Balkan ballad

Balkan ballads (also known as Balkan folk ballads)[1] is an umbrella term for several emotional, slow music styles in the Balkan region of Southeastern Europe. Balkan ballads, similar to other ballads, often deal with various themes related to love (unrequited love, love-sickness, romantic and intimate relationships) while using Balkan string instruments such as the šargija, as well as the clarinet, trumpet, accordion, fiddle, guitar and bass guitar. Balkan ballads are distinct from traditional ballads by including a fusion of pop music, folk music and sentimental ballads. Singers usually perform in their native languages.[2][3]

Ballads

Ballads are poems or songs that narrate a story in short stanzas. Traditional ballads are typically of unknown authorship and have been passed down orally generation to generation.[4] Many countries like France, Russia, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Spain, and Scotland have large ballad collections. The Balkan ballads are one such collection.

Characteristics

Typical ballads use ethnic instrumentation. In recent trends, Balkan ballads commonly implement some degree of westernized instrumentation.

History

As ballads are traditionally passed down orally, the exact dates of the origin are difficult to determine. However, the earliest recorded ballad, "Judas," Child Ballad no. 23, dates back to the early 1300's.[5]

Over time, the ballad medium spread to the Balkan Peninsula, and has since developed into the narrative and musical art forms present in Balkan culture today.

Examples from Eurovision

  • Lane moje” in 2004, and Nije ljubav stvar in 2012 performed by Željko Joksimović
  • Lejla”, performed by Hari Mata Hari (Bosnia & Herzegovina 2006)
  • Doris Dragović – “Željo moja” (Yugoslavia 1986)
  • Both of Darja Švajger’s entries for Slovenia (“Prisluhni mi” in 1995, and “For A Thousand Years” in 1999)
  • Magazin & Lidija – “Nostalgija” (Croatia 1995)
  • Maja Blagdan – “Sveta ljubav” (Croatia 1996)
  • Danijela – “Neka mi ne svane” (Croatia 1998)
  • Marija Šerifović – “Molitva” (Serbia 2007), which won the contest that year
  • Karolina Gočeva – “Mojot svet” (FYR Macedonia 2007), features a language change to English at the end
  • Marija Šestić – “Rijeka bez imena” (Bosnia & Herzegovina 2007)
  • Regina – “Bistra voda” (Bosnia & Herzegovina 2009)
  • Igor Cukrov feat. Andrea – “Lijepa Tena” (Croatia 2009)
  • Feminnem – “Lako je sve” (Croatia 2010)
  • Maja Keuc – “No One” (Slovenia 2011), a rare English-language Balkan ballad, although a Slovenian version was performed at the National Final
  • Kaliopi – “Crno i belo” (FYR Macedonia 2012), a more rock-based ballad
  • Nina Badrić – “Nebo” (Croatia 2012)
  • Eva Boto – “Verjamem” (Slovenia 2012)
  • Maya Sar – “Korake ti znam” (Bosnia & Herzegovina 2012)
  • Klapa s Mora - "Mižerja" (Croatia 2013)
  • Sergej Ćetković - "Moj svijet" (Montenegro 2014)
  • Knez - "Adio" (Montenegro 2015)
  • Dalal & Deen feat. Ana Rucner and Jala - "Ljubav je" (Bosnia & Herzegovina 2016)
  • Kaliopi - Dona" (FYR Macedonia 2016)
  • Balkanika-“Nova Deca (Serbia 2018)


References

  1. "Balkan ballad ::". Britannica Educational Publishing. p. 122. Balkan ballads are unrhymed and unstrophic.
  2. "Balkan ballad ::". Retrieved 2015-08-28.
  3. "Balkan ballad ::". BBC. Retrieved 2015-08-28.
  4. "ballad - Definition of ballad in English by Oxford Dictionaries". Oxford Dictionaries - English.
  5. https://www.britannica.com/art/ballad#ref503658
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