Angrusori is a collaboration between musicians from the Norwegian Kitchen Orchestra and Slovak Roma musicians. Together they seamlessly merge contemporary improvised music from Norway with traditional music of Slovak Roma, which is beautifully re-composed and hybridized by Nils Henrik Asheim and Iva Bittová.
“Angrusori: Romany songs of birth, death and black comedy. Using tango, flamenco, junkyard jazz and more, the pan-European group turn stories of migration, pain and persecution into something transcendent.” The Guardian
The Slovakian-Norwegian orchestra Angrusori released its debut-album Live at Tou on Hudson Records in May 2021. The album combined, and at times fuses, two distinctive spheres of musical culture: on the one hand, an ancient migratory song tradition, and on the other, contemporary, experimental improvisation.
The album was received
Since 2016, a group of musicians from the Norway based Kitchen Orchestra and the Slovak Roma community have collaborated on the project Phuterdo Øre (open ear), now renamed as the band Angrusori (ring). New connections have been developed between contemporary improvised music from Norway and traditional Slovak Roma music, beautifully re-composed and hybridized by Nils Henrik Asheim and Iva Bittová helped along by contributing musicians and hours of collaborative work.
For a number of years, researcher Jana Beliová has worked with the Roma population in Slovakia, collecting and documenting songs rarely heard outside the Slovakian countryside. This album offers a collection of these songs in a remoulded and repackaged format, inviting both old and new listeners of Roma music, and appealing to diverse audiences within and outside the Slovakian vernacular.
hese are songs from an otherwise secluded society, songs usually shared in peoples homes and kitchens. They are songs telling stories of a different European reality, encompassing experiences of social segregation, abject poverty and ill health, or love, jealousy and loss stories of specific and universal human tragedies, which nevertheless bear within them enduring qualities of resilience and togetherness. It is music that seeks to give renewed hope for our shared and interdependent humanity, through its ability to cross borders.
17th Jan – Grand Junction, London
18th Jan – Midlands Arts Centre, Birmingham
19th Jan – Band on the Wall, Manchester
20th Jan – Pavilion Theatre, Glasgow (Celtic Connections)
Website: https://angrusori.com/
Listen here: https://open.spotify.com/artist/7mopHec7Rhww9It4ifwuIj?si=xm7sL_ggRYCFSZreZxY3Xg