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Reviews:
Bleiburg | Pieces Of A Broken Dream
From Rose
Selvagggia: (By Nikita)
Stefan Rukavina, musicista croato, attivo
con un 7" e un doppio LP usciti tra il 1999 e il 2003, qui debutta
su supporto digitale con un doppio CD. Il sound ben amalgama sia brani
industrial ambient sia military folk, che vedono la collaborazione di
molti autori del genere: Cawatana, The Soil Bleed Black, Vidna Obmana
e molti altri, per un totale di 15 progetti che "aiutano" Bleiburg
a "condire" il proprio sound. E ne esce un interessante lavoro
dove, nonostante i diversi collaboratori, il tutto risulta omogeneo come
fossero un'unica band. Un concept album di rilievo, che ben riunisce diverse
"menti" dell'ambient e del folk. |
From Heathen
Harvest: (By Isis)
Better late than never, Bleiburg’s
‘Pieces of a Broken Dream’ is a recommended review here at
Heathen Harvest. Bleiburg is not a new comer and not unknown, especially
amongst the readers of this ‘digest’, yet the project created
by S. Rukavina, A. Scharz and E. Schroeder seem to be one of the forgotten
bands at the time of listing dark folk and industrial compositions. A
great mistake, by the way, for after more than twelve years creating music,
Bleiburg can boast over the creation fo several excellent records and
songs in many labels (Old Europa Café, Skull Line, Dark Transmisión
& Cold Spring Records). Throughout their career, they have collaborated
with many interesting projects and ‘Pieces of a Broken Dream’
comes as a compilation of most of these songs. A two disco record, which
unites, on one hand all the folk oriented songs and on the other the stronger
apocalyptic industrial sound of Bleiburg.
With the help of Hungarian project Cawatana, Bleiburg create an
oriental flavored introduction, rich in details and edges, with flowing
reciting, samplers, guitar notes and an apocalyptic ritual touch to finish.
It is followed by ‘The Death Rattle’, a collaboration with
the American band The Soil Bleeds Black. Naturally is enjoys a contemporary
take on medieval sounds, with a complex freestyle body and an almost dreamy
psychedelic sound. Their work with Gregorio Bardini comes next, under
the name of ‘Nuova Europa’. A landscape filled with frequencies
and sequences, where an Italian sampler that speaks about Croatia marches
in. Naturally, it speaks about history and pain, and would make indirect
reference to the Bleiburg massacre from which the German band takes its
name. Highly experimental during the first minutes, it then slips into
a more ethnic oriented universe, with a varied instrumentation and dense
ritual feeling. ‘Raspadanje’ makes up to the experimentation
with a sweet guitar line to open, against which the reciting voice clashes,
creating a duality in the song. The result sounds almost as a prayer or
as a chant. Obscure Resistance help Bleiburg create the excellent ‘Teufelsdivision’,
a classic example of dark folk: martial bases, German reciting / singing
lyrics, an overpowering acoustic guitar mark. Easy, effective, authoritative
and compelling.
Cellar of Rats take the emotion into a much flatter, evil
dwelling. Each time there is a glimpse of melody, or a lighter sound,
it is crushed by the weight of abyss the sound of ‘The days of storm’
manages to create. It ends in a gloriously epic piece, that, of course,
ends shaded by the limp percussion. The German Telepherique unites with
Bleiburg in the most visual of the compositions, ‘Nagna Parbat '34’.
Layers over layers of sounds, loops, oscillations and words create a delightful
oppresive web for dark ambient lovers. Amir Baghiri, from Iran, builds
the next collaboration, introducing a clear mid-tempo percussion line
in a shadowy, storm filled panorama; while Vidna Obmana pulls the shutters
down with an hypnotic ritual and oriental sounding creation that sways
and dances, like a smoke dragon through a curtained room.
A varied, polarized record. It manages to maintain a slanting
line of similarity throughout the work, yet also sways wildly into the
influeces of each collaborator, making the release almost smell of a compilation
instead of one artists’ dream. Exquisite at times, merely interesting
at others, it definetly hold precious pieces of art to be admired. |
From Feindesland:
(By Raphael)
In der alljährlichen Veröffentlichungsflut,
die der geneigten Hörerschaft zum Kauf angeboten wird, gehen einige
herausragende Releases leider unter, weil sie vom durchschnittlichem Material
überlagert werden. Gerne wird über die Schnelllebigkeit der
Mainstreammusik und ihrer Szene geschimpft. Hat uns diese Entwicklung
nicht auch im anspruchsvollen Untergrund eingeholt? Nehmen wir, die geneigten
Hörerinnen und Hörer noch wirklich alle wichtigen und interessanten
Publikationen des angeblichen Undergrounds wahr? Oder sind Neofolk, Industrial,
Dark Ambient und die anderen Musikstile des Genres auch nur noch eine
große Abzocke der vermeintlichen "kleinen aber feinen"
Labels? Fragen über Fragen, die jede Konsumentin bzw. jeder Konsument
für sich selbst beantworten sollte.
Die neue Bleiburg Doppel CD mit dem Titel: "Pieces of
a Broken Dream" dürfte in der Fülle von Neuerscheinungen
untergegangen sein, zumindest konnte ich in der einschlägigen Presse
keine ausführlichen Besprechungen dazu finden. Dieses Release enthält
nicht nur neue Tondokumente von Bleiburg, sondern auch die gesammelten
Gemeinschaftsarbeiten, die seit dem Bestehen der Band mit folgenden Akteuren
Cawatana, The Soil Bleeds Black, Gregorio Bardini, Thorn Agram, Obscure
Resistance, Harvest Rain, Lonsai Maikov, Larrnakh, Project Goth, Aube,
Nocturne, Cellar Of Rats, Telepherique, Amir Baghiri und Vidna Obmana
eingespielt wurden und zum überwiegenden Teil auch auf anderen Publikationen
zu hören sind. Das Album war schon seit längerer Zeit angekündigt
und kann über Cold Spring Records oder bei den einschlägigen
Mailordern erworben werden.
Bleiburg ist das Projekt von Stefan Rukavina, der kroatischer
Abstammung sein dürfte, ansonsten würden die inhaltlichen wie
musikalischen Bezüge auf Kroatien keinen Zusammenhang ergeben. Die
Betitelung seines künstlerischen Schaffens "Bleiburg" hat
eine historische Bedeutung für kroatische Staatsangehörige.
Am 15. Mai 1945 ermordeten jugoslawische Partisanen eine große Anzahl
von Ustascha Soldaten, Mitglieder von kroatischen Heimwehren, deren Angehörige,
Frauen, Kinder und unschuldige Personen, die keine kroatischen Kollaborateure
waren in der Nähe der Kärntner Stadt Bleiburg in Österreich.
Inhaltlich könnte die anspruchsvolle Konsumentin bzw.
der anspruchsvolle Konsument dieses Werk wie ein Geschichtsbuch betrachten,
wo jedes Lied für eine historische Begebenheit steht. Gewisse Tracks
definieren sich selbst durch ihre Namensgebung, andere erschließen
sich der Hörerschaft erst beim Lauschen der Klänge. Wer Tonkunst
mit hohem inhaltlichem Anspruch sucht, findet in Bleiburg, das passende
Mittel um seinen Geist zu stimulieren.
Musikalisch ist Bleiburg die perfekte Kreuzung aus militaristischen
und orientalischen Klängen. Aus dem geschichtlichem Aspekt heraus,
vereinigt Stefan Rukavina zwei der größten Punkte der kroatischen
Geschichtsschreibung miteinander. Der kriegerische bzw. militärische
Einschlag in der Musik ergibt sich bzw. steht für den ewig stattfinden
Kampf auf dem Balkan unter den ethnischen Gruppierungen. Zuletzt erlebte
Kroatien seit dem 25.Juni 1991, dem Tag wo die Unabhängigkeit erklärt
wurde, einen schrecklichen Krieg mit der Jugoslawischen Volksarmee. Die
orientalische Komponente hingegen rührt aus der Zeit von 1102 bis
1526, als die Osmanen die Länder Serbien, Bosnien, die Herzegowina,
Bulgarien, Griechenland und Bulgarien eroberten, Kroatien galt als Pufferzone
für den Westen und ist nur teilweise von den Türken eingenommen
worden. Sie hinterließen Spuren ihrer Kultur, die sich bis heute
noch in Gepflogenheiten der vorher aufgezählten Länder widerspiegeln,
auch natürlich in ihrer Musik. Bleiburg auf ein Genre reduzieren
zu wollen scheint unmöglich, eine Symbiose aus Neofolk, Darkfolk,
Dark Ambient, Industrial und alten (oder auf alt getrimmte) Sprach- wie
Tonsamples erwartet die Zuhörerinnen und Zuhörer. Abwechslung
bzw. Vielfalt wird auf dieser Doppel CD großgeschrieben, kein musikalischer
Einheitsbrei, der Langeweile aufkommen lässt, sondern rhythmische
bis atmosphärische Klänge dominieren das Szenarium von weit
über 2 Stunden Spielzeit.
Euch, unsere geneigte Leserschaft, ohne zwei ausführliche
Beschreibungen von Stücken bei diesem Opus zu entlassen, wäre
in höchstem Masse unverantwortlich und würde dem hier Geschaffenen
in keinster Art und Weise gerecht. Aus dieser sehr homogenen und komplexen
Arbeit von Bleiburg eine Auswahl für Euch zu treffen grenzt an Wahnsinn,
meine Entscheidung ist auf die Tracks 'Bleiburg' (feat. Larrnakh) und
'Ammon' gefallen.
Angetrieben von dunklen atmosphärischen bis rituellen
Klängen schleicht sich 'Bleiburg' (feat. Larrnakh) in die Gehörgänge,
die vorher beschrieben Situation verstärkt sich im Laufe mit industriellen
Schlägen bzw. Beats, bis eine typische Neofolkgitarre umgeben von
elektronischer Hintergrundmalerei das Regiment übernimmt. Die sehr
dunkle und befremdliche Gesang, eine Leistung von Sörös Gergö
von Larrnakh aus Ungarn, der mit seiner sehr martialisch angehauchten
Stimme (Er könnte auch Prediger in einer orthodoxen Kirche werden.)
einen Höhepunkt des Albums "Pieces of a Broken Dream" setzt.
Herzlich Willkommen im Orient, genau in diese Richtung geht
die Reise mit dem Tondokument 'Ammon'. Eine Klangcollage kombiniert aus
orientalischen und dunklen Momenten, die von einer verzerrten Gesangleistung
Unterstützung erfährt.
In meinen vorherigen Zeilen stellte ich Bleiburg als Ein Mann
Projekt vor, Stefan Rukavina ist der denkende bzw. lenkende Kopf, er komponiert
bzw. inziniert die Stücke gemeinsam mit dEMOND und A. Schwarz. Ehre
wem Ehre gebührt.
Die Gestaltung des Tonträgeraufdrucks und der Cover geht
auf das Konto von Abby Helasdottir ein aus Neuseeland stammender Graphikartist
und Musiker. Eine sehr passende und zugleich stimmungsvolle Collage, aus
einer Landkarte, die den Landstrich von Bleiburg zeigt, gepaart kroatischen
Symbolen aus verschieden Epochen. |
From Darkroom:
(By Roberto Filippozzi)
La strana creatura di Stefan Rukavina, artista
croato residente in Germania, muove i suoi primi passi nel '99 col 7"
"Chess Board", edito da quella Thaglasz che nacque inizialmente
- proprio per mano dello stesso Stefan - come fanclub dei Death In June
(pubblicando anche una fanzine ufficiale) e che poi si trasformò
in una vera e propria label, divenuta celebre grazie ad una serie di lussuose
ed ormai introvabili compilation. Nel 2003 è poi arrivato il sontuoso
doppio LP "Domobran", che ha consacrato il nome Bleiburg nel
'gotha' della cosiddetta 'brown area' grazie ad una serie di importanti
collaborazioni, che si sono rivelate il fulcro stesso del songwriting
di Stefan, il quale ha dato ad intendere di prediligere la scrittura a
più mani con altri artisti dediti a sonorità industrial
e neofolk. Mentre sarà difficile riuscire a collezionare l'opera
omnia di Bleiburg, complici i 16 dischetti (!!!) dedicati a questo interessante
progetto dalla nostrana Old Europa Cafè (per lo più edizioni
doppie, nonché una quadrupla), risulterà ben più
facile mettere le mani su questa succosa doppia raccolta di materiale
dell'artista croato, edita dalla sempre attenta Cold Spring e comprendente
24 brani per una durata complessiva che sfiora i 150 minuti. Sette sono
le canzoni firmate solamente da Bleiburg, mente i restanti 17 brani vedono
Stefan collaborare con tutta una serie di act più o meno noti quali
Cawatana, The Soil Bleeds Black, Gregorio Bardini, Thorn Agram, Obscure
Resistance, Harvest Rain, Lonsai Maikov, Larrnakh, Project Toth, Aube,
Nocturne, Cellar Of Rats, Telepherique, Amir Bagheri e Vidna Obmana. Talune
collaborazioni le avevamo già sentite tanto sulle uscite firmate
Bleiburg quanto sulle compilation targate Thaglasz: dal primo dischetto,
decisamente più orientato verso sonorità neofolk e soundscapes
dai toni magniloquenti, si segnalano in particolar modo le canzoni firmate
assieme a Cawatana (l'epica e possente "Batschka", scandita
da sezioni di fiati), The Soil Bleeds Black (una "The Death Rattle"
dai toni sacrali), Gregorio Bardini (che in "Nuova Europa" cattura
declamazioni sull'indipendenza della Croazia nel '41, tema assai caro
a Mr. Rukavina), Lonsai Maikov ("Six" è pura intensità
neofolk con un forte pathos vocale) e Thorn Agram ("U Hramu Slobode"
è ben divisa tra elettronica, sporadici ma indovinati inserti percussivi
e spoken vocals), mentre le tracce firmate dal solo Stefan - ad esclusione
dell'opprimente ed industriale "Notwende 2004" - odorano di
colonna sonora per immagini sbiadite di storia dell'Europa del secolo
scorso. Decisamente più ostico ed opprimente il secondo dischetto,
che a fianco della minimale "We Are Everywhere" e della sferzata
industriale "Muezzin Pop" propone rumorose collaborazioni con
artisti molto quotati in campo ambient e industrial, tra le quali spiccano
per durata quelle messe in atto con Aube ("Soshite Sorekara"
raggiunge quota 15 minuti...) e Cellar Of Rats ("The Days Of Storm"
supera i 16 minuti!). Potremmo asserire che la musica di Bleiburg è
più interessante quando Stefan collabora con altri artisti, il
che, valutando il suo lavoro 'a due mani', è probabilmente vero,
ma è il valore complessivo di release come questa che deve essere
premiato, e pertanto ci sentiamo di consigliare questo doppio album tanto
a chi deve ancora avvicinarsi al sound di Bleiburg quanto a chi già
ne ha apprezzato le gesta, fermo restando che siamo di fronte ad una materia
sonora destinata ai soli cultori della 'brown area'. |
From Compulsion:
(By Tony Dickie
Pieces of a Broken Dream is a comprehensive
archiving of the Croatian project Bleiburg's collaborations with artists
from Europe, America and Japan. It's an exhaustive collection of 17 collaborative
tracks and 7 previously unreleased solo tracks from Bleiburg. Bleiburg
is the solo project of Stefan Rukavina, former publisher of the Thaglasz
journal and related vinyl releases, and it's clear he has made considerable
use of his extensive contact list. I must confess this is my first real
exposure to Bleiburg (aside from some compilation tracks) but it would
be fair to say that they operate within post-industrial/neo-folk circles.
The solo tracks are largely slices of dark electronics, brooding soundscapes
with symphonic passages and spartan rhythms and beats. It's worth noting,
however, that it takes until track 5, and the first of two collaborations
with Obscure Resistance that they deploy the acoustic strum synonymous
with neo-folk, though earlier tracks adopt the martial vocals so favoured
by the genre. As a result of the collaborations the entire Bleiburg sound
is taken into new musical avenues absorbing fresh elements. With Cawatana
there's an air of eastern mystery to the ritual industrial sounds. US
contemporary medieavalists Soil Bleeds Black surround the martial vocals
with dirge like strings, flute, a fluttering piano score and death rattle
percussion. The martial folk of Harvest Rain is awash with ethnic flute
and hand percussion, while even Lonsai Makov's chanson is drawn into the
realms of traditional folk. The other artists featured include Gregorio
Bardini, Thorn Agram, Larrnakh, Project Toth.
Bleiburg may take their name form a European conflict but
they seem to be setting their martial themes in a modern context, namely
that of the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. Throughout Pieces of
a Broken Dream Bleiburg display an interest in eastern sounds where tablas
and hand percussion replace the martial beats atypical of neo-folk, ethnic
flutes feature heavily. Even their own tracks on the second disc are evidence
of their interest in recent history and contemporary world affairs. 'Oil
In Their Eyes' features forlorn piano and the distressed cries of (Muslim?)
women, while 'Muezzin Pop' harnesses Eastern samples to explosive beats.
And while the first disc revolved around neo-folk, the second disc is
far more electronic, featuring a number of ambient and noise tracks. The
real highlights are the longest. Aube offer ringing and buzzing tones,
ricocheted metal, against a solid Bleiburg beat. Cellar of Rats provide
a tension ridden soundscape of blurred electronics, cinematic strings
and battlesounds. The other artists include Nocturne, Telepherique, Amir
Baghiri and Vidna Obmana. The latter's collaborative effort is a fitting
piece of tranquil ethno-ambience.
The collaborative ventures on a Pieces of a Broken Dream illustrate
that Bleiburg have found a way out of the musical cul-de-sac that is neo-folk.
How much of that is down to the collaborators we don't know - no writing
credits or any recording information for that matter is provided - but
the diversity of musical approach while remaining loosely anchored to
neo-folk /dark ambient genres should attract the attention of even the
most jaded neo-folker. For the most part, it's an engaging collection
and as an entry to the world of Bleiburg its unsurpassed, and an impressive
first CD release by anyone's standard. |
From Side-Line:
(By DP)
This dcd features a collection of tracks
that the Croatian project of Bleiburg has realized over the years with
different other bands like Amir Baghiri, Aube, Project Toth, The Soil
Bleeds Black, Vidna Obmana etc… Next we also get 7 previously unreleased
tracks of Bleiburg. About the new songs I heard 2 great pieces on the
2nd disc entitled “We are everywhere” and “Muezzin pop”.
We can’t no longer speak about neo-folk, but more about a mix of
soundscapes and ambient-industrial music. The “Muezzin pop”-piece
is a real great track. I became deeply impressed by the elaboration of
the composition and especially about the wide diversity of influences.
There’s a bombastic, repetitive percussion mixed with excellent
vocal parts. The effect on top of the vocals creates a magical Eastern
touch. Among the other pieces and collaborations I especially like the
mystical approach in the work with Larrnakh and the amazing ambient collage
recovered with Croatian spoken vocals together with Thorn Agram. Some
other attention grabbers are the noise approach resulting from the collaboration
with Aube and the more symphonic approach resulting from the common efforts
with Cellar Of Rats. In a pure neo-folk tradition the lovers of the genre
will be pleased by a track in collaboration with Gregorio Bardini and
another one with Harvest Rain. This is a fascinating release delivering
a wide spectrum of influences! |
From Filth
Forge: (By Simon V)
The most addicted and spendthrift vinyl
collectors will surely remember of the name Bleiburg and his creator Stefan
Rukavina, who a few years ago was also running German label Thaglasz and
releasing some of the most incredible limited-editions ever seen, with
the 10-LPs boxset "Security Of Ignorance" remaining as the most
representative example. Apart from a few again extremely limited vinyls
(a 7" single and a double LP) and various apparitions on the aforementioned
releases, Bleiburg had never released anything else, much less on digital
format. Cold Spring presents now this double CD featuring 24 unreleased
tracks, rich of collaborations and apparitions by a lot of neofolk and
industrial artists appeared on the collectable Thaglasz samplers.
Since its last manifestation, Bleiburg has changed from a
one-man project into a band of four elements, considerably widening its
musical possibilities. The listening of the first CD will be a surprise
for those who remember the not very convincing noise tracks featured on
"Za Dom Spremni" or "Notre Domicile Est L'Europe":
the sound has turned into an epic, dramatic and powerful mixture of martial
industrial, neofolk, and dark ambient, thanks also to the collaboration
of the likes of Cawatana, The Soil Bleeds Black, Harvest Rain and Lonsai
Maikov. "Teufeldivision", for example, stands out as a powerful
and perfect neofolk anthem, with nothing to envy to any of that scene's
big names, while self-titled "Bleiburg", with its echoed and
cavernous thuds and ghostly keyboards, could have come out of Raison d'être's
mind.
CD 2 presents a totally different face of Bleiburg's music,
closer to the early experiments but, of course, a lot more refined and
effective, although this second half is less homogeneous and convincing
than the first. The interesting part is that the band is here working
with very topical issues, as shown by titles like "Oil In Their Eyes",
"Muezzin Pop" or "The Days Of The Storm", and by the
fusion of noisy ambient with Muslim chants and sampled voices from the
Middle East, in the vein of what recently listened from Ure Thrall or,
in the past, by the pioneer Muslimgauze. This time, the list of guest
stars features, among the others, Aube, Nocturne, Telepherique and Vidna
Obmana.
Undoubtedly, "Pieces Of A Broken Dream" will appeal
to the whole martial industrial / neofolk audience, as well as to the
more noisy and experimental maniacs, since both genres are well represented
on the two CDs, and there is enough variety among the tracks to make the
listening of both hardly ever boring. The only legitimate doubt is how
much of this reach menu is to be credited to Bleiburg themselves and not
rather to their numerous guests. |
From Judas
Kiss: (By Lee Powell)
Over the past few years the name Bleiburg
has slowly started to crop up with increasing frequency within the European
neo-folk/post-industrial genres but very little seemed to be known about
this Croatian artist. So to combat this, the UK’s leading light
in post-industrial music Cold Spring have released a wonderfully illuminating
double CD that pulls in a vast array of collaborations by Bleiburg as
well showcasing seven previously unreleased solo tracks. Mirroring its
title ‘Pieces of a Broken Dream’ this 2 CD 24 track album
pulls together fragments of sounds, influences, collaborations and ideas
that have shaped this elusive and highly interesting project and demonstrates
the highly diverse yet constantly compelling range of genres and styles
Bleiburg touch upon.
Being the work of just one man, Stefan Rukavina, Bleiburg
is able to be steered in which ever direction he sees fit which helps
explain the far reaching spectrum of ideas and sounds touched upon here.
Yet it’s obvious to see that Stefan’s heart and soul is held
very firmly by the passionate and moving essence of the European post-industrial
genre, with his music keeping one hand held against its dark beating heart
whilst the other explores musical styles and ties that share similar grounding
but are fundamentally different. Dark ambient soundscapes couple up with
neo folk and medieval sensibilities, delicate ambient like textures collide
with deep reverberating walls of noise whilst subtle samples melt into
commanding vocals. Like a wonderfully put together compilation of industrial
and neo-folk music ‘Pieces of a Broken Dream’ offers up an
impressive array of musical styles that sit somewhere within the guidelines
of these two genres. With CD one taking a softer more neo-folk/medieval
approach and CD two opting for the harsher more heroic and forceful experimental,
noise and darker electronic stylings.
Occasionally it’s hard to remember that this release
is all of the work of one man as the styles of musical delivery change
almost constantly from track to track, however this is due in part to
the collaborations that Bleiburg has participated in and the range of
artist he has worked with. Yet in retrospect when you look at this collection
as a whole you can’t help but be impressed by the constantly high
level of output Bleiburg has presented whether it be alone or as one part
of collaboration. Joining Bleiburg here amongst others are Cawatana, The
Soil Bleeds Black, Harvest rain, Aube, Nocturne and Cellar of Rats (the
new project that has risen from the ashes of Kerovnian) with each artist
or group adding their own style and sound to their collaborative track.
As introductory releases go you can’t help but be impressed
with what Bleiburg has presented with ‘Pieces of a Broken Dream’.
It also poses the question – what will come next – more collaborations
or a full length so release? I guess we’ll just have to wait and
see. However judging from the calibre of this double CD I’m sure
we won’t have to wait too ling before a flurry or labels fight to
get the next instalment of Bleiburg’s work out.
|
From Orkus:
(By Thomas Sonder)
Neben diversen eigenen Veröffentlichungen
haben sich die kroatischen Ursprungs-Folker Bleiburg anscheinend auf Kollaborationen
spezialisiert, waren es in den letzten Jahren doch so viele, dass sich
damit nun gar eine Doppel-CD füllen lässt. Pieces Of A Broken
Dream hält Werke bereit, die Bleiburg in Zusammenarbeit mit Industrial-
und Folk-Künstlern wie Cawalana, The Soil Bleeds Black, Thorn Agram,
Obscure Resistance, Harvest Rain, Project Toth, Aube, Nocturne, Telepherique,
Amir Baghiri oder auch vidnaObmana ausgetüftelt und aufgenommen haben,
wodurch ein abwechslungsreiches, musikalisch buntes, aber auch dichtes
Manifest der "obskuren" Szene-Abarten entstanden ist, das sich
von Military über Ambient und Klassik bis hin zu reinen Folk-Kompositionen
erstreckt und mehr als nur den Charakter einer "Sammlung" hat,
sondern das Tiefschürfende, Dunkelernste hinter Bleiburg vorzüglich
offenbart. |
From Elegy
Iberica: (by Cephas Solis)
Artista Croata, Bleiburg, com mais de dez
anos de existência e apesar de não ser tão conhecido
como o deveria, é contudo um projecto com uma valiosa caixa de
música criativa do experimental e ambiental sibilino. Bleiburg,
embora de origem croata, é um projecto alemão, editando
desde o início da sua carreira inúmeras obras, entre elas
colaborações com inumeráveis personagens artísticas
e projectos de renome. E é neste específico trabalho que
Bleiburg apresenta ou recompila todas essas colaborações
num belíssimo CD duplo editado desta vez pela Cold Spring. Entre
essas colaborações temos nomes como Cawatana, The Soil Bleeds
Black, Vidna Obmana, Aube entre muitos outros dentro da mesma cena musical.
É de lembrar que Bleiburg já passou por reconhecidas editoras
como Old Europa Café, Skull Line and Dark Transmission. Por isso
mesmo se tornou, ao longo de mais de uma década, um pivot do industrial
ambiental e do neofolk. Concluindo, este trabalho requereu todo um esforço
de equilíbrio e sintonia dedicando o estilo darkfolk no primeiro
CD e sons mais apocalípticos e ambientais no segundo. Descubram-no. |
From Vital
Weekly: (by NMP)
Despite the impressive catalogue of Bleiburg,
I must admit that I had never heard of this project before UK-label Cold
Spring released this album titled "Pieces of a broken dream".
Fortunately though, a number of more or less sound artists knew of this
very interesting project called Bleiburg. Bleiburg, German-based project
headed by Stefan Rukavina, creates music that floats in spheres of dark
ambience and ritual industrial. This latest release of Bleiburg represents
a very interesting mixture of materials from collaborations between Bleiburg
and other interesting sound artists plus unreleased materials of Bleiburg.
The joint venture tracks ranges from neo-folk (collaborations with Soil
Bleeds Black, Lonsai Maikov, Larrnakh etc.) to harsh moments of noise
(collaborations with Telepherique, Nocturne, Project Toth, Aube etc.).
Elements of ethno-electronics also appear through out the album, peaking
with the closing track "Traumwelt", a collaboration between
Bleiburg and Vidna Obmana that results in a tense work of ethno-oriented
ambient in the best manner of Vidna Obmana. Another great moment on this
150 minutes musical journey comes on second disc with the 14 minutes track
"Soshite Sorekara", an intense track that develops from claustrophobic
isolationist ambient to abrasive yet beautifully controlled noise by Japanese
noise legend Aube. "Pieces of a broken dream" can both be considered
as an impressive compilation of contemporary electronics and as a first-lesson
into the sonic world of Bleiburg. No matter which way you choose, this
is an excellent listening experience. Highly recommended. |
From Blow
Up: (by Paolo Bertoni)
Il progetto Bleiburg, nome che il titolare
Stefan Rukavina ha scelto ad omaggio dei caduti croati, militari e civili,
sommariamente giustiziati nel '45 nell'omonima localitá della Carinzia,
pur essendo attivo da più d'un decennio si è quasi del tutto
limitato ai CD-R - la sua mastodontica discografia in tale formato, otto
CD doppi ed uno quadruplo, è integralmente disponibile in esclusiva
presso la nostra Old Europa Cafe - ed era opportuno che una minima parte
di quanto realizzato venisse raccolta in un lavoro 'ufficiale' di maggior
diffusione. Negli anni Bleiburg, attraverso i contatti instaurati tramite
la fanzine/label Thaglasz, sempre da Rukavina curata, ha intrecciato una
serie infinita di collaborazioni tanto che ben diciassette dei brani di
"Pieces Of A Broken Dream" vedono la partecipazione di altre
entità, quindici tra sigle o solisti . Inevitabilmente il programma
scorre, gradevolmente, vario con picchi di fattura ottima nelle marziali
Batsch, con Cawatana, imbevuta di potenti, antichi, echi popolari,
The Death Rattle, con The Soil Bleeds Black, con tratteggi medioevali,
nell'esoterica Cemetary Of Heroes, con Harvest Rain, in episodi
folk noir, Teufelsdivision, con Obscure Resistance, Six,
con Lonsai Maikov, e Bleiburg, con Larrnakh, o industrial, Soshite
Sorekara, con Aube, e Iza Kulisa, con Nocturne, o ancora
ambientali, The Days Of Storm, con Cellar Of Rats, e Traumwelt
con Vidna Obmana. I restanti setti pezzi accreditati al solo Bleiburg,
raramente altrettanto efficaci, non sono meno eterogenei tra la chiara
matrice post-industrial di Notwende 2004 e quella neoclassical
di Glory Or Nothing. |
From Obliveon:
(by MK)
Unter allen Veröffentlichungen Bleiburgs
der letzten Wochen ist „Pieces Of Broken Dreams“ wohl diejenige,
die Fans von Neofolk und Industrial dann wohl am meisten ansprechen wird.
So finden sich nicht nur die zahllosen Kollaborationen Stefan Rukavinas
mit Bands aus diesen Genres hier wieder, unter anderem mit Cawatana, The
Soil Bleeds Black, Gregorio Bardini,, Thorn Agram, Larrnakh, Obscure Resistance,
Harvest Rain oder Lonsai Maikov, auch die Bleiburg-Stücke ohne Beteiligung
anderer Musiker sind hier für die genannten Genres am ausgeprägtesten
und haben wenig mit den häufig extrem experimenteller und elektronischen
Klängen aus der Klangschmiede Rukavinas, die sich auf der zweiten
der beiden CDs dieses Albums finden, wenig gemein. Natürlich unterscheiden
sich die Kompositionen dabei sehr stark voneinander, sind sie doch durch
die jeweilige Zusammenarbeit geprägt, wo jede der beteiligten Parteien
ihren musikalischen Einfluss geltend gemacht hat. So fällt es natürlich
schwer hier von einem musikalisch einheitlichen Album zu sprechen, nicht
aber davon, dass die einzelnen Stücke wirklich erstklassig sind und
trotz der stilistischen Bandbreite über eine Klasse verfügen,
die wirklich bemerkenswert ist. Alleine aber die Tatsache, dass dieses
Album existiert und nicht, wie der weit überwiegende Teil der Bleiburg-Veröffentlichungen
in Kleinstauflagen erscheint, sollte genügen, um diese Doppel CD
vorbehaltlos zu empfehlen und Bleiburg über die eingeschworene Gemeinschaft
von Connaisseuren einer breiteren Öffentlichkeit bekannt zu machen.
Verdient hätten Bleiburg es allemal. |
From Necroweb:
(by Deathbringer)
Dass es sich bei Bleiburgs neuestem Album
"Pieces Of A Broken Dream" nicht um ein normales Studioalbum
handelt, bemerkt man spätestens beim Blick auf die Trackliste. Denn
neben sieben bisher unveröffentlichten Songs von Bleiburg tummeln
sich hier die Kollaborationen Bleiburgs mit anderen Künstlern der
unterschiedlichsten Richtungen. Und so verwundert es eben auch nicht,
daß auf dieser Doppel-CD eine musikalisch recht abwechslungsreiche
Mischung vorzufinden ist, ob Folk, Dark Ambient, Electro/Industrial oder
Noise, hier ist von allem etwas dabei. Und selbst wenn man dem ein oder
anderen Track eher abneigend gegenübersteht, so wird der ambitionierte
Musikliebhaber trotzdem mehr als genug interessante Songs auf "Pieces
Of A Broken Dream" finden. Manchmal ist es eben auch gut, wenn sich
die unterschiedlichsten Strömungen einer Szene zu einem tête-à-tête
treffen, um interessante und neue Wege zu beschreiten. In diesem Fall
bedeutet dies auch, daß man als Hörer zwar etwas gefordert
wird, dafür wird man aber auch mit einem kurzweiligen Doppel-Album
belohnt, welches man immer wieder mal anhören kann.
Wer die Vielfalt liebt, sollte sich "Pieces Of A Broken
Dream" nicht entgehen lassen, denn das ein oder andere Schmankerl
gibt es hier allemal zu entdecken, abgerundet durch viele qualitativ gute
Songs. |
From Zero Tolerance:
(by Simon Collins)
The latest Cold Spring release is this retrospective
collection from Croatian artist Bleiburg. Alongside 17 collaborative works
featuring musicians from Europe, Japan and America, there are also seven
previously unreleased solo tracks. Dividing this collection into two discs
makes sense in terms of the divesity of music represented. Disc one is
devoted to neo-folk, including the heady central European exoticism of
`Batschka` with Hungarians Cawatana, the medieval morbidibty of The Soil
Bleeds Black`s `The Death Rattle`, Lonsai Maikov`s `Serge Gainsbourgh-like
chanson` `Six`, and the stirring Teutonic militarism of `Teufelsdivision`
and `Grab` with Obscure Resistance. Other artists include Harvest Rain,
Larrnakh, Thorm Agram, Project Toth, and Gregorio Bardini. Disc two contains
more ambient and experimental work, and its highlights are the two longest
pieces, `Soshite Sorekara` featuring the Japanese sound manipulator Aube
(aka Akifumi Nakajima), a dense and absorbing journey into inner space,
and `The Days Of Storm` with Lovecraftian ambient project, Cellar Of Rats,
which begins with 11 minutes of predatory minamilist drones before swelling
into an elegiac, cinematic orchestral theme and finally expiring in a
fusillade of artillery fire. |
From Lunar
Hypnosis: (by Ginnie Moon)
These two discs represent (mostly) collaborations
between "Blieburg" (actually one man named Stefan Rukavina,
who runs the German label Thaglasz as well as the Death In June fan club
by the same name,) and several stellar acts such as The Soil Bleeds Black,
Aube, Amir Baghiri and Vidna Obmana. There are seven solo tracks on the
discs as well.
Both the concept album "Pieces of a Broken Dream"
and the name of Stefan's project refer to a town in Austria where horrific
massacres took place during World War II. The massacres for the most part
were perpetrated by Communist Yugoslavian forces, (with the support of
the Allied forces,) against Croatians. Recent investigations suggest some
190,000 Croat men, women, and children were slaughtered many in particularly
gruesome ways, including the stoning of women and the beheading of unarmed
soldiers.
The music collected here is as heartbreakingly beautiful as
it is extraordinarily disturbing. The songs blend the terrors of yesterday
with the ironic horrors that continue even now; the sounds are traditional
and contemporary, somber and surreal. The gorgeous landscapes of Croatia
are sonically illuminated and punctuated with the nightmare of political
fanaticism. I am hard-pressed to think of a more dignified and substantial
remembrance of such an overlooked event in history as this two disc set;
the souls and events of Tenzo Woods and Bleiburg are well summoned by
the sounds. (10/10) |
From Absolute
Zero Media: (by Clint Listing)
What we have his is a double CD of well thought
out Neo Folk/Martial Music with a guest staring cast of the whos who of
the experimental/ Industrial musical world. Amir Baghiri, Aube, Cawatana,
Cellar Of Rats (ex-Kerovnian), Harvest Rain, Larrnakh, Lonsai Maikov,
Nocturne, Obscure Resistance, Project Toth, The Soil Bleeds Black, Telepherique,
Thorn Agram and Vidna Obmana. There are elements of ethno and medivial
sounds here too . Bleiburg reminds me a mix of Moon Lay hidden beneath
the clouds mixed with The Soil Bleeds Black and H.E.R.R. The vocals are
sung in the spoken Neo folk style with many other backing vocals either
male or female sung to add layers to it all. It is a very wonderful release
and I hear so many delicate layers mixed with the bombastic percussion.
Bleiburg is a project to be on the look out for and through out both Cds
there really isn't a poor moment. I will say though the 2nd CD has a must
more Martial Industrial vibe and a bit darker then 1st CD. Cold Spring
is the perfect home for this release. |
From Alternativ
Musik: (by Marius Meyer)
Viele Gruppen des Neofolk- und Industrialsektors
haben über die Jahre mit den Kroaten von Bleiburg zusammengearbeitet.
Zum ersten Mal erscheinen die gesammelten Kollaborationen nun auf einer
Doppel-CD, ergänzt um sieben eigene Stücke der Gruppe. Durch
die Vielzahl der verschiedenen beteiligten Künstler ist also schon
einmal ein breites Spektrum musikalischer Vielfalt garantiert, dessen
Rahmen vom klassischen Neofolk bis zu verstörendem Industrial reicht.
Mit insgesamt zweieinhalb Stunden Musik hat man die Spielzeit der beiden
CDs dabei gut ausgereizt, so dass dem Hörer viel geboten werden kann.
Dem Freunde neofolkloristischer Klänge begegnet mit Cawatana
gleich zu Anfang ein bekannter Name im Stück Balschka. Allerdings
steuern sie auf dieser Zusammenstellung weniger Folk bei als vielmehr
eine militaristisch anmutende Klangcollage mit experimentellem Einschlag.
Beschwörende wirkende Flöten mit treibenden Trommeln und kroatischer
Sprache treffen auf deutschsprachige Samples, die eine finstere Kulisse
hervorrufen. Das Bedrohliche und der militaristische Einschlag begegnen
auch in den folkdominierteren Titeln. Ein Beispiel hierfür ist der
Titel Teufelsdivision - eine Zusammenarbeit mit der Gruppe Obscure Resistance.
Eingeleitet von Kriegsgeräuschen wird das Stück schnell von
einer treibend gespielten Wandergitarre und stark betonenden Trommeln
vorangetrieben und es entsteht eine Art Lagerfeuerfolk, bei dem man sich
auch durch den Text bedingt dem Eindruck eines Heerlagers nicht erwehren
kann.
Von einem anderen Schlag sind die industriallastigeren Stücke.
So zum Beispiel der Titel Nuova Europa mit Gregorio Bardini. Rein musikalisch
gesehen besteht der Titel aus Frequenzen, die am ehesten mit dem Terminus
„Rauschen“ belegt werden können, dessen Intensität
sich abwechselt. Der Gesang ist dabei spoken word-betont und in kroatischer
Sprache gehalten. Gegen Ende des Stückes wird das „Rauschen“
um Trommeln und Flöten ergänzt, bleibt dabei aber experimentell.
Einige Stücke kombinieren die musikalischen Richtungen.
Der nach der Gruppe genannte Titel Bleiburg ist hier ein Paradebeispiel.
Ein erneut verstörendes Rauschen eröffnet das Stück, ab
etwa der Hälfte begegnet plötzlich eine harmonisch gespielte
Akustik-Gitarre, während das verstörende Element des Stückes
durch den bewusst übersteuerten Gesang beibehalten wird.
Schwachpunkte auf Pieces of a Broken Dream sind allerdings
ungünstigerweise ausgerechnet die Stücke, bei denen Bleiburg
alleine gearbeitet haben. Die Stücke spielen sich alle im Spannungsfeld
von Ambient und Industrial ab. Zwar ist Potential bei Bleiburg durchaus
vorhanden, dennoch wirken die Stücke leider etwas unausgegoren. Der
intendierte experimentelle oder wahlweise verstörende Charakter der
Stücke ist zwar zu bemerken, aber im Endeffekt siegt hier doch eher
die Langatmigkeit. Schade eigentlich.
So bleibt die Zusammenstellung am Ende ein ambivalentes Vergnügen:
Auf zwei CDs wird zu einem fairen Preis eine Menge Musik geboten, dessen
Facettenreichtum niemand abstreiten kann. Zudem besteht die Möglichkeit,
viele Projekte kennen zu lernen, dessen Name zuvor eher unter „kenn
ich vom Hörensagen“ lief. Die Dauer von zweieinhalb Stunden
ist dabei allerdings gleichermaßen Vorzug wie Kritikpunkt: Es ist
wirklich sehr anstrengend, wenn man den Versuch unternimmt, sie am Stück
zu hören. Streicht man aber die Stücke zusammen, die einem gefallen,
bleibt nach wie vor mehr Spielzeit über als manch andere Einzel-CD
zum gleichen Preis bietet. Aus diesem Grunde sollte man Bleiburg ihre
verdiente Chance geben und darf gespannt sein, wie es mit ihrer musikalischen
Entwicklung weitergehen wird. |
From Twilight
Zone: (by Michele Viali)
Per molti Bleiburg è uno dei tanti
nomi nuovi della scena. In realtà Stefan Rukavina –autore
di questo progetto- è all’attivo da una decina di anni, prima
con la fondazione della (finora) unica fanzine ufficiale dei Death In
June, quindi con le celebri e ormai costosissime compilations targate
Thaglasz, un marchio leggendario che ha promosso molti autori della brown
area nei formati e nelle confezioni più lussuose, e su cui compariva
già la musica di Bleiburg. Dopo un eccezionale 7” uscito
nel 1999 e il doppio LP Domobran del 2003, merce ormai destinata ai collezionisti
più incalliti, Rukavina decide finalmente di darsi ad un pubblico
più largo ed abbandonare le impervie edizioni limitate con questo
doppio CD.
La discografia di questo autore è composta per larga
parte da brani costruiti a quattro mani, firmati Bleiburg, ma profondamente
segnati dalla partecipazione di altri personaggi della scena. E su queste
basi è strutturato anche POABD, che propone la bellezza di 24 tracce,
di cui ben 17 realizzate in collaborazione con altri autori. Così
ogni brano ha un sapore diverso e particolare, dando vita ad una sorta
di compilation in cui scorgiamo il filo conduttore del musicista croato,
i suoi temi, tipici della scena neofolk e legati all’indipendenza
della Croazia, tanto cara anche a Douglas Pearce.
Tra i nomi più noti svettano Cawatana, nella marziale
Batschka, i Soil Bleeds Black che danno un tocco medievale in The Death
Rattle, i Lonsai Maikov, nel folkeggiante brano Six. Tra belle note malinconiche
affiora anche la presenza di Thorn Agram. Aube (presente nella magnetica
Soshite Sorekara), Nocturne e Vidna Obmana, sono invece i nomi maggiori
che caratterizzano il secondo dischetto, segnato da sonorità più
spigolose e rumoristiche. Tra le nuove leve spicca Obscure Resistance
che colora di classico neofolk la traccia Grab. Meno interessanti i momenti
firmati dal solo Bleiburg che, pur non annoiando, mancano del tocco vitale
che caratterizza il resto del lavoro.
Stefan Rukavina è una personalità d’eccezione
rimasta troppo a lungo nel buio, che si propone ancora sia come compositore
che come mecenate, dando spazio alle sue idee e alla vena creativa di
altri, sfoggiando sempre quel motto di battaglia preso a prestito dalla
sua terra, e che è diventato ormai il suo marchio di fabbrica:
ZA DOM SPREMNI! |
From Mentenebre:
(by Pedro Ortega)
La matanza de Bleiburg tuvo lugar en los
últimos compases de la 2ª Guerra Mundial. Croacia, que estaba en
la órbita del régimen nazi, fue tomada por las tropas comunistas
del futuro régimen yugoslavo comandado por el mariscal Tito. Así,
las fuerzas yugoslavas con la colaboración del ejército
británico llevaron a cabo una terrible matanza en Bleiburg arrasando
con todo y aniquilando tanto a los militares como a la población
civil. Tanto esta matanza como la devastación de Alemania una vez
rendida por parte de las tropas aliadas, son algunos de los hechos que
los ganadores de la guerra silenciaron.
Si bien estos antecedentes acerca del nombre de la banda que
nos ocupa podrían hacer que pensásemos en un aroma fascistoide,
el grupo expresa en su página web su carácter apolítico,
haciendo resaltar que esta reivindicación es solamente desde un
punto de vista de amor a su país y su triste historia, lo que corroboramos
con la portada del CD con el escudo croata a toda plana.
Bleiburg es un proyecto que lleva activo desde 1994 aunque
sus producciones han sido a base de CDRs fundamentalmente. Actualmente
Old Europa Café ha producido una caja de la banda, "Where
the Truth Lies" que contiene nada menos que ocho dobles CDRs y un
cuadruple CDR, el total de los trabajos previos de Bleiburg. Comentando
también la futura discografía mencionaré que está
a punto de ver la luz un doble CD con DVD, "Shadows will Survive",
que contará con la participación de Douglas P. de Death
in June en alguno de los temas.
Y ahora ya entramos en materia musical. Este trabajo es de
nuevo un doble CD, como lo son todas sus producciones, y viene a ser una
especie de recopilación de sus trabajos previos, hecho que deduzco
por las muy diversas colaboraciones que están presentes y que ya
han aparecido en sus trabajos antriores. Estilísticamente hablando
nos encontramos con una predominancia de Dark Folk y Martial en la primera
parte del primer CD y luego una marcha progresiva hacia el Dark Ambient
y el Ambient Industrial en el final del primer CD y en todo el segundo.
Yo personalmente me quedo con la primera de estas partes pues son géneros
que me atraen más que los segundos.
Así, tenemos en la primera parte colaboraciones tan
insignes como The Soil Bleeds Black, Cawatana, Harvest Rain, Lonsai Maikov
y otros menos conocidos como Gregorio Bardini, Thorn Agram, Larrnakh y
Obscure Resistance. Dentro de estas diversas colaboraciones voy a destacar
claramente las dos participaciones de Obscure Resistance, 'Teufelsdivision'
y 'Grab', y la de Lonsai Maikov en el tema 'Six'. Esta terna de canciones
son unos verdaderos temazos, constituyendo sin duda lo mejor del CD, son
muy darkfolkeros, con pinceladas marciales a veces y en el caso de Lonsai
Maikov más tirando al neofolk tradicional. Otro tema que no quiero
dejar de mencionar el el de colaboración con The Soil Bleeds Black,
como no con su aureola medievalista, aunque el tema es más bien
de corte neofolk.
Y ahora entramos en la sección más Dark Ambient
en la que tenemos también otra serie de colaboradores, los más
conocidos serían Aube, Telepheric y Vidna Obmana, y otros que desconozco
como Nocturne, Cellar of Rats, Thorn Agram, Project Thot y Amir Baghiri.
En esta parte aparecen también Bleiburg desprovistos de colaboradores,
mostrando que quizá su línea de trabajo sea más bien
la ambiental. Aunque hay un tema de Bleiburg un tanto diferente al de
la globalidad y es 'Oil in their Eyes', una pieza instrumental a piano
con algunos samplers de fondo. Uno de los destacables y que sigue una
línea Ambient Industrial es también de Bleiburg en solitario:
'Muecín Pop', con una marcada línea rítmica industrial
y unos samplers de un almuecín llamando a la oración. No
es el "Arispejal Astisaro" de Esplendor Geométrico, pero
se le da un aire. También interesante es la colaboración
con Telepherique, más puramente ambiental, aunque tiene samplers
de diversas máquinas funcionando a la vez, diríamos que
es un ambient industrial suave. Por último mencionar también
la colaboración con Vidna Obmana, puro Ambient, sin matices industriales
por ninguna parte, creando una atmósfera relajada que invita a
la meditación y que sirve de perfecto epílogo a este doble
CD.
A la hora de juzgar este trabajo yo diría que es bastante
ecléctico por el hecho de querer mostrar de una sola vez lo que
ha sido la trayectoria de Bleiburg y sus muy diversas y a veces divergentes
colaboraciones. Yo me quedo con la primera parte y con esos verdaderos
temazos que mencionaba anteriormente y que hacen que este CD merezca la
pena. Respecto a la segunda parte yo creo que en esos géneros Bleiburg
puede mejorar bastante. Otra cosa que quiero destacar es que con tanta
colaboración apenas podemos distinguir cual es la esencia de Bleiburg,
cuál es verdaderamente su múscia, pues lo que aquí
nos encontramos es una especie de amalgama que no llega del todo a tener
coherencia. Por los cuatro temas sobresalientes de corte Dark Folk voy
a recomendarlo a los incondicionales de este género. |
From Monas:
(By Roy)
I knew this band only by name and from a few mp3
snippets that I heard. I think that they are part of the 'new generation'
artists in the scene, but apparently they have been around long enough
to have a double cd compilation with almost only tracks for which they
coorperated with other bands from the scene. Bleiburg itself makes neofolk
and industrial (ambient) and so do the bands on this cd, from The Soil
Bleeds Black to Thorn-Agram and from Harvest Rain to Vidna Obmana. The
first CD is relatively tranquil with ambient and folky pieces, the second
cd is a bit harder with more industrial and noisy tracks, but still ambient.
Most tracks are actually pretty good and especially with of the variety
of cooperators and styles, the cds are still structered well enough to
form some kind of unity. A nice release of a band that I didn't know well
enough. |
From Gothtronic:
(By TekNoir)
The massacre of Bleiburg is the name for the murder
on a large scale on Croatian soldiers and civilians in may 1945 in the
Austrian (Carinthian) village Bleiburg. Alexander Solzhenitsyn categorized
this as the last secret of the Second World War.
To avoid falling into the hands of the partisan army of Tito
at the end of the Second World War, in may 1945, a large group of opposers
of the new powers fled from the Independent State of Croatia via Slovenia
to Austria. Among the refugees there were Ustase, Cetniks and Slovenian
soldiers, but also a large amount of civilians, such as Slovenians, Croatians
and Serbs. In the border-village Bleiburg they were intervened by British
soldiers, who handed them over to the partisans. A part of them were taken
to Yugoslavian prisons and concentration camps, the larger amount was
executed without any kind of trial.
This event has never been given much attention, neither has
Yugoslavia internationally been called to acknowledge responsibility,
probably because of the dissident - and strategic - position of communist
Yugoslavia as counterpart to the Soviet-Union.
The Bleiburg project by Thaglasz founder Stefan Rukavina,
that exists since 1994 but has not released that much so far but of which
on Old Europa Cafe recently a series of as much as 8 double cd’s
were and even a 4cd release were announced, again focusses it’s
attention to the events in the border area of Austria, Italy, Slovenia
and Croatia with a release that is out via Cold Spring Records that shows
a quality recording with a good and varied neofolk and martial-industrial
sound. The thematics of the album reflect a close kinship with the tradition
of the European identity and chirstianity, but also with freethinkers
and fascism. The fascination for the history of Croatia and the former
Austrian-Hongarian empire plays a major part in this.
As usual many collaborations on this double album as well
with various well known names from the neofolk, medieval, dark ambient,
noise and industrial realms. Most of those names have in any which way
a relation with the former label and Death in June fanzine Thaglasz. Think
Cawatana, The Soil Bleeds Black, Harvest Rain, Aube, Telepherique and
Vidna Obmana. Also some names and projects previously unknow to me play
a major role on this album divided over two cd’s. There are contributions
from Nocturne, Gregorio Bardini, Lonsai Maikov, Larrnakh, Obscure Resistance,
Thorn Agram, Project Toth, Amir Baghiri and Cellar of Rats. The first
cd has neofolk and martial songs although the second half of the disc
goes more towards dark ambient already, and the second CD, that also addresses
themes such as the urge for oil by the west, predominantly has a character
formed by ambient-industrial, tribal and noise. A total of 24 songs with
sometimes less strong moments, but overall of a very high quality, which
really is a great effort. |
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