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Ivo Papazov

Ivo Papazov
Born
Ibryam Hapazov

1952 (age 71–72)
Kardzhali, Bulgaria
Occupationmusician

Ivo Papazov (or Papasov; Bulgarian: Иво Папазов; born 1952), nicknamed Ibryama (Ибряма), is a Bulgarian clarinetist. He leads the "Ivo Papazov Wedding Band" in performances of jazz-infused Stambolovo music, and is one of the premier creators of the genre known as "wedding band" music in Bulgaria, along with the violinist Georgi Yanev, saxophonist Yuri Yunakov, clarinetist Neshko Neshev and accordionists Ivan Milev and Peter Ralchev. Together with Emilia they are known as Mames 2001. An orchestra that had great success in the TV show Познай кой е под масата ("Guess who is under the table").

According to Garth Cartwright, he was "the first Balkan Gypsy musician to win a wide international following with his two Joe Boyd-produced albums for Hannibal Records in the early 1990s."[1] Papazov and his Wedding Band have toured the United States several times.

In 2005, Papazov won the Audience Award from the BBC's Radio3 World Music Awards.[2]

Papazov and Yuri Yunakov are briefly profiled and the recording of "Kurdzhaliiska Ruchenica" from their 2005 album Together Again is analyzed in the popular textbook, Worlds of Music, 5th Edition.[3]

Ivo Papazov is a Bulgarian Roma[4][5] and his original name is Ibrahim (Turkish name). Papazov has stated: "I am one of the few light skinned people in my family but I know I am Romani."[6] As a result of the extensive programme of forced nationalisation of ethnic minority groups during Bulgaria's socialist rule, Papazov changed his first name to Ivo (adapted from Ibo, short for Ibrahim). He speaks Turkish and comes from Kardzhali, a city close to Bulgaria’s Turkish and Greek borders. He grew up in a musical family and followed the Balkan Gypsy tradition of leaving school at a young age, in his case to focus on playing music for a living.

Selected discography

  • Ivo Papasov and His Bulgarian Wedding Band - Orpheus Ascending (Hannibal, 1989)

Contributing artist

References

  1. ^ Cartwright, Garth (August 2008). "Review: Dance of the Falcon". fRoots. Archived from the original on 2008-08-04. Retrieved 2008-08-13. Archived by WebCite at .
  2. ^ "Awards for World Music 2005: Ivo Papazov (Bulgaria)". BBC - Radio 3.
  3. ^ Cooley, Timothy (2009). Custom Enrichment Module: Worlds of Music: An Introduction to the Music of the World's Peoples. Belmont, Cal.: Schirmer Cengage Learning. pp. 256–259. ISBN 978-0-534-59539-5.
  4. ^ "Ivo Papazov". Mondomix: Le magazine des musiques et cultures dans le monde. 30 March 2003. Archived from the original on 7 May 2007.
  5. ^ "Ivo Papazov". Mondomix: Le magazine des musiques et cultures dans le monde. Archived from the original on 2012-09-17.
  6. ^ Carol Silverman (2012) Romani Routes: Cultural Politics and Balkan Music in Diaspora p.141, Oxford University Press, USA ISBN 0195300947


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