Inka Marka Reviews and Awards

 

 

This was INKA MARKA’s second appearance at the RWMF and they hit new heights, their infectious brand of Andean music is folksy and celestial at the same time, striking directly at the heart.

Sarawak Rainforest World Music Festival 2007

 

First published in New Sunday Times, Malaysia , 5 Aug 2007 .

Rediscovering their Incan spirit by Himanshu Bhatt

A band of South American immigrants in Australia are rediscovering their lost cultural roots in the sounds of their homeland - the Andes , writes Himanshu Bhatt

About twelve years ago, Jose Diaz was surviving on odd jobs in Bolivia – he was a mechanic, a cook and a gardener at different times – when he migrated to Australia for a better living.Raised in a village in the outskirts of Cochabamba , a town in a Bolivian valley, he pined for his native land, and learned to play music with his brother-in-law in Sydney on weekends.They were soon joined by Chilean Michel Bestrin , also an immigrant who had hardly played music in his native country.
“We were pretty much a garage bunch,” remembers Bestrin today. “ Jose picked up the panpipes (an instrument of the ancient Incas), I learnt the guitar.”It was of matter of time before the sounds of their South American music started to generate interest; and the group found they could actually make a living playing music.
When Diaz contacted his mother in Bolivia to tell her he was going full time into music, she was perplexed. “Are there no jobs in Australia ?” she asked.Today, Diaz and Bestrin are the core members of the band named Inka Marka or ‘Force of the Incas’. They are joined by Argentinean friend Enrique Berbis and Chilean youngster Jaime Carrasco who used to skip school to play with the band till a few years ago.Though based in Melbourne, the sounds they have come to play are heard along the mountainous area of the Andes, which has the highest peaks outside Asia and the longest range in the world that straddles across Chile, western Argentina, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador and south-western Colombia.
In Australia these geographical distinctions evaporated, making it possible for the musicians from different ethnic American backgrounds to play together.
Speaking after their show at the World Music Festival in Penang recently, the irony was not lost on the members that it had to take their moving away from their native lands for them to so appreciate their lost cultural roots.

In fact, Inka Marka ’s music has naturally evolved to produce a generic sound of the Andes . “Being away from South America , your own sound develops,” explains Diaz in an interview. “It may not be as traditional as it is at home. It’s a mixture of influences. But the roots are South American.”Indeed, there are many different styles being played today across South America – from pre-Columbian to fusion to jazz. Some places even have influences of African slaves who were brought there centuries ago. “There are varying degrees of differences in each song we play,” says Bestrin. “Some are pre-Columbian, some are European, some are indigenous in the tradition of the Aymara Indians.”
“We try and talk about it as much as we can but on stage we just let it go and be as natural as we can.”
A portion of their repertoire includes songs with the Quechua language of the Aymaras, the descendants of the Incas.The group now also plays indigenous instruments like the panpipes and the quena or bamboo flute, both of which are still extensively played in Bolivia , Peru and Colombia .
“The pre-Columbian Indians had their own music loosely based on the pentatonic scale,” Bestrin explains. “There are certain phrases and repetitions of notes in the panpipes that go centuries into the past.”“The Spanish then brought the European musical form with chord patterns and the 8-note musical scale which is more melodic.”“When we go overseas, people are curious to know what Andean music is about,” adds Enrique Berbis .
“When we were about to play in South Africa , the people were just looking at us very seriously like Zulu warriors,” he recounts with a laugh. “But as soon as we struck the first chord, their faces changed. They became completely euphoric, and started dancing.”

Inka Marka has performed across Australia and in world tours to places like Singapore , South Africa , Brunei , Kuching and New Caledonia . At the festival at Penang , the local crowd seemed to react with a kind of awe at the completely unfamiliar sounds, with melodious, exotic vowels, the group was playing.

In Australia , the South American immigrants have reacted in an ambivalent way to the group. Some youngsters have been inspired to touch base with their lost roots.
“It’s a mixed reaction from our community,” says Jaime Carrasco . “A lot of people are refugees and having something that reminds them of their country is not what they’d like.”
For the future, Berbis and Carrasco - both came to Australia as infants - intend to write original songs; they even hope to incorporate elements of aboriginal Australian culture to reflect the land of their upbringing.
“Or maybe,” says Bestrin, “we’ll just pull back and return completely to our original roots – and play the music of the Incas, in original Quechua.”

Inka Marka is a five piece Melbourne based group with "all" of the musicians playing strings, wind and percussion giving a rich full sound.

Their masterful performance includes traditional and contemporary music which combining the haunting melodies of the pan flute and quena with the rich sounds of the guitar and charango.

Be moved by slow ethereal and mystical melodies.

kulcha.com.au

 

Tonight Inka Marka served as an equally effective foil for the choir, creating vibrant rhythms as they pulsed through an animated set of Andean folk tunes.

The Melbourne Age: Austrian Choir's 21st Birthday Concert

 

 

 

Every year Inka Marka consistently breaks new ground in Australia and overseas, we've achieved more than we first imagined and now we can imagine a whole lot more, and we won't stop until we get there.

Inka Marka