Tag Archives: GIno Srjan Yevdjevich

Kultur Shock 15th Anniversary at Chop Suey [Slideshow]

Seattle’s premier caravan of gypsy-punk-metal hellions, Kultur Shock, blew last weekend open with a marathon fifteenth anniversary celebration at Chop Suey Friday night, and it was a hell of a party.

A wonderful assemblage of humanity packed Chop Suey. Tippling Slavs gleefully sang along with singer Gino Srdjan Yevdjevich in their native tongue, even as energized punks and headbangers ricocheted against each other at the front of the stage (interestingly enough, a significant quotient of females seemed to be dishing out the slam-dancing). And the band, well, they couldn’t have been better. 

Yevdjevich, dreadlocks exploding from the back of his otherwise shorn head, commanded the stage with a potent combination of headbanging bad-assery, gypsy charm, and political-firebrand passion.  Guitarist Val Kiossovski threw fierce surf-guitar licks and Mideastern swirls atop the band’s heavy-metal crunch. The band’s bassist Guy Davis (also a member of storied Seattle rock trio Sage) and drummer Chris Stromquist kept the rhythms beneath the whole surging mass of sound lock-step perfect. Seattle multi-instrumentalist Amy Denio punctuated the songs with stabs of skronking sax and percussive vocalizing from another world. And if there’s another human being alive who plays violin with the artistry and uninhibited sensuality of KS’s Paris Hurley, please let me know their identity so’s I can crush on them, too.

Kultur Shock’s presence has been so ubiquitous on flyers and posters around town for so many years that it’s easy to pass them by. After seeing them live, that’s a mistake I’ll never make again. Nothing can beat seeing them work a stage in person, but pull up their website and play the stream of Ministry of Kultur while viewing the enclosed slideshow. That might come close. Maybe.

Gino Yevdjevich of Kultur Shock.
Paris Hurley of Kultur Shock.
Val Kiossovski of Kultur Shock.
Kultur Shock.
Guy Davis of Kultur Shock.
Amy Denio of Kultur Shock.
Val from Kultur Shock.
Kultur Shock.
Kultur Shock lead singer Gino.
Paris of Kultur Shock.
Gino of Kultur Shock.
Kultur Shock's Paris Hurley.
Paris and Gino of Kultur Shock.
Gino of Kultur Shock.

Gino Yevdjevich of Kultur Shock. (photo by Tony Kay)

Kultur Shock violinist Paris Hurley. (photo by Tony Kay)

Val Kiossovski, Bulgarian guitar hero. (photo by Tony Kay)

(photo by Tony Kay)

Sage bass player Guy Davis anchors Kultur Shock's bottom end. (photo by Tony Kay)

(photo by Tony Kay)

Paris Hurley and drummer Chris Stromquist of Kultur Shock. (photo by Tony Kay)

(photo by Tony Kay)

(photo by Tony Kay)

Gino looks evil. (photo by Tony Kay)

(photo by Tony Kay)

(photo by Tony Kay)

(photo by Tony Kay)

Gino Yevdjevich of Kultur Shock. thumbnail
Paris Hurley of Kultur Shock. thumbnail
Val Kiossovski of Kultur Shock. thumbnail
Kultur Shock. thumbnail
Guy Davis of Kultur Shock. thumbnail
Amy Denio of Kultur Shock. thumbnail
Val from Kultur Shock. thumbnail
Kultur Shock. thumbnail
Kultur Shock lead singer Gino. thumbnail
Paris of Kultur Shock. thumbnail
Gino of Kultur Shock. thumbnail
Kultur Shock's Paris Hurley. thumbnail
Paris and Gino of Kultur Shock. thumbnail
Gino of Kultur Shock. thumbnail

Kultur Shock Celebrates Fifteen Years of Gypsy Punk at Chop Suey

Bust out your balalaikas along with your earplugs. Seattle-based gypsy-metal juggernaut Kultur Shock celebrates its fifteenth anniversary at Chop Suey tonight ($15 DOS admission/Doors open at 9pm). And you’d be nuts to pass up the chance to view a band that routinely works arena-sized crowds into a lather all over Europe, playing in the sweaty confines of a tiny Capitol Hill club.

If you’re lazy, comparisons to avowed Kultur Shock fans System of a Down and New York ethno-punk caravan Gogol Bordello might seem apropos. Like SOAD, Kultur Shock throw a fistful of metal crunch into their stew of East European rhythmic and melodic cadences (KS’s newest Jack Endino-produced long-player Ministry of Kultur is a steel-toed gypsy boot of a record); and the jet-fueled swirl of sound definitely shares a spiritual kinship with the Gogols’ manic multi-culti attack.

But Kultur tops Val Kiossovski’s raging guitars with Paris Hurley’s gypsy violins and Amy Denio’s schizoid sax fills, both of which root the roar in tradition. Dreadlocked Kultur Shock lead singer Gino Srjan Yevdjevich looms way larger than Gogol Bordello’s wiry charmer Eugene Hutz, too. Yevdjevich’s voice oscillates between gravelly Balkan growls and alien ululations that suggest a lust-filled Slavic zealot, and the music galloping relentlessly around him could fill a mosh pit as readily as a dance hall. The floor of Chop Suey will serve as both tonight; we’ll lay you rubles to donuts.  Do not miss.