Pioneer

CIM7022 2006-06-06

Track List

Pioneer (from \"Asshole\")- 5:25
Son (from \"Sky Down the Middle\") - 2:49
Three and two (from \"Mountaintop Dweller\") - 2:14
It\'s not late (from \"Bird\") - 3:39
Hunter (from \"How I Became a Traitor\") - 3:28
My Love (from \"Bird\") - 4:22
Victory Day (from \"Hangover\") - 4:04
Book (from \"Return to Sorrento\") - 4:34
New Year song (from \"How I Became a Traitor\") - 5:33
Inside the dog (from \"Teapot of wine\") - 2:50
Dwarf Longnose (from \"All Quiet in Baghdad\") - 4:54
Fa fa (live) (from \"This is Mom\") - 9:35

Musicians

Leonid Fedorov - vocals, guitar, percussion
Oleg Garkusha - show, declamation, vocals
Viktor Bondarik - bass
Dmitry Ozersky - keyboard, percussion, trumpet
Nikolay Rubanov - saxophones, bass-clarinet, jaleika
Boris Shaveinikov - drums, percussion
Pavel Litvinov - percussion
Mikhail Kolovsky - tube, trumpet
Mikhail Rappoport - sound engineer

An Auktyon concert begins like this: The Russian band vamps wildly-an agitated burst of guitar, tuba, sax-as an oafish man, Oleg Garkusha, saunters onstage. Wearing the garish suit of an old-time huckster and carrying a briefcase, he begins to dance and yelp into his microphone, which sits center stage. In the course of a show, he loosens his tie, shakes a tambourine, jumps about and recites Russian poetry. It's difficult to take one's eyes off of him-which is notable, as he is not Auktyon's true leader, but rather the group's hype man. Look closer and spot the true top dog: Leonid Fedorov, a humdrum-looking guy who performs in Cheney-esque shadows, singing lead and playing guitar while a veritable circus erupts around him.

This overt showbiz con epitomizes Auktyon, a nine-member act that formed in the late '70s or early '80s - on Stalin's former turf, history still evidently depends on who's keeping track - and enjoys a sizable cult following at home.Auktyon's musicis something of a ruse, too. The busy, horn-fueled songs may share elements with stereotypical Russian sound, but they sharply diverge into an eccentric melange of punk and jazz. Like many of their countrymen, the musicians have been making inroads in the States: After playing a frenetic set in January at the Public Theater's globalFEST, the hardened pros return a few months older and doubtlessly none the tamer.
Jay Ruttenberg - Time Out , March 2006

Reviews

These veterans of the Leningrad rock club scene known for their Dadaist lyrics and riotous stage show fuse traditional folk with frenetic punk and jazz.
The New York times - March 2006

Releases