1979
Den Za Den
01. Svadba (4:05)
02. Galeb (3:52)
03. Ciganka (3:01)
04. Žed (3:27)
05. Fatamorgana (3:59)
06. Æoèor ritam (0:58)
07. A bila je tako draga (4:03)
08. Letnja ljubav (3:24)
09. Vodopad (2:39)
10. Jutro i noè (3:53)
11. Tako treba (4:49)
Studio Album, recorded in 1979, released in 1980
Vladimir Jankulovski / electric bass
Arian Dema / electric guitar, acoustic guitar, percussion
Dragiša Soldatovic / electric piano, piano, Moog synth
Dimitar Cokorovski / drums, percussion
LP RTV Ljubljana LD 0587 (1980, Yugoslavia)
02. Galeb (3:52)
03. Ciganka (3:01)
04. Žed (3:27)
05. Fatamorgana (3:59)
06. Æoèor ritam (0:58)
07. A bila je tako draga (4:03)
08. Letnja ljubav (3:24)
09. Vodopad (2:39)
10. Jutro i noè (3:53)
11. Tako treba (4:49)
Studio Album, recorded in 1979, released in 1980
Vladimir Jankulovski / electric bass
Arian Dema / electric guitar, acoustic guitar, percussion
Dragiša Soldatovic / electric piano, piano, Moog synth
Dimitar Cokorovski / drums, percussion
LP RTV Ljubljana LD 0587 (1980, Yugoslavia)
Another record balancing between jazz-rock and Balkan folk. Yes, if you think it sounds like LEB I SOL, you're right. It does sound like that. At the moments if this was an offshoot of the band, with aliases in the line-up. As a line of comparison it's like listening to THINK FLOYD. I don't have a problem with that. If someone is stealing the style, that's fine, as long as the songs themselves aren't stolen.
There are a few things distancing this record from the LEB I SOL ones (and distancing even more from SMAK another jazz-rock/folk combo): it's more jazzy. The playing is tight, dense, perhaps too homogenic for my taste, I would rather prefer a bit of collage and a few silent moments here and there.
It's closer to, let's say, WEATHER REPORT, and therefore closer to contemporary fusion/Balkan folk scene (VASIL HADŽIMANOV). And DEN ZA DEN sound more like a combo then a group of individuals; all the instruments are bold, piano is even more daring (in jazz context), but the palette of the soundscapes is somewhat limited. Please note that Limit here still represents a huge area for improvisations.
Maybe, maybe, maybe there was no intention to sound Leb i Sol-like, perhaps it was sort of a coincidence. Is this too streched and naive? Well, Leb i Sol hadn't started the whole thing, SMAK did, if I'm not much mistaken. Perhaps there was a fusion-y trend in the mid-late seventies that gather more names under its blanked while many remained obscure. Such a thing won't be unusal in contemporary Macedonian musical scene - the bands gather around Makedonska Streljba folk-goth-punk movement (late 80's/early 90's) or more recent wave of world/fusion ensembles (mid-late 90's with EZGIJA; OKTOEHOS etc.). From that point of view, DEN ZA DEN have a clear place in Macedonian rock culture, and a good place at that. Even if we force the copycatting argument, Den Za Den sounds like some of BETTER Leb i Sol albums - it was issued just when thing started watering down. With or without any of the contexts, this is a very good record.
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