Kolibri (band)

Kolibri

Kolibri on stage the Place Club in Saint Petersburg. 10 October 2010
Background information
Origin RussiaSaint Petersburg
Genres experimental rock
avant-pop
baroque pop
Years active 1988–present
Labels FeeLee Records
Real Records
Gala Records
Triary Records
Associated acts Sous
Website http://www.kolibri.spb.ru/
Members Yelena Yudanova
Irina Sharovatova
Inna Volkova
Past members Natasha Pivovarova
Olga Feshchenko
Oleg Emirov
Andrey Gradovich

Kolibri is a Soviet and Russian experimental pop/rock group formed in 1988 in Saint-Petersburg playing an eclectic brand of baroque pop blended with elements of post-punk, cabaret, chanson and dominated by vocal harmony. In their heyday Kolibri, according to rock historian Andrey Burlaka, combined ironic high posturing with touchingly humane attitude, writing and performing songs that were described variously as exquisite, depressive, extravagant, romantic, naive, sophisticated and decadent.[1] The band released six studio albums which were received both in Europe and their native Russia but never had any commercial success.[2][3]

Natasha Pivovarova, Kolibri's founding member, left in 1998 to form her own band Sous (The Sauce). She died in a car crash in Crimea, Ukraine, in September 2007.[4]

Band history

Kolibri were formed in 1988, originally as a side project for Natalya Pivova′rova (born 17 July 1963 in Novgorod),[5] then a member of Sergey Kuryokhin's Populyarnaya Mekhanika. She invited to join in six other girls, who were associated with the Leningrad Rock Club in one way or another but haven’t had any stage experience, and suggested they'd form a kind of musical theater and perform cover versions in a cabaret/avant-garde/post-rock fashion. On 8 March 1988 the septet premiered their Vacation of Love set (its title referring to the Japanese film) at the Leningrad Rock Club. According to critic Andrey Burlaka the concert caused furore and the girls became the overnight sensation of the city's cultural scene.[1] By the time of their next gig, though, Kolibri were five: Pivovarova, Yelena Yudanova, Irina Sharovatova, Olga Feshchenko, and Inna Volkova. Soon the band members started writing their own material.[3]

Debut

In November 1989, Kolibri went into Aquarium's portable studio to record their Американская жена (American Wife) demo and next month started working on their debut album in the Titanic Studio with producer Alexandr Titov (ex-Aquarium). Among those taking part in the recording were Oleg Sakmarov (flute, oboe), Piotr Akimov (cello), Alexey Ratzen (drums) and two Televizor's guitarists, Alexandr Beliaev and Maxim Kuznetzov. In 1990 the debut album Манера поведения (Manie′ra Povede′niya, Manner of Conduct) was released, first unofficially, then a year later on FeeLee Records in Russia. Two years later it was released in the USA.[3]

The band went on tour using the instrumental studio backing track and asserting (according to Allmusic) "their nonconformity with theatrical stage antics and costuming, in their case identical black ballet outfits and colored gloves."[3]

The 'classic' years

1991 saw Kolibri performing at the Rock Club's 10th Anniversary concert and at the Interdelo Festival in Novosibirsk, alongside N.O.M., Orkestr A and The Shamen among others. They took part in Nantes' Leningrad Days (Lеs Allumees fest) and later played in Germany, Finland and Sweden. In 1992 Videofilm company made a musical movie Колибри в Париже и Дома (Kolibri in Paris and at Home). Demonstrated occasionally in the Petersburg theaters throughout 1990s, it has never been released on video. By this time Olga Feshchenko has left the group and went on to live in Paris.[1]

Kolibri's second album Маленькие трагедии (Ma′lenkie Trage′dii, Little Tragedies) was recorded in 1992, session musician and arranger Yuri Sobolev and guitarist Alesandr Gnatyuk taking part. A song from the album, Zholtiy List Ose′nni (Yellow Leaf of Autumn), written and sung by Elena Udanova, became the Russian radio hit.[3]

On 8 March 1993, the group celebrated their fifth anniversary by playing in the Vyacheslav Polunin's show. In 1994 Kolbri recorded Найди десять отличий (Find Ten Differences); the album, produced by Andrei Muratov of DDT fame and released by Triary Records, is regarded as their best. This time they've got instrumental support from bassist Vyacheslav Koshelev, ex-Auktyon drummer Igor Cheridnik, various members of Prepinaki (the latter's frontman Alex Lushin was Natasha Pivovarova's husband at the time) and Aleksandr Belyaev of Nautilus Pompilius. [6]

The experimental Бес Сахара (Bes Sahara, a pun which could mean both 'Without Sugar' or 'Sugar Demon', its working title having been - 'Princesses Don't Poo'), recorded with Tequilajazzz was released on Gala Records. The members of Tequilajazzz joined the girls on stage to become for a while Kolibri's backing band.[1]

In 1998 Kolibri starred in Aleksandr Bashirov's film Zheleznaya Pyata Oligarchy (The Iron Heel of Oligarchy).[3][7] In May of that year the band joined the line-up of Sergey Kuriokhin's 2nd annual S.K.I.F. Festival organized in New York by David Gross, the good friend of the latter.[1]

Pivovarova's departure

In December 1998 Natasha Pivovarova left the band to pursue a solo career. She went on to work as a producer for Molochny Shake (another all-girl group which some critics labeled "the teenage Kolibri") and sang duets with Alexandr Lushin and his band. In January 2000 she formed a new group (or "the association" as they preferred to call themselves) named Соус (Sous, The Sauce).[3]

In less than a year Kolibri re-emerged with the two new members, Oleg Emirov (keyboards and arrangements; ex-Golye) and Andrey Gradovich (guitar). After a year of touring Europe the reformed Kolibri made their first Saint Petersburg appearance; their 24 December 2000 concert in Teatr Estrady garnered fine reviews.[1]

The album, Любовь и её конечности (Ljubov I jeio′ Kone′chnosti, Love and its Limbs) recorded in the Signal Studios with producer Sergey Rusanov (ex-Ulitzy, Televizor) was shelved to be released a year later by Real Records, almost simultaneously with their next work, Troi, a collaboration with the Volkovtrio members, Vladimir Volkov and Svyatoslav Kurashov.[1]

In the course of the next two years Kolibri played several festivals (including S.K.I.F.) and appeared in studio compilations (like the two Aquarium members tribute — first Dyusha Romanov's, then Boris Grebenshchikov). The band's 15th anniversary concerts in Moscow and Petersburg saw Natasha Pivovarova joining her ex-colleagues on stage. By this time Emirov has left and Kolibri joined forces with Soundscript 33, an instrumental trio led by saxophonist and composer Dmitry Fyodorov.[1]

Natasha Pivovarova, Kolibri's founding member, died in a car crash in Crimea, Ukraine, in September 2007.

In 2009 Yudanova, Volkova and Sharovatova along with Soundscript 33 recorded Железные звезды (Zheleznye zvyozdy, Iron Stars), which later made its way into Vzglyad newspaper's list of 12 best World albums of that year.[8] In 2013 Апокрифы (Apocrypha), the collection of rarities, was released online.[6]

Discography

Studio albums

References

External links

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, October 22, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.