Ali Güçlü Şimşek, Barlas Tan Özemek ve Mehmet Alican İpek’ten oluşan Lalalar; 2019’un Şubat ayında yayımladıkları “İsyanlar” teklisiyle yerli psikedelik sahneye hızlı bir giriş yaptı. 70’lerin arabesk ruhunu fütüristik bir yaklaşımla bugüne taşıyan grup; sound’unda sinematik retro basları, elektronik beat’leri, özgün vokalleri ve güçlü kirli gitarları, Anadolu ezgilerinin nostaljik ögeleriyle buluşturuyor. 2018’den bu yana “Hata Benim Göbek Adım”, “Yalnızca Ölü Balıklar Akıntıyı Takip Eder”, “Hiç Mutlu Olmam Daha İyi” ve “Ninja Partisi” gibi birçok teklisini dinleyicisiyle paylaşan Lalalar, canlı performanslarıyla da dans pistinin iddialı isimleri arasına girdi.
Mayıs 2022’de Bi Cinnete Bakar isimli ilk albümlerini yayımlayan grup, özgün eserleriyle hem Türkiye’de hem de dünya sahnesinde adından söz ettirmeye devam ediyor.
KAYNAŞ CLUB
Stap op zaterdag 3 februari binnen in de grenzeloze wereld van Kaynaş Club! Kaynaş, uitgesproken als ‘kay-naash’, is het Turkse woord voor “samenkomen” of “vermengen”. Dit eendaagse festival biedt het ideale podium voor muzikale samensmelting. Melkweg en EBB Music brengen oude muziek en hedendaagse klanken naadloos bij elkaar. Geliefde folklore en traditionele muziek komen tot leven in intrigerende vertolkingen van vandaag. Muzikaal weerklinkt dat in schitterende psych folk, hypnotiserende saz-melodieën en elektronische beats. En als de nacht valt, gaat de Kaynaş Club door als de Kaynaş NightClub. Laat je verrassen en inspireren door een diverse line-up van artiesten en stijlen.De eerste namen op de line-up zijn: Derya Yıldırım & Grup Şimşek, Lalalar en Burak Dolutas.
Fresh psychedelics from Istanbul!
Lalalar simply offers you a future-nostalgia through some retro-cinematic bass lines, electro-dirty beats, rebroken vocals, self-flirting guitars and kindly digged out samples from the legacies of Anatolia.
Enjoy the debut single “İsyanlar” which can be arguably translated as “Rebellions”.
Un psychédélisme frais venu d’Istanbul ! Lalalar vous offre simplement une nostalgie du futur à travers des lignes de basse rétro-cinématiques, des rythmes électro sales, des voix rebrochées, des guitares qui flirtent avec elles-mêmes et des samples gentiment déterrés de l’héritage de l’Anatolie. Savourez le premier single « İsyanlar » que l’on pourrait traduire par « Rébellions ».
Istanbul’s Lalalar remind you of your favorite 80’s cult show theme, and simultaneously sound like a delightful dumpster dive of spaghetti western-psychedelics, Anatolian funk, sampling and Fresh psychedelia from Istanbul! With their retro-cinematic bass lines, dirty electronic beats, rebroken vocals, flirting guitars and attentively dug samples from the legacies of Anatolia, Lalalar evoke a future nostalgia.
Founded by three well-known musicians from the Turkish music scene, respected both for their solo and collective work, Lalalar is no doubt one of the must-hear European discoveries of the moment. The title of their scorching debut single ‘Isyanlar’ translates to rebellions, and that’s more or less the gist of how this bunch operates on stage.
C’est souvent dans la racine des noms que l’on comprend la nature des choses, et Lalalar ne fait pas exception. Ali, principal auteur-compositeur du projet explique : « Lala est le sage, le professeur des sultans dans l’histoire ottomane. Et en même temps, en argot, celui qui ne sait pas de quoi il parle ». Mis au pluriel par le suffixe « lar », vous obtenez Lalalar, soit « les sages » prononcé dans un ricanement punk.
Pour les auditeurs dont la connaissance de la musique turque se limite au rock anatolien des années 70, Lalalar peut surprendre. Bien qu’Ali suggère que ces classiques psychédéliques coulent « dans les veines » du trio, Lalalar est bien plus qu’un simple groupe rétro. Au contraire, il tisse une trame subtile faîte de samples issus de l’intemporelle musique turque et anatolienne, de musique électronique et de rock.
Lalalar sera de retour avec un nouvel album le 8 septembre sur Les Disques Bongo Joe ! Après avoir agité les scènes européennes avec leur premier LP en 2022, le puissant groupe turc reviendra avec En Kötü Iyi Olur, un album à leur image : énervé, indépendant, politique et terriblement efficace. Ancré dans la poésie et les sonorités anatoliennes, mais tourné vers un rock clubiste et sans compromis, Lalalar n’a rien lâché et est de nouveau prêt à tout chambouler.
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Una dintre cele mai interesante apariții pe scena underground din Istanbul, trupa revine la București și va concerta vineri, 22 septembrie, în cadrul celei de-a 7-a ediții DokStation Music Documentary Film Festival.
Puternic influențați de rock-ul psihedelic anatolian al anilor ’70, dar și de muzica optzecistă și dark-wave-ul omniprezent în underground-ul din Istanbul, Lalalar cântă împreună din 2018.
După apariții de succes în festivaluri europene (Le Guess Who, Trans Musicales), trio-ul a lansat anul trecut albumul de debut, Bi Cinnete Bakar, un mix inedit de energie punk, muzică electronică și instrumente tradiționale.
Hailing from Istanbul, Lalalar serves up a unique blend of fresh psychedelic sounds that transport listeners to a future-nostalgic realm.
Their music is characterised by retro-cinematic bass lines, electro-dirty beats, rebroken vocals, self-flirting guitars, and carefully curated samples from the legacies of Anatolia. The band seamlessly fuses electronic, psychedelic, Anatolian funk, and rock genres to create a sound that is truly their own.
Sounds from the cutting-edge of the 21st century Istanbul:The powerhouse underground psych trio Lalalar
The brainchild of three of Turkey’s most active and innovative alternative artists – Lalalar ride a wave of fierce energy and acclaim generated by their show-stopping festival performances – they now unleash their hotly-anticipated debut album, Bi Cinnete Bakar.
The album is a thrilling mix of punk energy, dark electronics, Turkish instrumentation and samples.
Principle songwriter, Ali Güçlü Şimşek, explains: “Lala is the wise man, the teacher of sultans in Ottoman history. And at the same time, in slang, the one who doesn’t know what he is talking about.”
Bongo Joe present brand new sounds from the cutting-edge of the 21st century Istanbul underground by powerhouse Turkish trio Lalalar. Riding a wave of fierce energy and acclaim generated by their show-stopping festival performances at Le Guess Who and Trans Musicales, they now unleash their hotly-anticipated debut album, Bi Cinnete Bakar. The brainchild of three of Turkey’s most active and innovative alternative artists – Ali Güçlü Şimşek, Barlas Tan Özemek and Kaan Düzarat – the album is a thrilling mix of punk energy, dark electronics and Turkish instrumentation and samples.
You can learn a lot from the names bands give themselves – and Lalalar is no exception. Principle songwriter, Ali Güçlü Şimşek, explains: “Lala is the wise man, the teacher of sultans in Ottoman history. And at the same time, in slang, the one who doesn’t know what he is talking
about.” Make it plural by adding ‘lar,’ and you’ve got a moniker that might translate as “the wise guys,” delivered with a punkish sneer. That’s the kind of streetwise, confrontational attitude that crackles through Lalalar’s first, uncompromising full-length offering.
For listeners whose knowledge of Turkish music extends only as far as 70s Anatolian rock, Lalalar might come as a surprise. Though Şimşek suggests that those psychedelic classics are “in the veins” of all three members, Lalalar are much more than just another retro outfit. Instead, they weave subtle samples of timeless Turkish folk music into their electronic stews. Listen to how “Abla Deme Lazim Olur” begins with a flash of Arabesque strings before hunkering into a lumbering industrial-funk groove. Or the way a plaintive whine of Middle Eastern strings starts “Abla Deme Lazim Olur,” quickly giving way to a sultry theme with tense, spaghetti- western guitar.
In fact, the sounds of the 80s are a much more important point of reference for Lalalar – and for an underground Istanbul scene that for Şimşek says is currently fixated on “dark wave and dance.” You can hear it in tracks like “Isyanlar,” which revs up a turbo-charged electro-funk with echoes of the Night Rider theme, powered by hypnotic bass, a killer guitar hook, hand- claps and Şimşek’s somnolent, serious vocals. If pressed, Lalalar will admit to being influenced by the likes of Secret Chiefs 3, Rage Against The Machine, Neşet Ertaş, Pantera and Portishead. But, on tracks like “Sol Şeritte,” you can also hear traces of the gothic glamour David Sylvian brought to New Wave pioneers, Japan. “It’s deep waters, sometimes dangerous ones,” Şimşek explains. “It’s mostly fragile. There’s always something extra human even with all the robotic stuff we bang.” Turkish-speakers will also sense a certain intensity in Şimşek’s lyrics, which he describes as “sarcastic, dark humoured, political and heavily metaphorical.”
But for all their brooding mystery, Lalalar are anything but a bunch of shoe-gazing introverts. Over the last few years, they’ve forged a formidable reputation for their wildly ecstatic live performances. There as comfortable playing high-profile festival gigs – like the barnstormers they delivered at Le Guess Who in 2019 and Trans Musicales in 2021 – as they are rocking a DIY show in an Istanbul car park. This actually happened at the beginning of 2022, when they were chosen to kickstart a series of events organised by Kültür AŞ, an organisation with links to the social-democratic political party that currently stands as the main opposition to Turkey’s right-wing government. Shows like this have helped to position Lalalar at the vanguard of Istanbul’s extremely vibrant and volatile music scene where, according to Şimşek, “you can
easily find new bands popping up every day.” Just as the UK’s 70s punk scene was fuelled by youthful discontent with Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government, Turkish youth living under President Erdoğan’s rule are hungry for new sounds: “From underground amusement to posh clubs, there is always a crowd if you are doing something special as a musician,” says Şimşek.
All three members of Lalalar have been active on this scene for years but, although they’ve been friends since way back, they didn’t start playing together till Spring 2018. It was a long overdue meeting of minds, with a deep foundation of mutual respect. Şimşek says of his band mates: “To me Barlas is not only a guitar hero but also a magician when it comes music production and Kaan is a truly exceptional eye with his enormous musical knowledge.” In fact, Şimşek and guitarist Barlas Tan Özemek first worked together in 2014 on the debut album of another doyen of the current Turkish scene, singer Gaye Su Akyol – “one of the great things happening in Istanbul,” according to Şimşek. He’s been a member of her band every since and has worked on all three of her albums to date.
But now it’s Lalalar’s time to shine. They’ve been building a buzz for the last few years, with a total of seven scorching singles released by Bongo Joe since their debut, Isyanlar, in 2019 – and now, at last, they’re ready to unleash their first full-length album. Following on from Bongo Joe’s recent triumphs releasing albums by Altin Gün and Derya Yildirim, the label is thrilled to present Bi Cinnete Bakar, a gripping bulletin from the heart of the contemporary Turkish underground. Fans of Lalalar’s discography so far won’t be disappointed. The album collates all the tracks included on their singles, including B-sides, with almost all of them transformed into extended, remixed versions that allow Lalalar to stretch out and develop their urgent yet darkly transporting sound
At its heart, the album Bi Cinnete Bakar is a rebel cry. The title translates as “all it takes is a frenzy” an expression coined by Simşek as the positive affirmation we all need in these sometimes troubled times: “It’s a jump-starter. It’s something like ‘You can do it!’ Let’s say you are depressed, at the end of the world, at the bottom of the sea –all it takes is a frenzy! Come on!”