A Celebration of Folk Music

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PreviousAugust 2029
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From the dance house to world music

 

Every year since 2008, this festive gala of Hungarian folk and world music has filled Müpa Budapest to bursting. On this occasion, the evening will be framed by the Moldavian and Gyimes dance house music of Róbert Kerényi and the Szigony Band, while the still-youthful musicians of the Sarjú Band are also experienced dance house performers. Géza Fábri and Balázs “Dongó” Szokolay will present their folk-inspired music, the result of 30 years of collaboration and improvisation. Cimbaliband, which blends Eastern European vibes with folk music, arrives with its rarely heard Diva program featuring Ágnes Herczku. The new threesome of Szilvia Bognár, Bori Magyar, and Ági Szalóki also promises an exciting musical treat, one that radiates the joy and power of singing together. Balkan Union, led by guitarist-singer Csaba Tóth Bagi and expanded to include Branka Básits and Dávid Eredics, will present their new album at the gala.

Program and cast

Balkan Union:

vocals - Branka Básits

guitar, vocals - Csaba Tóth Bagi

saxophone, clarinet, kaval, traditional wind instruments - Dávid Eredics

drums, percussion - Ákos Kertész

bass guitar - László Máthé

 

Cimbaliband:

cimbalom, vocals - Balázs Unger

guitar, vocals - Kornél Varga

violin - Máté Solymosi

double bass - Gergely Tóth

drums, vocals - Lőrinc Babos

vocals, rhythm instruments - Ágnes Herczku

 

Szilvia Bognár, Bori Magyar, and Ági Szalóki:

vocals - Szilvia Bognár

vocals - Bori Magyar

vocals - Ági Szalóki

double bass - Zoltán Kovács

cobza, vocals - Géza Fábri

recorder, bagpipes, saxophone - Balázs “Dongó” Szokolay

 

Corpus Trombone Quartet:

András Sütő
Péter Pálinkás
András Pálfy
Gábor Hegyi

 

Sarjú Band:

violin, folk viola - László Hajdu-Németh Jr.

violin, accordion, gardon - Balázs Hajdu-Németh

vocals, violin - Tibor Gál

cimbalom - Áron Horváth

folk viola, violin - Szabolcs Szilágyi

double bass - Bendegúz Csoóri

artistic director - Barbara Kuczera

Palace of Arts Müpa Budapest

When Müpa Budapest, Hungary and its capital's new cultural hub, opened in 2005, it was built to represent more than 100 years of Hungarian cultural history. As a conglomeration of cultural venues, the building has no precedent in 20th century Hungarian architecture and has no peers in the whole of Central Europe.


The creators of this ambitious project, the Trigránit Development Corporation, prime contractor Arcadom Construction and the Zoboki, Demeter and Partners Architectural Office, were driven by the desire to create a new European cultural citadel as part of the new Millennium City Centre complex along the UNESCO World Heritage-listed Danube waterfront. The result is a facility whose construction quality, appearance, functionality and 21st century technological infrastructure makes it ideally suited to productions of the highest standard. The building is also highly versatile and equipped to host performances of any genre and almost any scale.

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