After living in Rome, London and Munich, Turkish-born Duygu Gün landed in the Mission in 2016 and set out to find her people.
Born and raised in the southeastern city of Mersin on the Mediterranean, she grew up in a world where identities were often multifarious and buffeted by turbulent history, with a paternal line hailing from Crete. The guitarist and vocalist “was trying to find a community,” she said in a recent conversation from her new home in Bernal Heights.
“I missed Europe and that intercultural environment, and then I saw a Kafana Balkan party, but it was sold out,” said Gün, referring to a monthly Balkan music showcase that has long served as a hub for the Bay Area scene (while often attracting top musicians from New York and beyond). Even though she couldn’t get into the event at the Rickshaw Stop, Gün connected with some fellow musicians and started sitting in at the Sunday Balkan jam sessions at (now sadly defunct) Revolution Café.
“I found the people,” she said, admitting she’s still surprised “that the scene is so vibrant. It’s hard to find these jams in Turkey. It’s so interesting to find it here.”
Gün, whose name is pronounced doo-EE-goo Goon, didn’t just find a scene here. She’s playing a key role in celebrating and championing it as the creative director of the feature-length documentary “Balkancisco,” which makes its theatrical U.S. premiere Sunday, June 23 at Gray Area’s Grand Theater.
Directed by Tugrul Sarikaya, “Balkancisco” explores the Bay Area’s contemporary Balkan music scene, which brings together musicians born to the overlapping traditions in former the Ottoman Empire territories of Bulgaria, Greece, Turkey and the former Yugoslav republics, as well as American musicians drawn to Roma and Balkan music. While the fractious history and competing nationalisms of Southern Europe gave birth to the concept of balkanization, in the diaspora the shared musical heritage serves as a binding force.
“Our music is so mixed, it’s hard to tell where it’s from, sometimes,” Gün said. “Roma people travel all the time. There’s this maqam influence with different scales” from classical Arabic music. “That’s why it feels like home for a lot of people.”
A Mission nonprofit that supports multi-disciplinary collaboration in the neighborhood, Gray Area is hosting the “Balkancisco” event, which kicks off at 4 p.m. with a Q&A led by Gün, and the screening followed by a procession to Bissap Baobab led by the 10-piece Balkan brass band Fanfare Zambaleta.