Bloomington (Indiana), USA -
A couple of years ago, Albert Kuvezin, leader of Tuvan roots-rock band
Yat-Kha,
fell on seriously hard times.
After a string of misfortunes worthy of an action movie—including stolen
passports, forcible deportation from Hungary, mob shakedowns, and a car crash—Kuvezin
found himself recovering from injuries in a hospital in Tuva.
Yat-Kha had gained
fans worldwide, played major festivals, and won a BBC Radio 3 Award, but the
band was now in limbo. A crucial U.S. tour had just fallen through, in part due
to the passport fiasco. Kuvezin was left with little solace save his collection
of rock and blues records.
The songs he blasted while convalescing took Kuvezin on a musical journey so
compelling that he knew he had to record his own versions of them. He was due to
lay down a new album in London, but instead of the originals he had been working
on, he decided to revisit and rework the music that had carried him through
those tough days. All in his unforgettable double-bass, lower-than-low
throat-singing style and using his unique approach to traditional Tuvan
instruments like the
Yat-Kha, the long, koto-like zither that gave the group its
name.
For Kuvezin, the tension and resonance between rock and Tuvan traditional music
were more than just a temporary comfort in a time of trial or a wacky novelty
project. They were leitmotifs that had defined his entire life. At the beginning
of his career at the end of the Soviet era, the ideology department of the Tuvan
Communist Party was less than thrilled when Kuvezin picked up the electric
guitar and started singing. As a little boy, he had been thrown out of the choir
and told to never sing again.
It wasn’t until the sounds of Deep Purple, Black Sabbath, and Slayer reached his
homeland of Tuva—a remote area of southern Siberia nestled between the Altai and
Sayan Mountains—that Kuvezin found the musical bridge between his voice, his
heritage, and the universe. These same sounds helped him once again, this time
on the road to recovery and eventually to
Yat-Kha’s latest album,
Re-Covers
(World Village).
Kuvezin’s special style of throat-singing had all but died out, and it was the
combination of this impossibly deep overtone singing with his progressive punk
sensibility that set the stage for
Yat-Kha. Tuvan throat singing reached the
American consciousness in the early 1990s largely through the recordings and
performances of
Huun-Huur-Tu, of which Kuvezin was a founding member. Feeling
trapped inside their markedly “folkloric” style, Kuvezin decided to deploy the
ethos of perestroika/glasnost-induced spring-thaw punk rock explosion he had
experienced in the city of Sverdlovsk (today’s Yekaterinburg) in the late 1980s.
Drawing on these two sets of roots, Kuvezin crafted a completely new world for
the rock, blues, country, and folk tunes on
Re-Covers, where the contours of the
songs remain but the spirit is pure Tuva.
Recorded in London, the album was produced by British musical agent provocateur,
world musician, and Billy-Bragg-supporting-player Ben Mandelson, with a little
help from Justin Adams, who plays guitar with
Robert Plant and who made a name
for himself as producer for Tuareg rock band
Tinariwen.
Along with Kuvezin’s
zither and voice,
Re-Covers features the drums of Zhenya Tkachov, who grew up as
an Old Believer, the religious dissidents who fled European Russia centuries ago
for remote areas like the upper waters of the Kaa-Khem river in Tuva, where they
have lived for generations. Persecuted by officials, this cultural group has
preserved the old language, traditions, and way of life forgotten by most
Russians. Tkachov has performed with the Tuvan State Symphony, played in several
popular Tuvan bands, and can now add Stones and Zeppelin covers to his varied
musical résumé.
Buy
Re-Covers.
World Music Central
http://www.worldmusiccentral.org/article.php/20060816201951653