Balkan brass music can never get better than Guča
Issue 59-60, August-September 2011
by Bozhidara Georgieva; photography by Anthony Georgieff
"Tra-ta-ta-ta! Tra-ta-tata!"
The trumpet solo
sweeps over the river
valley shrouded in morning
mist, bounces off the nearby
mountain slopes, and rebounds
over the sleeping town. The
sound wakes up some of the
people in the houses and tents.
They start to stir. "What's
the time, mate?" "It's seven
o'clock; too early." People
pull the blankets over their
heads, returning to sleep. For
some minutes, the early-rising
trumpeter proceeds with his
morning concert, then tucks
away his instrument and goes
God knows where.
This is how the mornings start in Guča, near Čačak, in those glorious days in August when the 3,000 or so inhabitants of this Serbian village, plus several thousand participants and spectators gather for Sabor Trubača, or the Trumpet Festival.
The Guča Festival was born in 1961 as a modest competition between four village brass bands. For a decade it was a local affair, but eventually grew to become an event on a Serbian national scale.
Today the Guča Festival lasts a week. It has been dubbed Serbia's SuperBrand, and foreign media refer to it promisingly as "cacophony," "Serbian Woodstock" and the "wildest music festival in the world." Well, it's all true.
The music that for a week floats above the streets of Guča is of the style that, in the 1990s, became popular in the West owing to Goran Bregović and Emir Kusturica. It saw the light during the First Serbian Uprising against the Ottomans in 1804-1813. The young Serbian army was made up of men who had come together from around the Western Balkans. The soldiers' entire daily military regime (the wake-up hours, the calls for assembly, attack, retreat and so on) was regulated by melodies played on an unfamiliar musical instrument – the trumpet. The trumpet was used not only to transmit orders, but during the hours of rest listeners gathered around every military trumpeter, asking him to play folk songs from the corner of the land they had come from. The musicians obliged.
This video was produced by www.mycentury.tv