By Joanna Booth
Otava Yo’s performance was intriguing from the beginning, starting with a background soundtrack of bird noises as the lights went down and the performers strolled casually on stage throughout the lively opening number. Their stage presence was cheerful and engaging and their folk tunes managed to be both dark and Slavic and utterly joyful at the same time. The traditional instrumentation and old Russian feel was balanced with a more contemporary sound which merged modern electric guitar solos into the folk texture beautifully.It was music which told stories and with the help of humorous anecdotal introductions in English before each song, these stories rang through especially in the lovely vocals of fiddle player Yulia Usova, whose soprano voice doubled all the male voices to great effect.
Recorded sound effects returned multiple times, including film crackling to accompany a slow waltz from a very old Russian film. These kind of performance novelties really lifted the show element of the gig. Multi-instrumentalism was a definite theme of the night and a favourite with the audience was the use of pan pipes split into three sections and divided among the performers who danced whilst they played, grins on their faces and the ear flaps of their hats flapping.
By the second half they had a good portion of the audience on their feet dancing at the back of the hall and by the last song of their set list the dancers had moved to the front by the stage and the concert felt more like a festival set. This, they told us later, was first time this has happened to them in the UK and there was a feeling of such mutual delight at this that the band decided to extend their concert beyond its planned end because, as they said, the night was “only just beginning.” Judging from their popularity at this gig, it seems the same can be said of their international careers.
Otava Yo on stage. Photo by Merlyn Driver |
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