Scheduled for theatrical release in June (NYC, the 15th; Los Angeles
the 17th), "Gypsy Caravan: When the Road Bends" is a film that is
very much in the mold of "Buena Vista Social Club" and just as
likeable. It also evokes the 1993 "Latcho Drom" ("safe journey"),
another great film about Roma music.

It documents a six-week tour in 2001 by some of the greatest Roma
musicians in the world, who are seen performing, socializing with
each other in hotels and on the bus, and participating in village
life back home. It is directed by Jasmine Dellal, who directed
"American Gypsy: a Stranger in Everybody's Land" for PBS in 2001, and
filmed by Albert Maysles, the legendary director of "Gimme Shelter,"
a record of a Rolling Stones tour, and other works.

The tour was organized by the World Music Institute (WMI), a New
York-based nonprofit whose concerts I have reviewed in the past and
who I have contributed money to. Given New York's relentless drive
toward high-rise yuppie hell, the WMI is one of the remaining
cultural artifacts that make life livable here. Furthermore, the
culture of the Roma people is about as at odds with the profit-driven
world of real estate and banking as can be imagined. Besides their
cultural legacy of some of the world's greatest music, these unfairly
maligned peoples can teach us about how to live better lives.
Macedonian Esma Rezepova, one of the tour's starring performers, put
it this way: "The Roma have never made war or invaded another country."

full: http://louisproyect.wordpress.com/2007/05/03/gypsy-caravan/

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