Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Kinda Blue- Exploring the Roots of Rebetiko


The weather is just right- soft overcast skies that let that quiet kind of beauty flourish. It's no more strange that a prison would be photogenic than that mournful songs would be beautiful. What are we doing at the old prison on a Sunday morning? Musing on beauty, a lot of which came from here.

A group in our hometown (Thessaloniki Walking Tours) breathes the vividness of a fairy tale into the history and culture of our city. The tours I have been on are not so much walking and seeing (plenty of both) as they are like grabbing at a thread and following it somewhere unexpected, unearthing legends and memories along the way, visiting personalities so alive in memory and song that they are only technically departed, telling their stories, and in so doing giving layers of meaning to ours.   

The tour was about a genre of Greek music of deep cultural resonance- Rebetiko, in philosophy not unlike the blues, or American bluegrass, but distinctly urban. Its history is tied to the turmoil of early 20th C Greece, and like most genres with enduring meaning, it's not without darkness and strife. So logically we meet our guide, Tassos Papadopoulos, at the very prison that figures prominently in the culture of Rebetika, the storied Gendi Koule. It's the city's highest point, visible from everywhere, and with a grand vista. This was originally a fortress, part of the Byzantine walls. The main walls of the prison are themselves a rich mosaic- pieces culled from earlier structures- columns, plaques- casually and randomly incorporated into the walls. 


The more recent history draws us here- It became a prison at the end of the 1800's, and was in use until 1989 (!). Everyone on the tour remembers this as a functioning prison, a place of recent, vivid memory. It is hard to imagine that it could fall into such a picturesque state so very quickly. It is a moving place. Right inside the enormous gate is the visitors area. A double screen of mesh separates us from narrow walkways where our incarcerated friends and relatives would be. We could chat through the fine mesh, but not pass them anything- weapons, for instance, or more to the point, hashish. 

Visitors would be where the woman is, taking a photo-
Inmates in the narrow corridor that wraps around.

The Greeks who came from Asia Minor as refugees and during the population exchange brought a love of hashish with them. Illegal in Greece, it is not a jump to see how the prison fits into our picture. Rebetika itself was not in favor for the years of Metaxas- like the Nargile, it was thought much too Turkish.

Art born of melancholy has staying power. Also art born of contemplation. Rebetika casts a little spell- the repetition of a slightly plaintive, hypnotic motif takes hold of you. This is the characteristic "Moumourika," bringing you into the song and moving you forward with it.  A repeated motif makes all the sense in the world. As Tassos points out, in prison you have plenty of time on your hands.
We are crowded onto the platform suspended over one of the prison yards.
That is Tassos at the end of the walkway. Behind him, one of the cell blocks.
While we are on this narrow bridge stretched across the prison yard, Tasso is telling us some lyrics that came from here- Vangelis Papazoglou's song of 1935 "Five Years' Sentence". A man behind me answers him, and the song comes to life as a dialogue, back and forth across the length of the bridge. It is completely spontaneous, not unjoyous- a moment that reflects the depth of the integration of Rebetika into the collective psyche. We go back through the guard house and into the cell block, opened for us. This is the solitary confinement area, picture to the words of a poem about Genti Koule being "the tomb of the living"

We file out, contemplative, and outside the prison gates is a poignant, unexpected moment- two musicians have joined us

Nikolas Vezynias (guitar) and Yannis Eyinoglou (bouzouki) 
and we get to hear "Five Years' Sentence," right outside of the Genti Koule, and it's beautiful.

You could stop here, at this one perfect moment, but we don't- the history of Rebetika takes us through the city's spiritual landmarks.

We meander along the old walls to our next stop. It's near Tzo-Tzo's, a place for smoking and drinking and listening to rebetika songs being played at one table or another, maybe a decade long closed, no one among us has not had at least one memorable (yet blurry) late night here. It had the best view in the city, or at least that was the rumor- years of the rich smoke of hand rolled cigarettes had long blackened it out.

Right where we are standing is a ruin of a house, one of its walls the wall of the city itself. When the refugees came from Asia minor, they took the houses the Turks had abandoned, but it was not nearly enough. The Byzantine walls were covered with shacks and houses such that the wall itself could no longer be seen. A bulldozer finally leveled them one day, but left this one standing:


(Tzo-Tzo's is just out of the frame to the right. There's no more point in photographing it now than there was in eating there then. But it was glorious.) Tasso has lots of stories to tell us- we look over the west harbor, and the cranes disappear as he fills it with beer gardens and skating rinks, concerts, a tram- the pleasure gardens of Bechsinari (in Turkish "Besh" = five, and "Tsinar" the plane tree, so beloved for its deep shade). Just up from this in the marshes was the Bara- an enormous red light district of European-wide reputation. We hear the names of the old "Tekedes"- places to smoke hashish, and houses of cards and dice masquerading as tavernas- one, the Green Mill of the 1960's, right next to us.

As we zig-zag down through the enchanted alleys of Ano Poli, we stop at Tsitsani Square (merely formalizing the well-established immortality of Vassilis Tsitsanis), for some vignettes of his life-








The 16th C Tourbe of Musa Baba
In Terpsithea Square, next to the tomb of a Sufi holy man, we see photos and drawings that bring more of this rich subculture to life- we learn the different types of Magas (tough guy?), their arcane sartorial secrets. We imagine them walking through the square, maybe starting a fight. We learn single words that tell a whole story ("Dervishopaido," for instance- the ultimate compliment for one 'who dances like a dervish').

At the Alaza Imaret, we hear of an illustrious career, decades upon decades on all the continents- a life so full it seems like a myth, then to the cemetery for another life of mythic proportions. In the shade of the fountains by the Rotonda, one more tale- when we walk over to Alambra to hear more Rebetika, beautiful Rosa Ashkenazy still dances in our heads.


Thessaloniki Walking Tours cover many themes, and are also given in English. We have 17 centuries and three empires worth of history in Thessaloniki- they weave it into some fascinating, lively pieces. Visit their site for details-

http://thessalonikiwalkingtours.com/home/

You can hear live Rebetika several nights a week at Alambra, Phillipou 80, near the Rotonda.

https://www.facebook.com/groups/476296699057958/?fref=ts



No comments:

Post a Comment