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Sarajevo to Belfast
Barnes and Noble
Sarajevo to Belfast
Current price: $14.99


Barnes and Noble
Sarajevo to Belfast
Current price: $14.99
Size: OS
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Built on the common experience of tragedy,
Tommy Sands
(from Northern Ireland) and cellist
Vedran Smailovic
(from Sarajevo) have been performing together for a few years, culminating in this album. While the theme is tragedy and the recovery from it in both regions of discord, the focus is pretty clearly on the atrocities in Sarajevo.
Smailovic
is the primary composer of pieces here, though there are numbers from
Sands
,
Pete Seeger
, and various traditional and
classical
works as well. The tone is largely a mournful one, as one would expect, though there are notes of hope built in now and then. The album opens on
"Ode to Sarajevo,"
a chorus piece (which includes
Joan Baez
);
"Bembasa"
is built from an old Sephardic work; and
Seeger
's
"Where Have All the Flowers Gone"
closes out the opening trio. A
waltz
that was once played before
Archduke Ferdinand
's assassination in Sarajevo (opening World War I) returns the focus to Sarejevo, followed by an
Albinoni
piece played by
after the bread-line massacre of 1992.
joins in on
Music of Healing
(surprisingly, not on
), working well in combination with
.
Bosfor
is an old Bosnian tune,
"Child of 2000"
was an early collaboration between the two stars of the album, and
"Dilber"
returns to the Bosnian theme again. The album finishes on the duo of
"Buskers"
(written by
' brother in tribute to
before any meetings) and
"Laganside,"
an old Irish love march. The two cultures rarely combine within the structure of a single song here, but instead the styles can change from one to the other relatively seamlessly as tracks switch. The performers are all worth hearing here, and the music is properly nostalgic and heartfelt. The only dry spots involve the use of an electric cello in a couple attempts to update the music a bit for contemporary audiences. Luckily those are rather rare, and the bulk of the album is a wonderful tribute to those lost in civilian attacks and to hope for the future. This is musically excellent and culturally relevant. ~ Adam Greenberg
Tommy Sands
(from Northern Ireland) and cellist
Vedran Smailovic
(from Sarajevo) have been performing together for a few years, culminating in this album. While the theme is tragedy and the recovery from it in both regions of discord, the focus is pretty clearly on the atrocities in Sarajevo.
Smailovic
is the primary composer of pieces here, though there are numbers from
Sands
,
Pete Seeger
, and various traditional and
classical
works as well. The tone is largely a mournful one, as one would expect, though there are notes of hope built in now and then. The album opens on
"Ode to Sarajevo,"
a chorus piece (which includes
Joan Baez
);
"Bembasa"
is built from an old Sephardic work; and
Seeger
's
"Where Have All the Flowers Gone"
closes out the opening trio. A
waltz
that was once played before
Archduke Ferdinand
's assassination in Sarajevo (opening World War I) returns the focus to Sarejevo, followed by an
Albinoni
piece played by
after the bread-line massacre of 1992.
joins in on
Music of Healing
(surprisingly, not on
), working well in combination with
.
Bosfor
is an old Bosnian tune,
"Child of 2000"
was an early collaboration between the two stars of the album, and
"Dilber"
returns to the Bosnian theme again. The album finishes on the duo of
"Buskers"
(written by
' brother in tribute to
before any meetings) and
"Laganside,"
an old Irish love march. The two cultures rarely combine within the structure of a single song here, but instead the styles can change from one to the other relatively seamlessly as tracks switch. The performers are all worth hearing here, and the music is properly nostalgic and heartfelt. The only dry spots involve the use of an electric cello in a couple attempts to update the music a bit for contemporary audiences. Luckily those are rather rare, and the bulk of the album is a wonderful tribute to those lost in civilian attacks and to hope for the future. This is musically excellent and culturally relevant. ~ Adam Greenberg