GAYE SU AKYOL Hologram Imparatorlugu LP Vinyl NEW 2016
TRACKLISTING
Hologram
Akıl Olmayınca
Kendimin Efendisiyim Ben
Fantastiktir Bahtı Yarimin
Kendimden Kaçmaktan
Dünya Kaleska
Eski Tüfek
Uzat Saçını İstanbul
Nargile
Anlasana Sana Aşığım
Mona Lisa
Berduş
Istanbul has a deep, layered history. From its beginnings as a fishing village to one of the pillars of the Roman world. The final stop on the Silk Road. The centre of the Ottoman Empire as the Turks spread their huge net across the Middle East. Across the centuries the city drew in cultures and blended them. Growing up there, singer-songwriter Gaye Su Akyol breathed all that in every day, along with her familys ancient roots in Anatolia. Those rich traditions combine to form part of the sound shes developed on her album Hologram Imparatorlugu (Hologram Empire), where sultry Turkish melodies twine around spiky, twanging guitars and insistent rhythms. Its a cliché, but the city is a bridge that combines cultures, and thats very true in music, especially the Greek influence, Akyol explains. When I was young, we visited Anatolia every year. I had the chance to observe and realise the different perspectives and practices of cultures. That made me feel closer to the diversity of Anatolian civilisation. But that, and the old music on Turkish Radio Television that she internalized, were only parts of the mix that helped shape her sound. She was constantly seeking out the new and the different, something to set off sparks in her emotions. When I heard Nirvanas Nevermind for the first time, my mind blew up. I discovered other Seattle bands, then people like Nick Cave, Joy Division, Sonic Youth, and Einstürzende Neubaten. A bit later I heard Jefferson Airplanes White Rabbit. The dark, mellow mood of the music, the use of the instruments and the vocal technique of Grace Slick greatly inspired me and led me into psychedelia and then surf bands. What they all did seemed to fit with older Turkish singers I loved like Selda Bagcan and Müzeyyen Senar. By then Akyol was already part of a new underground music scene that had sprung up in Istanbul. A military coup in the 1980s led to a repression of rock across the country. After a decade the governments grip was beginning to loosen, and Akyol became part of the new wave of music, exploring the mix of old Turkish music and rock that she heard in her head. Your own culture is important; your parents and grandparents give it to you, she notes. No culture is better than any other. I studied as an anthropologist; I know that. So I began finding my culture and mixing it, balancing the traditional and modern elements in my music. My art, my sound. People focus so much on the technical part, but you have to look inside to find out what you want to do. You have to say something new. I want to change the world forever. That first disc seeded the ground. The new album, Hologram Imparatorlugu, bears the full fruit of the partnership. It digs deeper, fired with a seductive, shadowy passion. The thick swirl of Oriental strings on Hologram plunges towards the heated boil of Fantastikir Bahti Yarimin. The dark lullaby of Dünya Kaleska weaves a haunted post-punk spell before building to the albums climax Berdus, where spaghetti western guitar cracks over a propulsive rhythm and a sensuous Anatolian melody. The sound is cinematic and gorgeous and Gayes luminous voice brilliantly orchestrates these shifting moods. Past, present, future. Her music, her art.