REVIEW: Yasmin Levy

To the gentle strumming of the guitar and the strains of the flute, Yasmin Levy, dressed in black and the ever enticing enchantress, cast a spell on the audience with her tremor-filled “La Serena”. It was just a start.

Firstly,a lil more about the Ladino music that Yasmin Levy sings. In her rendition, she maintains the original lyrics and melody of the  songs (some of them nearly 500 years old), but changes the rhythm to a Flamenco style. She also mixes Turkish, Egyptian and other Middle-eastern music in her own Spanish compositons and the result is unbelievably beautiful.

To understand the Ladino songs better, we would have to delve a little into the Ladino culture.  In 1492,in an attempt to flush the land of all non-christians, the Catholic rulers, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella issued a decree that all Jews, Gypsies and Moors (a population of Muslim peoples from Northern Africa who conquered the lands of Spain and Portugal in 711 CE) living in the Spanish kingdom were either to convert to the Catholic faith or leave the country. Thousands of Jews were exiled from their homes, and in the years that followed these Jews settled in other parts of Europe, Northern Africa, and the Middle East (see the map of Jewish Migration).

The Jews from the Iberian peninsula carried their language with them and settled in the Ottoman empire. They became known as the Sephardic Jews and their language became known as Ladino.

It is no wonder that the Ladino songs are mostly about longing, love, desperation, passion and of course hope. These songs, handed down from generation to generation by mother to daughter and father to son, survived purely by word of mouth. They are based on simple themes from everyday life- like a mean mother-in-law or the unrequited love of a heartless lover. To those persecuted Jews, stripped of their lands and property and enslaved by new rulers, music must have been the only means to give vent to their melancholy, solitude, frustration and the occasional happiness.  The wailing laments in the songs show this pain clearly. What is common in all these songs is the singer’s candid admission of his/her true feelings. It is such a contrast to the norm of the sophisticated upper class where emotions are best hidden and there are euphemisms, innuendos and a tendency to be emotionally aloof.

Coming back to the performance, Yasmin Levy is of those singers who have a “heart” voice- she sings with such feeling in her songs that you don’t need to know to language to appreciate the pathos or empathise for the loss. Be it the complex rhythmic phrasing or the slow vibratos, she  modulates her voice so perfectly to bring out the right emotion. She is a brilliantly talented singer with a deep soulful and sensuous voice. It just doesn’t get better than that. Period.

She was accompanied on the percussion by Ishay Amir, her husband, who kept perfect rhythm.  For some songs like the haunting “Mano Suave”, he played the darbouka (see pic below), a drum that is often used in music for belly dancing.

I was so thrilled by the Armenian Vardan Havanissian who played the wind instruments flute,clarinet and zurna (see pic below).

I thought was very similar to an Indian musical instrument called the nadaswaram (albeit a shorter version of it). He was just superb. His smooth flowing style with the ornamentation and variations was out of the world.

On the electric upright bass was Miles Danso from Ghana. The bass melded so well into the songs.  On guitar was Yechiel Hasson, a master of Flamenco style.  There were songs which had Ms Levy singing with only the guitar to accompany her. Both the artists’ amazing talents could be seen  in those duets.

Unlike in Western music where ensembles play with sheet music, in this kind of music the musicians just play by memory. This is definitely harder as it needs perfect co-ordination. But this kind of setting leaves so much of room for improvisation and encourages spontaneity based on the mood of the audience and that was what we saw in the performance.

One perfect example of the amalgamation of Falmenco and Ladino was “Noches Noches”. The Flamenco genre’s staccato clap punctuating a vocal line was shown so beautifully in this one. It is such an evocative song.

“Una Ora” had Arabic music elements and would have been a great one for belly dancing, as would have been the funny song, “Mi suegra la negra”(The mean mother-in-law). You can imagine a newly-wed daughter-in-law singing this to herself, gritting her teeth, as she is doing some chores for her mother-in-law instead of being with her husband. Here’s a translation of the lyrics. Ms. Levy also showed some of her Flamenco moves here.

“My mother-in-law the evil one

Takes revenge on me.

I can no longer live with her.

She is stronger than death itself.

Soon I shall get rid her.”

The old cantina, “Adio Kerida” (Farewell,my love) was so beautiful. She had the audience singing to it. It might as well have been an metaphorical ode sung by a Jew to his native land.

My favorite of the evening was “la Alegria”. Contrary to its name (which means “happiness”), the song is about a woman who is pining for her love. It is so sad that it churns your insides and leaves you with a deep disgust for that imaginary cruel lover. The whooshing sound of the bass in this is so moving.

Yasmin Levy’s own compositions “Una Noches Mas” (a very slow moving number) and “El Amor Contigo” (a fast paced flamenco style song) were also about love. The Ladino style could be seen in her compositions as well.

That Yasmin Levy brings together musicians from so many different countries and different faiths is a testimonial to the respect the musical world has for her. May her efforts to bring people together with music bear fruits.

I was not the only one to have fallen for her music. There was an encore and Yasmin ended with a really sad Spanish song. As I was heading out, I overheard someone say, “That wasn’t fair. The last song only left me yearning for more. Wished she had sang some more.”  Sigh, sigh, I defintely agree.

Krithika, [art]seen reviewer

Krithika likes to jump in puddles of water, especially when a person wearing all white walks past by

7 thoughts to “REVIEW: Yasmin Levy”

  1. Judith, as per Levy herself, some of the songs she sang were supposedly 500 years old. Whether they are original melodies is for anybody to say.
    Of course, not all Ladino songs have “wailing laments.” But to me, “La Alegria” does fall under the category of “wailing laments”. It is a beautiful poignant form of expressing pain.

  2. I was there, and I agree, it was a wonderful concert. But I disagree with your statement that “Unlike in Western music where ensembles play with sheet music, in this kind of music the musicians just play by memory.” Playing with or without printed music has nothing to do with the type of music being played. And while the music may have seemed largely improvised, it was very tightly arranged. Check out the various recorded performances on YouTube.

  3. Michael,
    Thanks for the comment. Let me clarify my stance here a little.

    I definitely agree that whether or not sheet music is used has nothing to do with the quality of music. Also, all music will follow a certain arrangement irrespective of the presence/ absence of sheet music.

    However, when you play by memory (like at the Yasmin Levy concert), then there is room for the expression of the creativity of the musician. In western sheet music, the composer describes what he expects from the musician very clearly. So, for example, the musician’s interpretation is often in the dynamics and articulation (and that really can have different effects, of course). I am ignorant of other improvisations that may exist and would be happy to learn about that.

    In the forms of music where you play by memory, each instrument would obviously have a defined set of music. The musician would improvise within these boundaries laid by the music (for example, while maintaining the rhythm, the musician can have different variations of the melodic mode used in that song). Clearly, the musician here has more freedom and often, master musicians take advantage of this to show off their musical prowess.

    With my statement in the review, I wanted to emphasise the difference in Western music and this kind of music (similar in structure to other music of the Orient, like Indian for example). When you have to play by memory, then you have a totally different learning approach to music. Using mnemonic tools similar to the solfeggio systems (obviously indigenous to that form of music) and other methods (i am sure they exist but i am not personally aware of them), music is memorised.

    I am not aware of what techniques Yasmin Levy and her fellow musicians use though.

    Of course, no form of music, be it Western or Eastern, is superior than the other. They each have their distinct flavor and are equally pleasing to the ear.

  4. I was there, and I agree, it was a wonderful concert. But I disagree with your statement that “Unlike in Western music where ensembles play with sheet music, in this kind of music the musicians just play by memory.” Playing with or without printed music has nothing to do with the type of music being played. And while the music may have seemed largely improvised, it was very tightly arranged. Check out the various recorded performances on YouTube.

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