Formed by Buchbinder in 1988, and co-led by Dave Wall, The Flying Bulgar Klezmer Band was a product of the rebirth of interest in
Yiddish culture in North America. In 1988, they played its first concert at Toronto's famed Clinton's Tavern. That was followed by a 1989 show as part of the
Mariposa Folk Festival (to which it would return in 1992). In 1990, the band released its first (self-named) album. and performed at the Folk on the Rocks Festival in Yellowknife (it would return the following year). The album was nominated for Best World Beat Recording at the
Juno Awards of 1992. By 1993, the band name had been changed to The Flying Bulgars, and the band released its second album,
Agada. The album was very well received and was nominated for Best Global Recording at the
Juno Awards of 1994. The band toured in support of the album, appearing at the Vancouver Folk Festival and Mayfest Glasgow in 1994. In 1996, The Flying Bulgars released their third album
Fire, with the Yiddish singer
Adrienne Cooper. That year, with the popularity of the genre growing, the band played at Klezmer Mania! in Berkeley, California, and played shows in various North American cities. The band's fourth album,
Tsirkus, was released in 1999. Further, in 2000, they performed at New York's Bell Atlantic Jazz Festival. In March 2001, the Flying Bulgars were part of Toronto's Feast of the East festival; their performance was aired on
CBC Radio's
Play with
Jian Ghomeshi. In May 2002, the Flying Bulgars performed their show
Shekhine-Spirit in the Natural World before a sold-out crowd at Toronto's Isabel Bader Theatre. The concert (which featured guest artists
Jane Bunnett,
Levon Ichkhanian, Rick Shadrach Lazar, Stephen Donald and Alex Poch-Goldin) was the group's first theatrical presentation, melding music, poetry and visual elements (stage design and video). A recording of this work, produced by David Travers-Smith and featuring new compositions by every band member, was released in June 2003 as
Sweet Return.
Sweet Return received rave reviews and was nominated as World Music Album of the Year at the
Juno Awards of 2004. In 2004, the band started off with an appearance as a headliner at the Chutzpah! Festival in Vancouver. It played at Ottawa's Tulip Festival, the Nova Scotia Multicultural Festival,
Festival d'été de Québec and, back in British Columbia, the Mission Folk Festival. The Flying Bulgars have toured throughout Canada, and performed internationally, including at the
WOMAD festival in Morcombe, England, and the
Tollwood Festival in Munich. They also participated annually in the Ashkenaz Festival in Toronto, a festival of Jewish culture which was founded by David Buchbinder and is one of the world's most prestigious festivals of its kind. The Bulgars sixth studio album,
Tumbling Into Light, was released on November 10, 2009. The recording was produced by David Newfeld and engineered by Jeremy Darby at Toronto's Canterbury Music Company. On January 31, 2010, the band staged a multi-media, multi-disciplinary performance of
Tumbling Into Light featuring
Andrea Mann (dance),
Bruce McDonald (film) and Lorenzo Savoini (design) at the
Young Centre for the Performing Arts. It was directed by McDonald, and co-produced by the band, McDonald and
BravoFACT. The Flying Bulgars disbanded in 2010 but, on February 3, 2018, they played a show to mark the 30th anniversary of their first performance at Clinton's Tavern. ==Discography==