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Sophie finds her voice - in Russia

Sophie Solomon is relaxed

September 29, 2016 12:08
Exploring Russia: Sophie Solomon
4 min read

Sophie Solomon is relaxed. Despite an eye-wateringly early call to accommodate the time difference in Los Angeles where she's currently promoting her new album, she's on great form, talking enthusiastically about her life and music. It's not the Sophie Solomon I remember from back in the early 2000s, when she was lead performer of the trailblazing British klezmer band Oi Va Voi. Back then, her wild stage persona was one of the main draw of the band's vibrant gigs - bringing a heavy metal style physicality to a Jewish music scene which didn't quite know what had hit it. She attacked the violin with a vicious energy; her performances were profoundly joyful, but also passionately furious.

That energy is still present on her new album, Stop the Parade, but infused with a greater dose of lightness and wit. The album is a hymn to all things Russian - a country which has inspired Solomon for years. "I first read a book about the last tsars of Russia when I was about twelve and became really fascinated. And then my older brother married a contemporary dancer from Russia when I was a teenager and she had this extraordinary group of friends - a very bohemian St Petersburg crowd, musicians, painters DJs. This was the early 90s when Russian was opening up, Perestroika, Glasnost…and I would go and stay with them in my school holidays, go to weird museums and squat parties." Solomon last visited Russia three years ago and the album is less of portrait of contemporary Russia under Vladimir Putin and more rooted in the culture and history of the Soviet Union.

It is also an attempt to capture a broader sense of Russianness; mythology, aesthetics and national disposition. Solomon characterises Russia as "a land of extremes…extreme weather, extreme poverty, extreme richness." She suggests that "Russians need to abnegate themselves before a strong leader, whether a Tsar or Stalin." A Stalin-esque figure is the subject of the title track, in which Solomon imagines a dictator on their death bed in unusually repentant mood: 'Cancel the fireworks / Stop the parade / And leave me in peace to grow old in the shade'. Other tracks feature equally rich back stories: Microscope Man refers to the elaborate subterfuges engaged in by ordinary Russians such as smuggling out life stories on the pack of postage stamps, Black Moon tells of spies leaving messages for each other in anonymous boxes, and Yellow Chrysanthemum depicts dissidents being replaced by flowers in official photographs.

Barbed Wire Love Song has a particular Jewish resonance - written for a film depicting the story of Herman Rosenblat, a Holocaust survivor. Rosenblat's story was that he managed to survive because a Polish girl threw him apples over the fence of Buchenwald, a girl who he met sixty years later on a blind date and married.