| “I don’t feel ‘home’ anywhere” says Antun Opic.  With his dual origins from both Germany  and Croatia,  the singer-songwriter lets his sense of rootlessness feed into his work as an  artist to create an opus born from the amalgamation of all his musical  influences. As varied in musical style as it is in national inspiration, the  album “has nothing to do with Balkan music”, a point which Antun hastens to  make clear – his music draws on ideas from many different sources without  hierarchy. Having gathered intimate knowledge of performance  through his time touring with the punk cabaret group “Strom & Wasser”,  Antun returns with a solo project formed in collaboration with his old guitar  teacher Tobias Kavelar and acoustic bassist Horst Fritscher. His eponymous trio  constitutes the core ensemble, which according to the spirit of the album  occasionally flexes to include other guest instrumentalists.    Indeed, versatility is an important part of  Antun’s musical ethos – he plays an unconventional blend of world music, blues,  and pop; allowing blaring trumpets to meet a swinging banjo, while gospel  choirs are jubilating in the background. Sometimes the guitar  romanticises in the style of Django  Reinhardt, sometimes, it devotedly enthrals the listener in the manner of Paco  de Lucia. In some of his songs, Antun Opic includes passionate gypsy and fiery  flamenco only to recall Paul Simon's African borrowings in others.   The particular nature of the band also enables  adaptibility – playing both acoustically and with amplification, their music  can encapsulate and transmit a panoply of different atmospheres, through “blind  understanding” (T. Kavelar). Nevertheless, it is not through the desire to  touch a wider audience that Antun Opic chooses to sing in English as opposed to  his native German or Croatian – the reasoning is twofold. As well as being the  lingua franca for the Anglo-American pop/rock genre which “has been inspiring  him ever since his early youth”, English also provides for Antun the doorway to  a “new soul” through which he can write with some objective distance.   The stage characters Antun creates may be as he  puts it “people you wouldn’t really want to know”, as is the case with his  track The Informer, but perhaps this too is at the essence of Antun Opic’s  appeal – he writes as the lingering one percent of our minds which we try to  ignore. He writes from a multinational outlook with a result that evades  geographical or genre classification, and approaches timelessness.    Having released his first demo album on his own  digital record label “Antuned”, his self-produced debut “No Offense” will  finally follow this year in summer. |