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Uncategorized

MOZAIK, “THE LONG AND THE SHORT OF IT” – BOSTON IRISH REVIEW

15/05/2024 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
Mozaik, review

Mozaik, “The Long and the Short of It” • This space sang the praises of Andy Irvine last month, with the recent release of his “Old Dog Long Road” retrospective. Well, here we go again, although in this endeavor he’s got plenty of company: old Planxty chum Donal Lunny, American old-timey musician Bruce Molsky, Dutch multi-instrumentalist Res van der Zalm, and Bulgarian Nikola Pirova. As Mozaik, these five have for almost two decades now been finding common ground between the Irish, Appalachian, and Balkan music traditions. And on this, the group’s third release (recorded in 2015 but only issued several months ago), they add yet another element: Greek folk music, in the person of guest vocalist Chrysoula Kechagioglou who, while only appearing on a quarter of the album’s 12 tracks, is an absolutely enchanting presence.

The sheer variety of instruments these guys play make up a small orchestra: bouzoukis, mandolins, harmonica, guitars, fiddles, five-string banjo, whistles, uilleann pipes, bodhran, and from the Balkans, the violin-like gadulka, kaval (a wind instrument) and the gaida (bagpipes). Irvine leads on four of the songs, Molsky two, adding Dublin and American voices to the mix. Not to be overlooked is another guest singer, Ágnes Herczku of Hungary, who vocalizes a Moldavian tune that leads into a dance melody (“Gyimes”). The overall effect is exotic to say the least: vintage Irish folk revival fretted-string accompaniment, old-timey/Appalachian drive, Eastern European rhythms and intervals – sometimes intertwining, other times set off against one another, but always holding together the vision of commonalities in cultures and music traditions.

 

more: andyirvinenews.wordpress.com

Chrysoula K. & Púrpura – Interview

26/12/2023 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
Chrysoula K. and Púrpura, interview

Η Χρυσούλα Κεχαγιόγλου συζητά με την Χριστίνα Κανατάκη για την πρωτοβουλία του συγκροτήματος Chrysoula K. & Púrpura – Συνέντευξη να υποστηρίξουν οικονομικά το κέντρο Διοτίμα μέσω του νέου τους album “Χαμένη Πόλη”
Στην εκπομπή Τα Καθέκαστα
Στην Δημοτική Τηλεόραση Θεσσαλονίκης TV100

 

ULYSSES: European Odyssey

19/09/2022 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
onassis, project

A new civic and cultural project—”ULYSSES: European Odyssey”—that unites in a single vision 18 cities across Europe.

“ULYSSES: European Odyssey” is inspired by the novel’s status as one of the seminal landmarks in European culture. The project’s transnational scope will be multi-disciplinary and consist of 14 city events animating the democratic public spaces of a modern city in ‘all walks of life’, plus 18 civic cross-sectoral Arts & Society symposia to be held in each city, 30 artist exchange residencies and 18 literary commissions for a new EUROPE-ULYSSES book to be published in 2024.

The project will unfold in each of the 18 cities in the chronological order of the novel’s 18 episodes, opening in ATHENS late September 2022, immediately followed by Budapest, Marseille, Trieste, and Vilnius in autumn 2022. In 2023 initiatives will take place in Paris, Berlin, Copenhagen, San Sebastian, Cluj, Istanbul, Zurich, Groningen, Eleusis, and Oulu. The project will complete its journey in June 2024 in Lisbon, Dublin, and Derry-Londonderry.

In its application to Creative Europe, the organizers of “ULYSSES: European Odyssey” underlined 18 ‘urgent priorities’ in contemporary European society, one for each city and directly inspired by the themes present in Joyce’s 18 book episodes. These include for example: ‘youth, citizenship & democracy’, ‘the role of neighborhood communities in post Covid Europe’, ‘enrichment through immigration’, ‘our creative dialogue with the dead’, ‘our modern-day relationship with food’, ‘the ecological challenges facing our sacred seas and shores’, ‘Shelters and Europe’s ageing population’, ‘The future—a female vision’, etc. These themes will be addressed through the 18 Arts & Society Symposia held by the UEO consortium partners in each city, from which questions and proposed solutions will be sent through to the Grand Symposium of 309 questions (as inspired by Episode 17 of “Ulysses”) in Dublin June 12-14, 2024.

The 18-city consortium of partners comprise a range of established and emerging organizations including three museums, three theater organizations, a civic environmental project, an illumination light festival, two cultural and tourism government authorities, a photography festival, and independent artists and curators in the visual and performing arts and film. The lead partner for the project is “Stichting Brave New World Producties” in the Netherlands alongside the lead artistic partner “Arts Over Borders” in Ireland.

source: onassis.org

ULYSSES European Odyssey (UEO)

19/09/2022 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
project

ULYSSES European Odyssey (UEO) is an epic project from 2022-2024 across 18 cities in 16 countries, producing artistic responses in public spaces to social and cultural themes identified in the 18 episodes of James Joyce’s Ulysses. At the same time, a cycle of 18 public symposia will be held in each city to produce 309 questions (Ulysses, Ep. 17) towards creating a new arts and society manifesto for Europe. The project also has 30 artist residencies which will contribute to a new book, Europe-Ulysses, alongside 18 new writing commissions, one writer from each city.

SCHEMA

ULYSSES European Odyssey was inspired not only by Joyce’s European masterpiece, but also by his own ‘user’s guide’ to his book. Joyce wrote two schemas. His Gilbert schema in November 1921 to help his friend, Valery Larbaud, prepare a public lecture on the novel. And his Linati schema in 1920 to assist Carlo Linati understand the fundamental structure of the book.

In both schemas Joyce identifies places, times, colours, bodily organs, scientific and artistic disciplines and symbols for each episode. He also identified the chapter his episodes linked to in Homer’s The Odyssey. In the Gilbert schema he also gave each episode a ‘technique’, ranging from narrative to monologues, narcissism to hallucination.

Arts Over Borders and Brave New World Producties took his schemas and added a further column: Contemporary European issues. Diving deep into each episode we found a modern day European (global) issue or urgency in each chapter.  This 100 year old novel started to reveal itself in a new, compelling way. It took on, deep from within the very twists and turns of the main protagonist, Leopold Bloom’s journey around Dublin, a rich and provocative modern day relevance. ULYSSES European Odyssey was born.

Our next step was to match the contemporary European issue to a city. Sometimes a challenge but more often perfectly matched, we identified cities for each issue and thus for each episode. We tested the rationale for the matching before we identified our partners to ensure it all hung together.

The next step was to find a broad range of organisations whose artistic discipline or creative form would reflect the huge diversity of Joyce’s writing style in each episode. It was a search through our creative and professional contacts plus new discoveries, new artistic meetings. Conversations with people requesting recommendations and tips, online research (we developed the project during Covid) and conversations. Talking, sharing our ideas. Until finally we had our partners.

ULYSSES European Odyssey is a journey around Europe. Odysseus’s journey home. Bloom’s journey around Dublin. Joyce’s journey around literary form. And now, too, our journey through the novel, seen through the eyes of 18 cities, 18 contemporary European issues, 18 different creative disciplines and 18 contrasting organisations.

 

ulysseseurope.eu

Songbird – An Irish / Greek Collaboration | Dónal O’Connor and Chrysoula Kechagioglou

09/09/2022 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
collaboration

Songbird sees one of Ireland’s leading traditional musicians, Louth man Dónal O’Connor, join forces with soulful Greek vocalist and percussionist Chrysoula Kechagioglou, to create brand new music inspired by Irish and Greek instrumental and song traditions. Exploring both contemporary and traditional compositions and new approaches to musical accompaniment, this promises to be a stunning cross-cultural collaboration, connecting the musical language of Ireland and Greece in fresh and innovative ways.

Commissioned Artists/Lead Collaborators: Irish/Greek Dónal O’Connor & Chrysoula Kechagioglou

Dónal O’Connor: fiddle, harmonium

Chrysoula Kechagioglou: voice, percussion

Maria Ploumi: lute

Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh: vocals, flute & whistles

The initiative is presented in association with Droichead Arts Centre in Drogheda, Linenhall Arts Centre in Castlebar and Siamsa Tíre in Tralee this autumn.

Dónal O’Connor is a musician who comes from a long and distinguished line of Irish traditional musicians and singers. Described as a ‘fearless musical adventurer’ and ‘a renaissance man’, he has established himself as one of Ireland’s leading record and television producers and has played and recorded with the likes of Karen Matheson of Capercaillie, Duke Special, Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh, John McSherry, Davy Spillane, Four Men & A Dog, Steve Cooney, Mary Dillon, The Horslips, Darlingside, Liam Ó Maonlaí, Cathal McConnell, Bob Brozman, Harry Bradley, Ríoghnach Connolly and Niall Hanna. Having inherited a musical legacy of at least five generations of fiddle playing, he has toured the world from a young age and his collaborations have variously included membership of Ulaid and At First Light, Lá Lugh and the Gaelic Song Supergroup A Stór Mo Chroí.

Renowned Greek singer Chrysoula Kechagioglou (Chrysoula K.) has recorded and performed with numerous Greek, European and U.S. artists including Donal Lunny, Andy Irvine, Bruce Molsky, The Horslips,Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh, John McSherry and Donal O’Connor. She leads her own all-female band Chrysoula K & Púrpura, which aims to create a new sound, combining aspects of traditional and classical forms with compositions influenced by diverse musical cultures. She has recorded two albums with Chrysoula k. & Púrpura, Chrysoula k. & Púrpura (Australia 2018) and Lost City (Athens 2022) and toured extensively in Europe, Australia, USA, Egypt and Ireland.

Collaborating Musicians

Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh is an award-winning traditional singer and musician from Corca Dhuibhne, West Kerry. Formerly lead singer and flute player with the Irish band Danú, Muireann recently recorded Róisín ReImagined, an album of sean nós songs arranged by contemporary Irish arrangers with the Irish Chamber Orchestra..

Maria Ploumi is a Greek traditional lute player known for her dynamic style of playing. Having studied musicology and Greek traditional music, her interest in exploring diverse musical languages is apparent in her collaborations with some of Greece’s leading traditional musicians and singers, and in her String Theory Ensemble duo ‘ with pianist George Paterakis.

Sing your heart out during Chrysoula Kechagioglou’s online vocal workshops

17/08/2020 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
interview, workshop

As a member of Greece’s oldest Celtic band ‘Iernis,’ Chrysoula Kechagioglou is not short of vocal expertise in Greek folk songs from the Cyclades, Dodecanese and Asia Minor.

That’s why she’s the perfect choice to teach online singing workshops every Tuesday in September from 6pm – 7pm, as organised by Sydney Greek Jam and Rebetika in Melbourne.

“I am not very confident about distant learning and my ability to share information this way. I am very fond of personal contact. But I am also a woman of my time and I want to cope with this new situation,” Chrysoula tells The Greek Herald exclusively.

“I don’t want fear of illness or technology to keep this wonderful knowledge away from those who wish to have it.”

Chrysoula’s workshops will be available via Zoom and they are open to a limited number of participants. No prior assumed knowledge of Greek or Greek songs is necessary as the lesson can be conducted in English with transliterated lyrics.

Those who are lucky enough to get a spot in the one-hour classes will learn about the history of songs from the Dodecanese, Cyclades and Asia Minor, as well as cover some vocal techniques particular to these regions.

“I have chosen these songs because they are interesting music and lyrics wise and because I really love them,” Chrysoula says.

(…) read more at greekherald.com.au

BOSTON IRISH – March Album Reviews – Mozaik, “The Long and the Short of It”

04/03/2020 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
album review, Mozaik

By Sean Smith

Mozaik, “The Long and the Short of It” • This space sang the praises of Andy Irvine last month, with the recent release of his “Old Dog Long Road” retrospective. Well, here we go again, although in this endeavor he’s got plenty of company: old Planxty chum Donal Lunny, American old-timey musician Bruce Molsky, Dutch multi-instrumentalist Res van der Zalm, and Bulgarian Nikola Pirova. As Mozaik, these five have for almost two decades now been finding common ground between the Irish, Appalachian, and Balkan music traditions. And on this, the group’s third release (recorded in 2015 but only issued several months ago), they add yet another element: Greek folk music, in the person of guest vocalist Chrysoula Kechagioglou who, while only appearing on a quarter of the album’s 12 tracks, is an absolutely enchanting presence.

The sheer variety of instruments these guys play make up a small orchestra: bouzoukis, mandolins, harmonica, guitars, fiddles, five-string banjo, whistles, uilleann pipes, bodhran, and from the Balkans, the violin-like gadulka, kaval (a wind instrument) and the gaida (bagpipes). Irvine leads on four of the songs, Molsky two, adding Dublin and American voices to the mix. Not to be overlooked is another guest singer, Ágnes Herczku of Hungary, who vocalizes a Moldavian tune that leads into a dance melody (“Gyimes”). The overall effect is exotic to say the least: vintage Irish folk revival fretted-string accompaniment, old-timey/Appalachian drive, Eastern European rhythms and intervals – sometimes intertwining, other times set off against one another, but always holding together the vision of commonalities in cultures and music traditions.

(…) read more at bostonirish.com

Chrysoula Kehagioglou’s important international collaboration with Mozaik

10/12/2019 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
Mozaik, newalbum

MOZAIK is the band that Andy Irvine had dreamed of and his long time musical friends gathered together in Australia in early 2002 to form this multicultural super band. Andy Irvine has been travelling around the world since his youth and one of his great ideas was to collaborate with so much of the dierent music that had inuenced him. American ddler and 5-string banjo player Bruce Molsky brought the Old Time tunes and songs from his native country, Dónal Lunny was the unquestionable percussive powerhouse of the gathering on bouzouki, guitar and bodhrán. Bulgarian/Hungarian musical genius, Nikola Parov brought all manner of exotic instrumentation to the mix (including gadulka, gaida, kaval, gardon, utes, clarinet, guitar and nyckelharpa) and Rens van der Zalm, undoubtably one of the best all round musicians on ddle, mandolin, low whistles, uillean pipes and guitar, brought with him his quintessential Dutch attention to detail in his lovely melody lines.

MOZAIK recorded this 3rd album outside Budapest during the month of September 2015.

This time they had a beautiful traditional singer Chrysoula Kechagioglou as a guest and she brought the warm wind and colour of her native Greece into the band for this album. Andy and Bruce also take lead vocals and the instrumental tracks composed by Dónal and Nikola (with the magnicent voice of Ágnes Herczku) are in this album. It has taken more than four years for this album to come to fruition but here it is at last and that’s about the long and the short of it!

 

Available at andyirvine.com

MOZAIK: THE LONG AND THE SHORT OF IT

21/11/2019 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
Mozaik, newalbum

Multi-cultural folk supergroup Mozaik is the band that inveterate musical traveller Andy Irvine had always dreamed of forming. His dream came to be realised in Australia in 2002 when he got together with four fellow-musicians who represented his biggest musical influences – all supremely versatile practitioners who could bring their own takes and ideas to the table. These being American old-time supremo Bruce Molsky, Ireland’s “percussive powerhouse” Dónal Lunny, Bulgarian/Hungarian multi-instrumentalist Nikola Parov and Dutch master-of-all Rens van der Zalm. Between them, they play an impressive number of different instruments (over 20) and boast two charismatic singers (Andy and Bruce), so any Mozaik outing will embrace an astounding variety of timbres, styles and approaches and any audience will thus be kept both constantly engaged and royally entertained.

And that’s unquestionably “The Long And The Short Of It”, as the group’s albums – and in particular this third recorded offering – amply illustrate. Let’s leave aside the question of why a collection recorded over four years ago (during the month of September 2015, in Nikola’s house outside Budapest) should have taken this long to come to fruition – and celebrate its appearance now, for here it is at last and (to put it mildly!) proves well worth the wait. It contains material and performances that are quintessential Mozaik, the kind that keeps audiences flocking back to their gigs time after time and leaving the venues totally energised and invigorated and ready to face the grim world outside. To describe the musicianship as top-flight is both a given and a massive understatement, and there are many examples of the neck-prickling seamless interactive and combination skills on display throughout the album. The twin fiddles on track 2’s medley (The Black Hills Waltz & The Red Steer); the chilling unison whistles introducing the whalermen’s song The Coast Of Peru; and Nikola’s sinuous violin work on the first of the three tracks to feature special guest Chrysoula Kechagioglou. But this is mere cherrypicking, and if I were asked to cite just three favourite tracks I’d be hard put to do so. The gorgeous Rainbow ’Mid The Willows, which takes a song from the singing of Almeda Riddle and a tune by Chris Algar, would have to be a candidate, as would the aforementioned track 2 pairing; the third is mentioned in dispatches below… But not far behind is Old Virginia, led by Bruce and drawn from the singing of Dan Tate from near Fancy Gap, Virginia, while it’s impossible to resist Andy’s puckish anecdote As Good As It Gets, indelibly paired with a referential quick-march by Dónal. Or for that matter the pattergun delivery of Andy’s portrait of Harry Houdini, from whose charms it proves aptly hard to escape…

However, notwithstanding the plethora of vocal and instrumental talent available within the quintet itself, no Mozaik venture would be complete without at least one special guest, and The Long And The Short Of It is no exception, for the album’s billing proudly headlines “with Chrysoula Kechagioglou”. Chrysoula is a renowned Greek traditional singer with a particularly beautiful voice, and all three of her contributions are disc highlights. They range over a wide emotional range, from Like A Soft Breeze, a haunting setting of a poem by Napoleon Lapathiotis (who shot himself in 1944), a translation of The Song Of The Nightingale (a traditional song from Thrace) and, to conclude the album, a stunning a cappella account of the “dance song” Neratzoula which was Chrysoula’s grandmother’s “party hit”. Mozaik’s other guest artist on this album is singer Ágnes Herczku, who vocalises (hums) a beautiful melody to introduce Nikola’s inventive transformation of Gyimes, a Moldavian kettös (an animated couple dance).

The above guest contributions aside, there’s inevitably an abundance of brilliant playing and scintillating, ever-shapeshifting arrangements throughout the disc, with interesting and imaginative scoring to hand whatever the mood. And the apparent sheer effortlessness of the musicians’ virtuosity is never to be underestimated. There are as many magnificently lyrical passages as there are instances of intelligent note-spinning, indeed, and although no individual track exceeds 5½ minutes in length there’s invariably a feel of relaxed accomplishment pervading the music-making even when a fast tempo is called for. Only on the last of the disc’s purely instrumental tracks did I feel a tad disappointment due its shortness, it couples a chirpy original reel of Dónal’s with an ultra-infectious Romanian dance, but it’s all over in but a flash and the entire medley is done and dusted in just under three minutes with barely time to draw breath! Bravo and encore!

So summing up, the long and the short of this review is a hearty, unqualified recommendation for this impeccably packaged disc – a seriously uplifting set from Andy and his chums.

 

Order The Long and Short Of It here: https://www.andyirvine.com/albums/The-Long-And-The-Short-Of-It.html

You can hear a track on our latest Folk Show here: https://www.folkradio.co.uk/2019/11/folk-show-episode-66/

 

Photo Credit: Béla-Kása

 

source: folkradio.co.uk

Playing rebetiko with Chrysoula K. and Púrpura on RN Drive

07/03/2018 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
abc radio, Australia 2018, Chrysoula K. and Púrpura, interview, melbourne, rebetiko festival

Rebetiko is a form of blues music, which traces its roots back to urban Greece in the 1920s.

The genre had a major resurgence in recent decades and it now has fans across the world.

Chrysoula Kechagioglou is the front person of the band, Chrysoula K. and Púrpura, who are in Australia for their first international tour.

Presenter: Patricia Karvelas
Executive Producer: Claudette Werden

 

THE INTERVIEW

 

source: abc.net.au

Chrysoula K. and Púrpura @ SBS Greek in Melbourne

06/03/2018 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
australia tour 2018, Chrysoula K. and Púrpura, live, melbourne, radio, SBS Greek

Chrysoula K. and Púrpura is touring Australia

02/03/2018 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
australian tour 2018, Chrysoula Kechagioglou & Púrpura, interview, radio, SBS Greek

 

We don’t often have the opportunity to enjoy live concerts with musicians the calibre of Púrpura but in March the all female band will tour Australia.

Chrysoula Kechagioglou, the founder and vocalist of  Púrpura with the mellifluous voice, spoke to Dina Gerolymou.

 

source: www.sbs.com.au

Chrysoula K. & Púrpura “Let’s fly together – Australian Tour 2018”

14/12/2017 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
australian tour 2018, Chrysoula K. & Purpura, let's fly together

Australian tour 2018 crowd funding campaign:

Dear friends,

the Kickstarter crowd funding campaign about “Chrysoula K. & Púrpura” tour in Australia has just begun! It is about a 44-day music tour in March-April 2018 with concerts mainly at international festivals and festivals of the Greek community.

We ask for your help, it is important even it is only 5 euros!

 

Moments from 3rd Celtic Music Festival

27/05/2017 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
3rd Celtic Music Festival, Iernis

Iernis and beloved ones in the 3rd Celtic Music in Athens! Two sold out nights, wonderful music, happy talented people on stage, warm audience…. what more could one ask?

 

“Light Thickens” in Münster

10/05/2017 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
documentary, fascism, germany, lightthickens

“Light Thickens” is a documentary about the way art can help people handle the trauma of war… Through the eyes, research and final works of 9 artists, the movie talks about fascism, about the way that war makes us lose our humanity – if we let it! It has been a very hard, terrifying, soul searching process for all the people who were involved, but it was definitely worth it! Now, we proudly see the movie traveling around the world. Next stop, Münster, Germany. We thank the people of the city for their interest and we will be there to answer any questions- if we can. Some questions are too hard to be answered…


www.cinema-muenster.de

www.lightthickens.eu

Apodimi Compania – Australian Tour 2017

06/04/2017 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
apodimi compania, australia 2017

Venues and Festivals where you can find us:

7th April Spotted Mallard Brunswick, Melbourne
9th April Greek Festival of Sydney
14-17th April National Folk Festival, Canberra
21st April Adelaide Festival
22nd April Dance at Pontiaki Estia
23rd April Caravan Club Melbourne

1st Woman ‘s Day Music Festival in Athens, Greece 2017

25/02/2017 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
1st Woman 's Day Music Festival, Chrysoula K. & Purpura, Müzikal Ifade, Noriana

Wednesday, March 8

Time: 20.30

Location: Cinema Trianon Codrington Patission 21 & 101 (Victoria Station) 210 8215469

Duration: 120

Ticket price: € 8

13 women musicians, 3 figures, 120 minutes of music presented at the landmark film cinema, Trianon for the occasion of the Festival of Women.

With the assistance of the photographic lens of Chloe Kritharas Devienne, photographs of her work will be displayed in various phases of the evening, three all-female figures hold our tribute to the woman struggling to express -kallitechnika, social, political and eroticsm.

Without many words, using music and songs from different corners of the globe, from M. Asia and East of the areas from the Celts, to Latin America and Europe, these performances carry a message for all people and especially for women.

Müzikal Ifade:
Violet Ikari – voice
Nansy Kyriakaki – guitar
Gogo Batsikoura – saz
Alexandra Papastergiopoulou – cello, percussion, mikropnefsta

Noriana:
Irini Triantafyllidi – voice, lute
Eleftheria Polygeorgi – flute
Mimi Mouratidou – violin
Natasha Paflatou – percussion

Chrysoula K. & Purpura:
Chrisoula Kechagioglou – voice
Effie Zaitidou – kanun
Maria Ploumi – lute
Sophia Serefoglou – flute
Elsa Papeli – cello

 

www.internationalwomensday.com

Chrysoula K. & Púrpura Guest: Haig Yazdjian

24/01/2017 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
Chrysoula K. & Purpura, Haig Yazdjian

«Púrpura»: The latin word for “purple”. The symbol of spirituallity, mistery and harmony. The perfect color for a clearly “female” band. 5 women with different musical tastes and background, in co- operation with the exceptional Armenian musician Hiag Yazdjian, aiming to create an original musical reality, which will sound both joyful and nostalgic.

The slightly paradoxical mix of instruments – canun and lute from the eastern Mediterranean tradition, flute and cello from the symphonic orchstras of the West – and the combination of all these with the oud and the jazz influences of Haig, form an ideal environment for the melodies of Argentina, Ireland and the East to flourish and create a mozaik- a musical dialogue between the East and the West.

Members of «Púrpura»:
Effie Zaitidou: canun
Maria Ploymi: lute
Sofia Serefoglou: flute
Elsa Papeli: cello
Chrysoula Kechagioglou is singing.

Apodimi Compania – Australia Tour – April 2017

23/01/2017 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
apodimi compania, australia 2017

To all our old and new friends in Melbourne…..Apodimi Compania will be touring OZ in April 2017, playing at the Spotted Mallard, Brunswick 7th April and The Caravan Club 23 rd April… Will you come round and support us ??? We promise to play our hearts out !!!”

The Apodimi Compania are back… and returning to Brunswick, where it all began some 28 years ago! Now resident in Athens, Greece, the Apodimi Compania is one of the world’s leading exponents of Rebetika and Greek Folk Song and Dance. Regular members Manuel Galiatsos, Yiannis Niarhos, George Galiatsos and Chrysoula Kehayioglou will be joined by Apodimi’s latest member, fiddle player, Vangelis Votteas, and they are bringing a new CD, hot off the press! The show will start in concert mode and then later in the night the band will play tunes for dancing until the people can dance no more!

Traditional Celtic song ‘Cruel Sister’ soon on Youtube!

24/12/2016 asd by kechagioglou
Uncategorized
Chrysoula K. & Purpura, Cruel Sister, new song

An image from the animation that Tony Thalassinos is creating for the traditional celtic song Cruel Sister.
The animation will be the video of our cover of this song. It will soon be released on YouTube…!

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