionist Adam Campbell, accordionist Michael Bridge, and cellist Beth Silver, they take their collective backgrounds in conventional classical music coaching into new instructions.

The ensemble was based almost twenty years in the past by two musicians on the College of Toronto. It grew to become a quartet, with its present members, in 2018. As we speak, their music could possibly be described as a fusion that blends components of klezmer, tango, jazz, rock, and each Persian and Western classical influences. One of many components that characterizes their music is the capability to improvise, alongside their technical virtuosity.

Sofreh Tisch

The album’s title comes from a mix of Persian and Yiddish/Jewish traditions, and speaks to the character of the music. Sofreh (سفره), a Persian phrase, refers back to the sort of conventional tablecloth that’s used at weddings and different celebrations. Tisch (טיש) means desk in Yiddish, and by extension, a cheerful gathering that takes place earlier than a conventional marriage ceremony or different special day.

It’s a mirrored image not solely on the character of the music, however of the friendship and creative collaboration between the ensemble’s members.

Ladom Ensemble: Pianist Pouya Hamidi

Pouya Hamidi was one of many unique duo who based Ladom. With a Masters in Sound Recording from McGill College, he’s the group’s chief composer and arranger.

The main focus of the brand new album got here merely from the roots of the ensemble’s members.

“My background is Iranian. I used to be born in Tehran,” says Hamidi. He got here to Canada as a 12 12 months outdated.

He factors out that cellist Beth Silver’s household moved to Canada from Japanese Europe a few century in the past.

The ensemble’s members know one another effectively from a historical past of touring, performing, and making music. Beth joined a few decade in the past. It was easy proximity that led to the idea of the album. “For the concept of this album, it could be good to carry her background as effectively into the group.”

Beth is answerable for arranging about half the album, which primarily splits evenly between Jewish/klezmer and Iranian music.

“That’s the concept behind the album,” he says. “In a metropolis like Toronto, you’re in a position to do this.”

He notes that there are particular musical components that minimize throughout each cultures, and that there was a Jewish inhabitants in Iran for hundreds of years. There are different cultural similarities.

“Each communities have actually suffered in historical past,” he says. In consequence, the music usually expresses feelings like ache and longing. “There are similarities in that,” he provides.

“Dance is an enormous half in each cultures.” Tracks like Hora, named after the normal Jewish marriage ceremony dance, and others, are linked immediately to bop rhythms and idioms.

The music goes on a journey from Transylvania and Japanese European Jewish diaspora to the Caspian Sea, The Bronx circa mid-century, and past.

“One other musical thought which is actually related between the cultures is elaborations,” Hamidi says.

He mentions that Silver studied musical traditions in Romania, the place elaborations are understood as part of decoding the rating. “Melody isn’t actually what’s on the web page,” Pouya laughs. “It’s related in Iranian music. There’s quite a lot of elaborations to the melody.”

It’s follow and efficiency collectively that creates simply the precise vibe for all of it to hold collectively stay. The ensemble’s distinctive mixture of sounds provides to the artistic spark. “In Ladom, it’s as a result of it’s such a novel instrumentation,” he says. “What we do collectively, naturally makes it our personal. That’s what makes the ensemble distinctive.”

He credit their shared backgrounds in Western classical, and performing chamber music through the years, with their simple musical chemistry. “We carry that sensibility to our music.”

  • Discover extra particulars about their June 2 efficiency, and tickets, [HERE].

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