The indigenous music 
                of Georgia is extremely old; the distinctive 
                modes seems to have been in place over 
                3000 years ago and the earliest surviving 
                written sources, which date from the 
                11th century, give testimony 
                to the remarkable development of vocal 
                polyphony. Recent research has suggested 
                that the Georgian tonal system predates 
                the Greek by 1000 years; some researchers 
                go further and suggest that the Georgian 
                polyphonic tradition is the origin of 
                the European polyphonic tradition. 
              
 
              
And that is the fascinating 
                thing about the music of the region; 
                unlike neighbouring countries, the music 
                of Georgia is polyphonic in a way which 
                is rare in European folk traditions. 
              
 
              
This disc, which explores 
                the various Georgian regional traditions, 
                was produced on a shoe string by a German 
                team travelling the country in an old 
                VW bus. Using an emergency generator 
                and a small selection of sound engineering 
                equipment they recorded in venues as 
                diverse as an old monastery, an abandoned 
                cinema and a former cultural centre. 
                It is a testament to the recording engineers’ 
                skill that whilst listening to these 
                two fascinating discs I was not particularly 
                aware of the difficult conditions under 
                which they were made. 
              
 
              
The bulk of the material 
                is sung by the Antchis Chati Choir. 
                Formed in 1987 by a group of enthusiastic 
                ethnomusicologists, the twelve members 
                of the group come from all walks of 
                life. They double as a church choir 
                so the group is familiar with the riches 
                of both the Georgian secular and sacred 
                traditions. The whole of the first disc 
                and half the second disc are devoted 
                to secular music from various regions 
                of Georgia and the latter half of the 
                second disc explores the region’s ancient 
                sacred music. 
              
 
              
The choir makes a rich, 
                vibrant sound, the vocalism is very 
                throaty and the individual voices are 
                very free but at no time do you feel 
                that the group is out of control or 
                that, conversely, they are being over-cautious 
                in the way of classical musicians singing 
                in folk traditions. The result is something 
                which never needs apologise for its 
                sound-world and which convinces as an 
                accurate and admirable representation 
                of the local traditions. 
              
 
              
The nearest comparison 
                that I can come up with, in terms of 
                the sound-world of the discs, is in 
                the work of Marcel Peres and his group 
                Ensemble Organum where they experiment 
                with performing early Roman chant in 
                styles which mix in folk tradition and 
                middle-Eastern vocal traditions. The 
                result, as far as I am concerned, is 
                completely entrancing. 
              
 
              
Not all of the disc 
                is taken by the Antchis Chati Choir. 
                One group of secular songs is performed 
                by three elderly men from Gurien. The 
                presence of these men (Karlo Urushade, 
                Guri Sikharulidze and Tristan Sikharulidze) 
                is not explained in the liner notes 
                but we must assume that they are real 
                performers in the folk tradition, and 
                their contribution is vivid indeed. 
                Other guests on the disc are the Tsinandali 
                Choir, a seven man group, whose contributions 
                are equally welcome. 
              
 
              
The sacred section 
                of the disc starts with the bells of 
                the Motsama Monastery and the whole 
                disc concludes with an evocative farewell 
                to Georgia. 
              
 
              
Sebastian Pank writes 
                amusingly in the liner notes of his 
                trials and tribulations whilst doing 
                these recordings. We must be grateful 
                to him as they reveal a fascinatingly 
                rich and varied alternative polyphonic 
                vocal tradition. That this tradition 
                still flourishes is a testament to the 
                groups performing on this disc. This 
                is a set which should be of interest 
                to many musicians, but it is much more 
                than that. The performances have an 
                immediacy and vibrancy which is completely 
                entrancing and the discs have accompanied 
                us on the car stereo in many of our 
                own journeys. 
              
 
              
              
Robert Hugill