Cover of Rhapsodija Trio Stare Mesto
luludia

• Rating:

For fans of rhapsodija trio,lovers of folk and world music,listeners seeking emotional and poetic music,followers of instrumental trios,enthusiasts of eastern european and gypsy sounds
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LA RECENSIONE

I remember Moni Ovadia. And I remember that film, “Train de vie”...

I remember Prague under the snow, I remember the summer wine. I remember that I like the memory. Knowing that I have lived.

It can be a play of water and mirrors, the ubiquitous and insinuating melancholy, Philip Glass in the manner of Franz Kafka.

Or grace and naivety, flying donkeys, muffled enchantment, Marc Chagall in the manner of Marc Chagall.

And then the blues of the Hellenes, the gypsy blaze. Violins fired up at a thousand, ending up who knows how in a snow globe. And still, even if it's just a little orchestra, at track two you have to turn up the volume...

Music, in short. And you almost think that “it's true that we can't talk and that we always talk too much”

Poetry in motion, poetry often cheap, but who cares? It's all so beautiful...

You're in a little café and there are three guys, accordion, guitar, violin. And that so beautiful is returned to you as if they were showing you an old photo.

And even if there's no street, it's street music. Even if there's no dust, it's music full of dust.

Then you are drunk without having drunk, happy without being happy. And maybe it can be that you are still living.

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Summary by Bot

The review praises Rhapsodija Trio's album Stare Mesto for its blend of melancholic and lively folk influences. The music is described as poetic and emotionally rich, evoking vivid imagery and nostalgia. With soulful instrumentation—accordion, guitar, violin—it transports listeners to intimate settings filled with beauty and bittersweet joy. The album encourages deep listening and emotional engagement.

Rhapsodija Trio

A trio described in the review as three guys — accordion, guitar, violin — playing melancholic, street-tinged world/folk music with klezmer and gypsy inflections; evokes poetry, memory and cinematic moods.
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