..Ljiljana
Buttler is one of the great re-discovered voices of Eastern Europe.
Deep, dark and distinctive. Her recording with the Mostar Sevdah Reunion
band, "The Mother of Gypsy Soul (Snail Records) is one of my CDs
of the year and impresses everyone I've played in to.
(Simon Broughton ,Songlines, UK, September/October 2002)
LJILJANA
BUTTLER was born in Belgrade, her father was an accordion virtuoso and
her mother a Croatian singer. But her father left soon after she was
born and her mother had to support herself and her child, singing in
bars. They settled in Bijeljina, a small town in Bosnia, but one night
her mother fell ill and Ljiljana went to the café and said "My
mother can't come tonight, she's sick. Please let me sing." She
was only 12 but had learned at her mother's side. A year later her mother
left and Ljiljana was on her own - she continued singing in cafes to
support herself through school. Then she headed for Belgrade. "I
started singing in bars in Skadalia (the famous restaurant quarter,
a sort of Balkan Montmartre)", she remembers. "The atmosphere
was fantastic. The people laughed and cried during the music. That always
inspired me - that and strong slivovice (plum brandy), lots of sad loves
and lots of emotion and romance. Sometimes we made recordings for Radio
Belgrade. They simply came to the cafes, listened to the music and if
they liked it, asked the musicians back to the radio to record".
From
1980 Ljiljana started doing concerts and became well-known on TV until
the political and musical mood started changing with so-called turbo-folk
providing the soundtrack for the Milosevic era. "Even before the
war, I realised that somehow the joy had vanished and the Balkan men
were no longer interested in love stories. Suddenly it became important
to wear a short skirt and flash your cleavage. The shorter the skirt,
the better singer you were thought to be. I realised my time was over.
It was a time for weapons and hatred. It affected me terribly and the
war that followed has left scars that will last forever."
In
1987 she vanished from the Balkan music scene in which she played such
a dominant role, leaving music lovers wondering about her mysterious
disappearance. In 2002 she decided to return to her homeland and record
a new album on the Snail Records label. Her vocal abilities on "Mother
of Gypsy Soul" lead us to the depths of Gypsy and Balkan soul.
At the age of 60 she sings better then ever; what she is presenting
to us now is a pure handbook of Balkan Blues. The astonishing reappearance
of this lost legend is something to be more than grateful for.
Her
performance on the album shows why, in the former Yugoslavia, she was
referred to as the 'Gypsy Ella Fitzgerald' and the 'Billie Holiday of
Gypsy Music', but mostly she was called lovingly the 'Mother of Gypsy
Soul'.
On
this recording, the highly acclaimed Serbian Gypsy trumpet player Boban
Markovic performed as a special guest joining Ilijaz Delic on vocals;
Mustafa antic on vocals, accordion and clarinet; Nedjo Kovacevic
on vocals and violin; Mio Petrovic on solo guitar; Sandi Durakovic
on rhythm guitar; Kosta Latinovic on double bass and Senad Trnovac on
drums. This is known as Mostar Sevdah Reunion, one of the most famous
Balkan bands from Bosnia and Herzegovina. Ljiljana hopes to publish
her second CD with Snail Records in october 2005.