Rebetiko Orchestra Berlin | live with guests
an aged poster with an image of musicians holding instruments. visible are baglama, buzuki, violin, double bass. the musicians are facing the camera. an aged purple script announces the dates and time of the concert. a logo of an arabesque circle with the text: "rebetiko Orchestra Berlin" in purple and ochre yellow is at the top left of the image, while to the right is a faded out image of a baglama, a sleeve-sized string instruments, used to be smuggled into prison at times when Rebetiko was outlawed.

Saturday, 01 March, 2025 - 20:00

Rebetiko Orchestra Berlin | live with guests

Doors: 19:30 | Concert: 20:00 

tickets at door only: sliding scale [recommendation: 10 and up] 

 

Rebetiko Orchestra Berlin was founded 2024 by Jannis Stergiou, its conductor, and the KANARINI BERLIN School of Greek Music in order to study and disseminate rebetiko music. Its unusual combination of instruments, tongues and backgrounds, united by passion to the genre and its heritage, resonates with the roots of rebetiko and rebetes, with a unique timbre and a rich repertoire. 

March 1st, with guests on percussion and voice, the orchestra will come together to summon the longing, joy, resistance and dance of past and future. 

GUESTS:

Zefi Varlami: voice 

Thanasis Petsas: voice 

Christina Fronista: voice 

Hogir Göregen: percussion

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Rebetiko is a pure folk music movement that started in Greece at the beginning of the 20th century and expressed the joys and sorrows of the less privileged, forming a link between the local inhabitants and the refugees from Asia Minor, who flooded the urban centres after their persecution in 1922. As a musical idiom, it creatively elaborates on the musical heritage of the Eastern Mediterranean, with its own instruments and musical scales, bridging in a way the music of the East with that of the West. It produced genius composers, singers and instrumentalists, who created a vast original repertoire of incredible diversity and immediacy, which accompanied the lives of the simple people, to whom it was addressed.
In the decades that have passed since then, it has flourished and declined, its themes diversified, adapting to the issues of Greek society, in order to gradually evolve or even merge into what we call greek popular music. From 1972 onwards, interest in rebetiko awakened again and in the early 1980s it was played live in the corresponding venues, while the gramophone discography was digitalized and began to be released on CD, while the repertoire was recorded, taught, the old techniques were studied, etc.
Since 2017 it has been a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity Monument.

 

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