Akkordeonale 2012

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Akkordeonale 2012

International Accordion Festival

Every year since 2009, Dutchman Servais Haanen has invited musicians from different countries to come and play together and to show, despite their cultural diversity, their common musical heritage; the accordion. The Akkordeonale demolishes the old cliché of the accordion being merely the instrument of traditional folkmusic. At the festival, one gets to hear the astonishing musical variety of the instrument: from traditional to contemporary, encompassing virtuosity, vivacity and highly individual styles.

This year a colourful mix of Argentine tango, Balkan gypsy, Styrian jazz and Scottish folk awaits the audience, mixed with Haanen’s musical aesthetic and enriched with violin and trombone.

As different as the instruments (chromatic piano accordion, diatonic button accordion, bandoneon) are the musicians’distinct approaches and techniques. Where one is academically trained with a highly acclaimed classical education, the other cannot read musical scores but has learned the instrument as a matter of cultural course from earliest childhood on.

These diverse approaches come together into a gripping coexistence on stage.

But the Akkordeonale doesn’t see itself as just a platform for presenting cultural characteristics of musical styles. It seeks to create something new, something entirely original and exciting. Existing musical cultures mix and merge on stage, to form new flavours and intense sensations.

Servais Haanen knows how to top the evening off with his dry sense of humour and expertise, telling anecdotes about the musicians and interesting facts about their instruments and styles. In keeping with the motto “accordion is a beautiful instrument, even if others argue the opposite!”. With this festival he strikes one more blow for this muchloved and often underestimated instrument, which promises: there’s a great deal of music within!

See

– Hear – Enjoy!

Florinel Ionita

Roma

– Balkan – Fever

Florencia Amengual

The female Soul of Tango

Johannes Steiner

Jazzy Groove in Styrian

Sandy Brechin

Scotland’s Finest

SERVAIS HAANEN

The Master of Fine Sounds from the Netherlands

Accompanied by:

Sean Reagan

Violin and Mandolin

Sigrún Kristbjörg Jónsdóttir

Trombone

Florencia Amengual

The female Soul of Tango

Initially, Argentinean Florencia Amengual studied classical and electric guitar at the

Technological Institute for Contemporary Music in Buenos Aires.

But soon she discovered tango for herself, the bandoneon and her love for music.

She studied bandoneon under Gabriel Rivano in Buenos Aires and Marcelo

Mercadante in Barcelona, where she still lives today.

Florencia Amengual composed for various music and theatre companies. With her tango trio “La Sacado”, she is very successfully touring through Europe, conveying the sound of her city Buenos Aires at milongas, festivals and concerts.

She is one of the few female bandoneon players who knows how to represent her predecessors in a fresh way without loosing sight (and sound) of the original.

Florinel Ionita

Roma

– Balkan – Fever

Bukarest based Roma Florinel Ionita stems from a family of musicians. He originates from the Romanian village Clejani, whose two clans of musicians constitute the

“Taraf de Haidouks” that brought the small village world fame.

As tradition would have it, he started to play accordion in his early childhood and at the age of fourteen already performed as a weddings’ musician.

He is accordionist of the “Mahala Rai Banda”, an ensemble that merges gypsy folk with jazz and pop – pure party!

The mahalas are the suburbian ghettos where the poorest of the poor live, mostly

Roma that are often referred to as “blacks” on the Balkan.

For the musicians among them, playing an instrument is often not necessarily driven by passion but also by misery.

The

“Mahala Rai Banda” became famous with their track “Mahalageasca” for DJ

Shantel, which became the theme song for Sasha Baron Cohen’s movie “Borat”.

Johannes Steiner

Jazzy Groove in Styrian

Austrian Johannes Steiner grew up with the Styrian accordion. As a fourteen year old boy, his quest and vision had already begun. He felt urged to squeeze every musical facet out of the diatonic instrument and any playing technique that seemed possible on it.

After his studies in music for traditional Austrian folklore and during his subsequent studies of jazz and pop music, he began to increasingly integrate the Styrian harmonica into musical styles for which it had been an uncommon instrument so far.

In his project “Die Resonanz”, influences of world music, jazz, avant-garde, balkan etc. become interwoven in an individual sound image, with a lot of space for interaction and improvisations.

Sandy Brechin

Scotland’s Finest

Sandy Brechin is one of Scotland’s most famous accordionists. He plays with the bands “Burach”, “Seelyhoo”, “The Sandy Brechin Band” and “The Sensational Jimi

Shandrix Experience”, just to name a few.

He releases new Scottish folk music on his own label (Brechin all Records) as well as historical recordings, among them “The Complete Songs” of Robert Tannahil.

He is a docent for accordion in traditional music at the National Centre for

Excellence, the only school of its kind in the country.

Sandy Brechin composes his songs in traditional style, most of them have been released in a course book for Scottish accordion.

Servais Haanen

The Master of Fine Sounds from the Netherlands

As musical contrarian, Dutchman Servais Haanen is string puller and organiser of the

Akkordeonale. Among other things, he composes and arranges the festivals’ ensemble pieces.

Servais has left his former home of classical and folk music far behind to realize his sensitive and poetic compositions on the diatonic button accordion . His music appears like a mixture of minimal music, nightclub jazz, musette and the love for the sensitive, allowing his accordion to set foot into spheres where it hasn’t yet had a place …

Thanks to his versatile work with groups like Appellation Contrôlée (avant-garde),

Quatro Ventos (fado and Portugese music), KlangWelten-Festival (world music) and his activity as a composer for various productions at music theatres and for film documentaries, Servais brings into play the most diverse musical material.

In addition to being a docent for accordion, one of his dearest activities is his manifold ensemble work with exceptional or impossible instrumentation.

Accompanying musicians

Sigrún Kristbjörg Jónsdóttir

Trombone

Young Icelander Sigrún Kristbjörg Jónsdóttir studied violin and piano at FÍH at the department for jazz and rock music. During her studies, she replaced the piano with her great love the trombone. Together with her group “The Icelandic Wonderbrass”,

Sigrún played for 18 months in Björk’s Volta world tour. She’s currently studying trombone and violin at Codarts, Hogeschool of Arts in Rotterdam.

Sean Regan

Violin and Mandolin

Sean Regan lives in Galway in Western Ireland. With his multifaceted and velvet glove style of playing the violin, he has established his reputation as one of the best violin players in the Irish music scene.

It is not only the world of traditional reels and jigs that he dwells in, he’s a gifted improvisational musician, and is in great demand for Irish Sessions, folk and rock concerts.

Sean Regan played, among others, together with Sharon Shannon, Damien

Dempsey, Andrea Corr and recently alongside Moya Brennan from Clannad.

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