Excerpt from the recent San Francisco Chronicle article:
"Rivkin, who performs her own breathtaking act as a "live one-woman choir" (using digital looping technology to astonishing effect), said house concerts offer artists "a venue to connect with the audience where there's not so much of a separation between the audience and the performer. For me, music is a lot about connection."" Michael Dougan, SF Chronicle
To read the whole article, please click on the link below
Rose Street Music: Irina's Press
Sing Out! Irina Rivkin was born in Leningrad (St. Petersburg, Russia. She moved to California as a young child. Now, at 32, with her first release Upwelling, she is political, jazzy, and rhythmic. Spanish and Russian are laced throughout the English lyrics. Impeccable enunciation and hot, harmony-rich vocals carry each track. The vocals are always so close that it’s as if she was lip-close to our ears sharing the intimate agony of Guatemalan women losing family members to cycles of fire and blood, or her ecstasy of finding true love. One highlight is “Ya Eyo Lublu” (Russian for I love her). She sings undaunted and upbeat as she brings her lover home, despite her mother’s admonishing, “I don’t like that you’re like that.” On three tracks she includes Maria Quiles and Rebecca Crump as the trio Making Waves. Singing “Glass House” their rhythm and sound would pass as a Russian Sweet Honey in the Rock. It is easy to forget that many of the songs have no instruments beyond vocals. We feel no loss musically. As she sings on “Taking Our Freedom” her father was caught and threatened by the K.G.B. for spreading the love of poetry. Coming to America was their attempt to find some freedom somewhere. Here is a woman who knows the treasure of freedom and is singing for and about it both worldwide and inside. -Angela Page
Irina Rivkin's music is a nice mix of a cappella tunes and full-band compositions. She's got a warm, passionate voice that suits both kinds of songs. She mixes personal songs (like "Ya eyo lublu, I love her") with political ones like "See Through Bush"(George, not Kate obviously). "Hold the Moment" poignantly speaks of not being able to still time. Ironically songs are one of our means of holding the moment, like musical snapshots of feelings and events. upwelling is full of moments, captured for us by a gifted singer and writer.
CD REVIEW: Irina Rivkin – “Upwelling” By Stacey Board - 01/11/05 - 04:23 PM EST The first thing you notice about Irina is that she is very brave. Then immediately after you realize that she is also very talented and very unique. Her voice is like a fine liquid glass ribbon. It is versatile, solid, fragile and flowing. Her songwriting voice is also very unique and strong. Her melodies soar and swoop but still stand solid and balanced. She writes with what I imagine is a mirror and flowers in one hand, and a pen and sword in the other. She is not afraid to be vulnerable, and she’s not afraid to tell you how it is, even when the flaws are yours. Rivkin is a modern poet, protester, trailblazer and compassionate artist. The varied harmonies that are added by Making Waves, her trio that includes partners Maria Quiles and Rebecca Crump simply shine. Their voices are lovely and they sound lovely together. If you appreciate music with a heart, a brain and a message you will adore Irina Rivkin’s “Upwelling”. http://www.rosestreetmusic.com/
Indie Round-up for March 9, 2006 [- Hide] Jon Sobel, feature columnist http://blogcritics.org/archives/2006/03/09/165527.... http://blogcritics.org/archives/2006/03/09/165527.php Indie Round-Up for March 9, 2006 - Golay, Rivkin, Rentler March 09, 2006 Jon Sobel Irina Rivkin, upwelling Although we are in a richly creative time marked by cross-pollination of musical styles and traditions, this CD stands out as something really different. In a mere 36 minutes Irina Rivkin pulls together aesthetic, emotional, political, sexual, and social justice themes into a contiguous and unique artistic statement. Despite the coffee cups in the cover photo, Rivkin's work is very far from the "lesbian coffeehouse music" that I anticipated. Instead it's a kind of world-folk spawned from the artist's Russian folk-music background and acute sensitivity to personal and political injustice, and informed by a crossover-jazz sensibility a la Leonard Bernstein and a mildly experimental bent akin to that of Kate Bush or Meredith Monk. It's all that, and it's pretty to listen to too. The instrumental accompaniments are light to nonexistent, as Rivkin's voice is the prime instrument here, bolstered by those of the excellent Maria Quiles and Rebecca Crump (who together with Rivkin comprising the group Making Waves). Rivkin sings her angular melodies in a voice that switches easily from soft to sharp. Where the other voices jump in, the sound becomes more universal and more exotic at the same time: discrete moments could have come as easily from a North American roots-revivalist group like the Be Good Tanyas as from an exotic, arty hitmaker like the Bulgarian Women's Choir. Her lyrics, for the most part, manage to be both pointed and poetic. Political music is hard to pull off, especially if it's not satirical, and, except in "Welfare-to-Work Blues," which is musically creative and elegant but lyrically forced, Rivkin accomplishes the difficult task very well. "See Through Bush" is clever and light-handed and the more cutting thereby; the Spanish-language "Sobrevivientes" raises a fist of musical beauty against oppression; and the chant-like "Taking Our Freedom" deepens its message with hypnotically intense music while personalizing it with a dollop of family history. The non-political songs are rewarding too. Rivkin's reflections on love and its accompanying troubles range from the imagistic ("Little Silver Packets," "River & Volcano") to the painfully explicit (the Outmusic Award-winning "Ya Eyo Lublu"), and, unlike most lyricists, who are at home only in one mode or the other, Rivkin can convince with words both clouded and clear.
Intimate glimpse of artists caught on MySpace By Paul Freeman / Entertainment Writer http://www.paloaltodailynews.com/article/2007-4-13-myspace-artists http://www.ebdailynews.com/article/2007-4-13-myspace-artists IRINA RIVKIN Berkeley-based progressive folk artist Irina Rivkin pours an intense intimacy into her poetic lyrics and haunting melodies. Her voice is delicate, but resonates with an expressive power. Whether delving into the personal or the political, her songs command attention. An a cappella number, "Ya Eyo Lublue," a Russian love song, demonstrates her unadorned vocal magic. Rivkin performs at the Freight & Salvage for "Rhythm & Harmony: New Horizons in Global Songcraft" on May 6, joined by Ashley Maher and Moira Smiley with VOCO. www.myspace.com/irinarivkin
Local Talent Donates Tracks to Benefit Queer Center -- favorite track "Ya Eyo Lublu" Local Cut -- Willamette Week Local Talent Donates Tracks to Benefit Queer Center Have 20 well-known, mostly-local artists ever come together to say “Hey, we support who you are!” to you? Well, yesterday the queer youth of Portland received just such a shout out with the release of Cherchez la Femme’s Safe Haven compilation. The disk is a figurative haven, largely peopled with queer artists or groups with queer members, in some cases singing about that very fact: My favorite track is “Ya Eyo Lubia” by Irina Rivkin, which is an a cappella number about bringing a girlfriend home to meet a less-than-supportive mother. But the compilation benefits a literal haven, the Sexual Minority Youth Resource Center at 2100 SE Belmont, where lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered and questioning kids under the age 24 find a place to write, create art, and, according to the materials I got with the CD, even “cook healthy food together” in a judgment-free environment. Here are a few tracks that immediately caught my eye. File these under, “Damn. That’s pretty impressive.” Pink Martini – “Sympathique” Tara Jane O’Neil – “The Poisoned Mine” Le Tigre – “Keep on Livin’” Sleater-Kinney – “Step Aside” The Decemberists – “The Soldiering Life” Sneakin’ Out – “Cool It” Indigo Girls – “Dairy Queen” The Sneakin’ Out track is previously unreleased, and the Indigo Girls number is apparently really rare. That Demberists track is extra notable one because guitarist/multi instrumentalist Chris Funk helped contact some of the artists on the CD and strategize for its release. Much of the rest of the CD is dominated by female solo artists, many of whom donated unreleased tracks. The first five were specially mastered by Bill Gladfelter at Jackpot as a donation to the comp, but all of these are probably new to your ears: Amee McCaa – “This Old Town” Lara Michell – “House on Fire” Claire Bard – “You Got Love” Nicole Campbell – “Serendipity” Ann Weiss – “Juanita” Cynthia Williams – “Lidda Bidda Bliss” Pamela Means – “Augusta” Tamara J. Brown – “DYKE” Bethany Lars / Spiraling Infinites – “Sentimental” Vivian’s Keeper – “Puzzle” Ashleigh Flynn – “Maybe, Maybe Not” Alix Olson – “Cute for a Girl” You can order the compilation from Cherchez la Femme’s website, or pick one up at Music Millennium, and you can learn more about SMYRC by visiting their website. Photo: SMYRC’s parade banner.
PeaceDriven Songwriting Awards -- Reviews With just a drum and stirring vocals, "Taking Our Freedom" draws you in and keeps your attention until the end. The lyrics are personal and socially charged and it's a very touching piece of music. Well done! "Little Silver Packets" is a yet another beautiful composition from Irina Rivkin. She writes purposeful songs and avoids the pitfalls of clichés. Her songs are unique, personal and heartfelt and immediately resonate with listeners. This song is very well done. "Katrina's Eye" is a fascinating song with an amazing social awareness. Its acoustic presentation fits perfectly with the deep lyrics that are delivered. This song stands out as one of the most moving songs written about the worst natural disaster in American history.
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