Gypsy Punks

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (796 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 63:34

eMusic Review

Avatar Image
Robert Phoenix

eMusic Contributor

Robert Phoenix has been a postman, gardener, special-ed aid, bartender, psychonaut, Tarot reader, phone psychic and new age buyer for Rasputin's Records. H...more »

04.22.11
A frantic, fun manifesto summed up by its title.
Label: Side One Dummy

Joe Strummer is not dead. Just one listen of Gypsy Punks and it's clear that Joltin'Joe's departed spirit has slipped into singer Eugene Hutz. Gogol's banging Balkan diaspora dovetails with Strummer's world music explorations — it's arguably the summation of the former Clash frontman's global-politique-a-go-go. But Gogol don't fancy themselves rock revolutionaries in the classic sense. On "Go Revolutions," Hutz tears into karaoke culture by proclaiming that he could make a "better revolution with his dick." Humor and 4/4 rhythms aside, the soul of Gogol is still firmly rooted in the gnarled, rocking Eastern European wedding music popularized byYuri Yukanov and Ivo Papasov. It's frantic and fun, a manifesto wrapped in irony and fired with a sly urgency, especially when Hutz breaks out into the mother-tongue of all revolutionaries, singing praises to Cuba in Spanish. Somewhere, Strummer is harmonizing with Hutz on a phantom radio from the other side.

Write a Review37 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

Who Knew?

kevharb

Who knew there was such a thing as "gypsy punk" music? I didn't until I heard Start Wearing Purple and kept wanting to hear it over and over again. This album is an anarchistic collision of eastern European folk music and punk rock, two great musical tastes that taste great together. Who knew?

user avatar

Review by BarbaricArcticE

EMUSIC-00D85870

Personally, my favorite of their albums. Probably the most "approachable" too. True artists. Great performers. Straight out entertainment value. See them live if you ever get a chance. It will be a show you will always remember.

user avatar

My ears will never be the same

pantsmonkey

So, seriously... I picked this album up, unwrapped it on the way to my car, and popped it into the changer. I damn near drove myself into a tree. Now THIS was something truly infectious. I returned to my soul-crushing cubicle with a stupid, shite-eating grin on my face, because I'm telling you... you just cannot listen to this without smiling. You can't. I also defy you to listen to this without wanting to jump around shouting and fist pumping like a crazy person. The comparison to Joe Strummer is an apt one, I think, minus some of the political relevance of The Clash. The energy and sound is a natural progression, though.

user avatar

High energy Gyspy Punk.

GLEN-BASS-PLAYER

Their lead seems to be on every punk doc movie I see. He's willing to try something new and it works.

user avatar

Dare you to stay still

pixelologist

You just don't get much higher energy than Gogol Bordello. The headlong pace swept me right up. This is fun stuff.

user avatar

knock out

RK3

frantic groovy gypsy punk makes me happy. it all makes so much sense to punkafi those intoxicatic gypsy sounds. try it you'll like it.

user avatar

You'll get a kick out of this

schwartz.ben

for more eclectic stuff check out Estradasphere if you like this kind of stuff, less punk, more black metal, more genres, more virtuosity.

user avatar

7th heaven and 7th hell

Steliade

This is an emergency calling : Get this album NOW ! Joe's Strummer analogy has already been accurately made, I will add my two cents and invoke Shane Mac Gowan's spirit (anyway, not surprinsingly, Joe Strummer and the Pogues were closely connected). Wow ! This album is both chaos and cosmos, when I listen to it, I feel like opening my window and yell in the street "Hey, people, I love you, just listen to this music, it's heaven, hell, earth, it's your lover's breast, it's your father's hands, it's a wild horse running, it's Attila inviting you to his wedding ! " Gogol Bordello, I'm your slave for ever !

user avatar

Disbielief

EMUSIC-00E301DC

I got dragged to see this band by a girl I was Dating and had heard all this "Gypsy Punk" propaghanda I have been playing and listening to punk more that half my life.. I have to say they were SO GOD AWFUL, IT MADE ME RETHINK MY WHOLE RELATIONSHIP!!!

user avatar

I'm ADDICTED!

terrilyn_thompson

I love everything about this group. I love the Music, the lyrics, everything. This band makes me want to dance, sing and be marry. Check them out they are freakin awesome!

Recommended Albums

They Say All Media Guide

These “gypsy punks,” as the band jubilantly describes itself, were once precisely that, a spectacular clash of cultures that smashed the exuberance of Ukrainian gypsy music and the pounding rhythms and exhilarating fire of Slavic folk, with the roar of punk rock. That was then, but now globalization has got them in its grip, and Gogol Bordello set about crashing through national boundaries, reconnecting the cultural links borders have severed. If a fire and fury for life fed the soul of the gypsy, the Slav, and the punk, it also lay at the heart of hard rock and heavy metal, and so into the meat grinder goes incendiary lead guitar. Flamingo’s fire lies in its emotive rhythms and dangerous atmospheres, both of which seep into the set as well. You can hear it on “60 Revolutions,” and even more magnificently on the stomping “Think Locally Fuck Globally,” whose rhythms subtly quicken into a furious flamingo fire, before sweeping into a tribal tattoo, finally flinging itself out in a gypsy swirl. “Not a Crime” careens into Arabesque, “Immigrant Punk” skanks straight into reggae, while “Underdog World Strike” heads underground, interweaving hip-hop, punk, and reggae to gypsy’s own roots. Frontman/lyricist Eugene Hütz explains how his own history drives him on the autobiographical “Undestructable,” accompanied by a cheery punky reggae backing that defies one not to sing along. And it’s not the only one for much of the set is spectacularly anthemic, from the fist-in-the-air fervor of the Oi!-esque “Not a Crime,” the fashion-fling command chorus of “Start Wearing Purple,” to the life-affirming “Undestructable.” One may even start phonetically parroting the lyrics of “Santa Marinella.” That latter song is not sung in English, and there’s foreign lyrics sprinkled about the set, but the emotional meaning is always clear. A truly universal album that encompasses America’s eternal immigrant story, urban living, and a love of life and music that translates into every language on earth. It’s the fire in not just the gypsy soul, but the soul of everyone, and Bordello ignite it into a blaze as bright as life itself. – Jo-Ann Greene

more »