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Kultur Shock
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Throw together a pair of Bosnians, a couple of Bulgarians, three Americans, and a bassist from Japan and you've got culture shock. Or at least
Kultur Shock
, the Seattle-based band who freely mix punk and metal with Balkan brass. Leader
Gino Yevdjevich
became a professional musician in his native Sarajevo when he was 16, making a good living playing commercial music. All that changed in 1991, when the war in the former Yugoslavia began. With no money and precious little
food or electricity, the local artistic community made art for itself -- and found it well received as locals braved snipers and bombs to get out of their houses. However, he left for the U.S. in 1994 under the sponsorship of singer
Joan Baez
and ended up in Seattle starring in a play with music about the Sarajevo conflict, Behind God's Back. The band
Kultur Shock
came after the play closed, playing acoustic music in restaurants. Advised by
Krist Novoselic
(who has his own Croatian roots in the Balkans) to play louder, they began doing so -- and found themselves thrown out of the restaurants. After a brief hiatus, they returned to play Seattle clubs with guitarist
Mario Butkovich
, who'd been persuaded to move from his new home in Portland.
Brad Houser
(
New Bohemians
,
Critters Buggin'
) took the bass slot, with
Amy Denio
and
Jessica Lurie
filling out the horn section. In 1999, they recorded and self-released
Kultur Shock Live in Amerika
, which documented the outfit at the first full stage of their development. While the music they played was all traditional, the treatment of it certainly wasn't, with loud electric guitars complementing the twist-and-turn horn lines. It was,
Yevdjevich
admitted, "a party album," and though often impressive, it didn't do them full justice. Changes in personnel ensued.
Houser
left, to be replaced with
Masa Kobayashi
from Tokyo, and a second guitarist, Bulgarian
Val Kiossovski
. With that lineup, they began to make their first studio record, along the way signing with Kool Arrow, the label run by
Faith No More
's
Billy Gould
, and continuing to play local gigs as well as touring up and down the West Coast. The album,
FUCC the I.N.S.
, appeared in late 2001, followed by
Kultura-Diktatura
in 2004 and
We Came to Take Your Jobs Away
in 2006. ~ Chris Nickson, All Music Guide
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Albums (3)
We Came to Take Your Jobs Away
(10 songs)
Kultura-Diktatura
(9 songs)
FUCC the I.N.S.
(9 songs)
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© 2009 All Music Guide, inc. All rights reserved.