FOREST-Sylvester – BALKAN BOYS BAND | DJchillout

Datum: Sa, 29.12.2018 um 20:00
Veranstalter: Verein Innenhofkultur | VILLA FOR FOREST (powered by Riedergarten)
Ort: VILLA FOR FOREST, Viktringer Ring 21 - gegenüber KELAG, neben Koschatmuseum, Klagenfurt

Der Verein Innenhofkultur hat seit 1997 seine Sylvesterfeier kurz vor Sylvester, denn der 31. gehört Euch.
(Karl Valentin: Wenn die stille Zeit vorbei ist, wird es auch wieder ruhiger.)
Dieses Mal die BALKAN BOYS BAND (8 Musiker), danach unsere GLOBAL SOUL-DJs
Rok Nemanič / vocal, trumpet | Andrej Štrekelj / trumpet | Matija Marion / saxophone | Tomaž Zevnik / clarinet | Emir Ibrakić / guitar | Nejc Poljanec / accordeon | Ilj Pušnik / bass guitar | Uroš Nemanič / drums
Eintritt frei - Spenden herzlichst willkommen !

It all began in 2007 when lead singer and trumpet player Rok Nemanič went to Guča – the heart of brass balkan music and energy. He was amazed and instantly determined to form a band. With sounds of balkan in mind, he gathered 8 academic musicians with similar visions. Balkan boys started their journey in 2009. They’ve developed a rather unique music style they like to call »balkan pop fusion«. It combines ethno balkan melodies with rhythms such as rumba, ska, gipsy, swing and reggae. The band released their first album From Zabledamin 2012, their next album Radio Me Gusta was released in 2015.

Balkan boys are a Slovenian band of 8 members. Their music is full of youth, positive energy and unique interpretations.

Facebook: https:// www.facebook.com/balkanboys/
Instagram: https://www.instagram..com/balkanboysband/

Eine Kooperation zwischen Littmann Kulturprojekte (powered by Riedergarten) und Verein Innenhofkultur.

Termine

am Mi, 25.06.2025 um 20:00

Noise, Silence, Action | Villa For Forest

Villa For Forest, Viktringer Ring 21, 9020 Klagenfurt In this event, the GMPU Experimental Music Workshop will perform works by Pullitzer Prize recipient, Diné musician and artist Raven Chacon; experimental music mavericks Christian Wolff and James Tenney; and founding member of the Fluxus Movement Alison Knowles. Each work explores alternative forms of musical notation including graphical scores and text-based event scores that result in sounds and actions that challenge the very definition of music and prompt innovative and unconventional performance practices. These works also encourage a new form of listening and engaging with music by probing extremal and liminal musical spaces: from the almost imperceptibly soft and sparse to the loud and dense. In some cases, the music even reaches "beyond sound" through the consideration of colonial histories and the navigation of social systems and their corresponding power dynamics.

Free admission