Papadakis plays his Syrtós Rodopianós
with laouto player Stelios Lainakis
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The life history of Kostas "Naftis" Papadakis develops uniquely after
a conventional beginning. His learning violin and its repertory
within his family, then becoming a professional player, follow a pattern found in many Mediterranean regions,
apart from his performing at feasts for money at an early age.
Papadakis would probably have remained in Crete and continued
performing as a demotic musician but for the vendetta involving
his family, which forced him into long periods of emigration.
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Papadakis & self-portait depicting him wearing traditional Cretan man's costume, symbol of his allegiance to local tradition
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As an emigrant, Papadakis was obliged to recycle himself as a musician.
Since he could not earn a living performing Cretan music in Athens,
he became a rebetis. Then he became an interpreter of Panhellenic
repertory for communities of the Greek diaspora during his American
period. To play music is not a question of identity or nostalgia
for him, but a profession, and Papadakis adapts himself to the market
demands in the different kinds of realities where it happens
that he lives. Thus, he changed instrument and repertory according
to the different circumstances, and at the same time his status
changed from the respectable musician of the Cretan villages
to the member of the musical sub-culture of Athens' underground,
and then to a full-time professional who toured throughout the
world.
Yet Papadakis
did not lose his first and basic identity; in the final part of
his story, he ends his career fighting in defense of his true
instrument, the violin, and its repertory of Cretan dances. His
deep feeling of belonging to a tradition was not destroyed, but
perhaps reinforced by his manifold experiences.
Sharing other musical cultures seems to have let Pakadakis become more
aware of the dignity and importance of his native one. His resistance
against the remodelling enacted by mass media arises out of this
awareness, which finally transforms the musician into a sort of
historian.
The life history of Kostas "Naftis" Papadakis gives
evidence of the active role which may be assumed by musicians
within a society. His living "within" history, experiencing
and sharing the main musical practices of his time and even engaging
in a fight against an action of remodelling, lead us far from
the stereotype of the passive and conservative folk musician and
leave us aware of the way music makers perceive, interpret and act on the social contexts where it happens that they live.
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