- Home
- Music / Culture
- music
- social science
- Bright Balkan Morning

Bright Balkan Morning
Romani Lives and the Power of Music in Greek Macedonia
Music / Culture
Photographs Dick Blau
Sales Date: 2002-12-09
352 Pages, 11.00 x 9.75 in
A celebration of settled "Gypsies" and music-dance in Greek Macedonia with CD.
A stunningly-illustrated interweaving of first person narratives, photographs, cultural commentary and soundscapes, Bright Balkan Morning provides an unprecedented view of settled Romani lives in the Balkans and the unique roles of "Gypsy" instrument players in the region. These Romani instrumentalists from Iraklia, an ancient Greek Macedonian crossroads and market town that is home to about 2,000 Roma, provide the sounds that facilitate parties and rites of passage, performing an essential and highly valued service for their multicultural neighbors.
At the heart of the book are ten first-person Romani life stories. Charles and Angeliki Keil situate these personal accounts within the cultural, historical and economic setting of Greek Macedonia, and provide an overview of musical events in diverse localities. The 161 black and white photographs by Dick Blau include parades, parties, weddings and wrestling matches; portraits of the musicians and their families; studies of domestic life in the Romani neighborhood; reproductions from Romani family albums and other historic images. Steven Feld's soundscape CD features the voices and instruments of people whose stories are told in the book. Familiar sounds of markets, church, neighborhood and countryside set the context for exuberant performances at home and at parties, cafes and nightclubs.
CONTRIBUTORS: Angeliki Vellow Keil, Charles Keil, Steven Feld, Ian Hancock.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Foreword – Ian Hancock
Preface
The Most Important Instruments in the World
Layered Identities and Improvised Traditions: Roma in the Byzantine-Ottoman-Greek Continuum
The Roma Jumaya
Mahala Album
The Life of Mitsos Hindzos
In Their Own Words, Translated
Rides of Inclusion
Afterword – Dick Blau
Glossary
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Soundscapes of New Year's Week in Greek Macedonia: CD Recording and Notes by Steven Feld, with Comments by Charles and Angeliki Vellou Keil
The authors have worked together on a variety of projects, including Polka Happiness (1992), co-authored by Dick Blau and the Keils. Dick Blau is Professor of Film at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. http://www.dickblau.com/ Charles Keil is author of Urban Blues (1966) and Tiv Song (1979), and co-author (with Steven Feld) of Music Grooves (1994). Angeliki Vellou Keil is the compiler/editor of the Autobiography of Marcos Vamvakaris (1973). Steven Feld is Professor of Music and Anthropology at Columbia University. His sound recordings include Voices of the Rainforest (1991) and Bosavi: Rainforest Music from Papua New Guinea (2001). Papua New Guinea (2001).] His newest recording, Bells & WinterFestivals of Greek Macedonia (Smithsonian Folkways Recordings), is a perfect accompaniment to Bright Balkan Morning, and is available at http://www.folkways.si.edu/catalog/50401.htm. Ian Hancock is Professor of Linguistics, Asian Studies and English, and Director of the Romani Archives and Documentation Center, at the University of Texas at Austin. He is also Romani representative member of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council.
""Feld's sensitively recorded CD makes an already extraordinary book truly unique.""
~—Dieter Christensen, Director of the Center for Ethnomusicology, Columbia University
""In rapport with the layered text by the Keils — Dick Blau's amazing photographs give the book a sense of presence, the intimacy of people viewed up close and distant, always lovingly, with respect and with awe. There's an inviting pulse here, an energy and inwardness that take human shape; rapt bodies register and make palpable an unheard music. Blau's camera dances with its subjects and makes them real.""
~Alan Trachtenberg, author of Reading American Photographs
"Feld's sensitively recorded CD makes an already extraordinary book truly unique."
~—Dieter Christensen, Director of the Center for Ethnomusicology, Columbia University