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<atom:feed xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><atom:id>http://calabashmusic.com/</atom:id><atom:title>New Music From Di Grine Kuzine on Calabash Music</atom:title><atom:updated>2008-11-20T12:41:15Z</atom:updated><atom:link href="http://calabashmusic.com//world/publisher/artistView/action/getfeed/item_id/21176/feedtype/102/output/feed/atom.xml" rel="self"/><atom:author><atom:name>The Calabash Music Team</atom:name><atom:email>support@calabashmusic.com</atom:email></atom:author><atom:entry><atom:title>Funky Pukanky</atom:title><atom:id>http://digrinekuzine.calabashmusic.com/#album_21180</atom:id><atom:updated>2005-04-12T10:55:32Z</atom:updated><atom:link href="http://digrinekuzine.calabashmusic.com/#album_21180"/><atom:summary>Music from Funky Pukanky</atom:summary><atom:content type="html"><![CDATA[<img src='http://files.calabashmusic.com/images/21180/funky_pukanky.jpg'>Here's an utterly engaging music video that's a little bit Cabaret, a little bit klezmer and a whole lot of fun. It's the result of a competition to find a song that extolled the multicultural face of modern Berlin. Alexandra Dmitroff, a second generation Bulgarian who fronts the band wrote the song, and the reward was their very own video. With a little help from a girlfriend choreographer, they developed the visuals, but it's the charm of the song itself that carries it. The band's sound is a combination of Balkan, Jewish and Germanic influences. In case you are wondering 'Di Grine Kuzine' is a slang expression; it's what established Jews might call a newly arrived relative.]]></atom:content></atom:entry><atom:entry><atom:title>Feribot</atom:title><atom:id>http://digrinekuzine.calabashmusic.com/#album_21212</atom:id><atom:updated>2005-04-12T10:55:32Z</atom:updated><atom:link href="http://digrinekuzine.calabashmusic.com/#album_21212"/><atom:summary>Music from Feribot</atom:summary><atom:content type="html"><![CDATA[<img src='http://files.calabashmusic.com/images/21212/feribot.jpg'>Raucous and unruly, Feribot is not traditional music. It's more like very hip village music played by urban post modernists. As the band says in the album's liner notes: "On this ship there is room for you all." ]]></atom:content></atom:entry><atom:entry><atom:title>Klezmer's Paradise</atom:title><atom:id>http://digrinekuzine.calabashmusic.com/#album_21242</atom:id><atom:updated>2005-04-12T10:55:32Z</atom:updated><atom:link href="http://digrinekuzine.calabashmusic.com/#album_21242"/><atom:summary>Music from Klezmer's Paradise</atom:summary><atom:content type="html"><![CDATA[<img src='http://files.calabashmusic.com/images/21242/klezmers_paradise.jpg'>Somehwere in between a Balkan village orkestra,&nbsp; circus music, and an American klezmer bigband...]]></atom:content></atom:entry></atom:feed>
