Bicho Carpinteiro & Lusitanian Ghosts
Gratis
Bicho Carpinteiro
Bicho Carpinteiro is the new project by Vasco Ribeiro Casais (Omiri, Seiva,
Dazkarieh) and Rui Rodrigues (Casuar, LOT, Uxu Kalhus).
The synergy of these two musicians with results in a deep and power folk in
which the various musical languages of the Portuguese tradition (fados, chulas,
viras, lenga-lengas, etc.) are recreated through the lens of these two artists who
fuse them with electronic environments.
Lusitanian Ghosts
Lusitanian Ghosts features ancient Portuguese chordophones and other European
string instruments, promoting ancient sounds in the 21st Century.
Re-casting these heritage folk violas into rock n roll songs, the artist collective writes
from a socio-political perspective on building a better world, creating songs from and
for the heart and the mind.
Their second album, recorded on analogue tape at Clouds Hill Studios in Hamburg, will
be out towards the end of 2020. It is a musical project that mixes indie songwriting with traditional Portuguese
instruments like the Beiroa, Campaniça, Braguesa, Terceirense and Amarantina guitars
– or violas as they are called in Portugal: each with its own string arrangements and
tunings.
Lusitanian Ghosts was founded by Neil Leyton and Micke Ghost, when Leyton took a
viola Amarantina from Lisbon to Stockholm; Leyton then decided to make an
experimental album mixing the various regional Lusitanian (Portuguese) chordophones
with their usual brand of singer-songwriter rock n roll.
The collective gathered at Canoa Studios in Portugal, with producer Ricardo Ferreira,
and recorded ten songs, featuring Leyton on bass as well as the viola Beiroa; Micke
Ghost on the Amarantina; Vasco Ribeiro Casais aka OMIRI on the Braguesa and
Nyckelharpa; O Gajo on the viola Campaniça; and Primitive Reason’s Abel Beja on the
viola Terceira. In the absence of Lil’ Ghost, who would join later, Ricardo also played
the viola Toeira: making it 6 regional chordophones on this unique record.
Along with the debut album there is a feature documentary film that also interviews
several chordophone experts who explain why most of these Portuguese ancient
instruments became forgotten – almost extinct – over time. These historic instruments… they are the real Lusitanian Ghosts