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On May: Budapest Folk Fest – The real revival of traditional culture

folk festival budapest knap zoltán

Budapest Folk Fest is a celebration of cultural diversity in the Carpathian Basin and its roots.

In Budapest many different cultures meet, this city has a live folk tradition, since the music and dances originally played in the villages has now living on in the city through vivid dance houses, world music concerts, urban folk goups: is a real revival of traditional culture. Authentic folk music, gispy songs and dances, urban folk and world music, dances houses, kinds of music from Central and Eastern Europe and some guest from outside are all welcome at Budapest Folk Fest.

Venue: Budapest, Hungary – Fonó Music Hall, Hungarian Heritage House, Kobuci Kert
Date: 22-25 May, 2019

Budapest Folk Fest – Programs

Wednesday 22 May

Dance Teaching and Festival Opening Concert
Venue: Fonó Music Hall

18:30 Festival Opening Concert, Guest: Bazseva band feat. Dalinda
Ticket price: HUF 1000

Thursday 23 May

20.00 III. Meybahar evening – “Ek vatheon”(GR) K.Tapakis, N.Paraoulakis, L.Metaxas, Meybahar
Venue: Fonó Music Hall

Voices of Minorities:

19.00: EtnoRom
20.30: Goran Bojcevski Quartet (SLO), Refugees For Refugees (BE)
Venue: Hungarian Heritage House (Hagyományok Háza)

19.00 Concert and Dance House: Erdőfű Kamarazenekar, Pásztor Hóra
Venue: Kobuci kert

Friday 24 May

19.00 Levente Vaszi Album Release, Berka Dance House
Venue: Fonó Music House

19.00: Melinda Balogh Album Release
20.30: Voice of Minorities: Klarisa Jovanovic & Della Segodba (SLO), SuRealistas (IT)
Venue: Hungarian Heritage House (Hagyományok Háza)

19.00 Meszecsinka, Tribali (M), SelectorKA
Venue: Kobuci kert

Saturday 25 May

20:00 Turkish evening – Canlar feat. Erdal Salikoglu (TR) and Guessous Majda Mária; Vardan Hovanissian & Emre Gültekin
Venue: Fonó Music House

16.00 Muharay Elemér Népművészeti Szövetség Gala Performance
18.00 ball and dance house
Venue: Hungarian Heritage House (Hagyományok Háza)

19.00 Juan De Lerida (FR) and His Guests, Marko Markovic Brass Band (SRB), Babra
Venue: Kobuci kert

Folk Music Concerts on the Danube (Showcase organised by Hungarian Heritage House)
Venue: TRIP Ship

folk festival budapest knap zoltán
Photo: Zoltán Knap

Locations:
Fonó Music Hall
1116 Budapest, Sztregova u. 3.

Hungarian Heritage House
1011 Budapest, Corvin tér 8.

Kobuci Kert
1033 Budapest, Fő tér 1.

Get more information HERE.

Orchestra surprises everyone in Szeged library! – Video!

Szeged University trumpet flashmob

An orchestra surprised everyone in Szeged Science University’s library when they all of a sudden started to blow their trumpets and hit the drums. See one of the best flashmobs of 2019 below.

A Hungarian news website called Szeretlekmagyarország posted the video on Szeged Science University’s Facebook page. This video went viral on the internet, 142 thousand people have seen it, and over one thousand shared it.

The band is called SunCity Brass, and they play electro bass.

Let’s look at the video:

 

We can see how the students are reading quietly and unsuspectingly, but then a guy starts to pound the top of his head with a heavy book (!). Shortly after this, others join, too, and they start to drum on the library tables with their books or hands. These noises are strange at first, but the whole mess of noises starts to resemble a catchy song’s rhythm.

All other students are looking confused, some even disturbed, when the whole music starts.

[button link=”https://dailynewshungary.com/this-is-a-hungarian-virtue-an-amazing-flashmob-in-debrecen-video/” type=”big” color=”red” newwindow=”yes”] Amazing Hungarian flashmob in Debrecen Mall![/button]

The rest of the band was hiding their trumpets under the tables, and they start to blow them, too. Six trumpeters are now blowing their instruments, and you can recognise the beat of Camila Cabello’s Havana.

People are now recording on phones – probably sending this library sensation on Messenger, Snapchat or whatever other social media they use.

A couple of girls are starting to dance around to the music, following the band while they transfer to another popular song: Ricky Martin – Livin’ la Vida Loca.

All of the trumpeters are going upstairs to meet the drummer on the second floor’s corridor facing the library’s hall.

SunCityBrass consists of three trumpeters, two trombonists, two tuba players, one MC and, last but not least, a drummer.

This performance surely surprised a lot of students who were studying at the library, but hopefully, they were not disturbed. 🙂

[button link=”https://dailynewshungary.com/darth-vader-dancing-at-the-budapest-airport-epic-star-wars-flashmob-video/” type=”big” newwindow=”yes”] Darth Vader dancing at Budapest Airport! -Epic flashmob Video![/button]

Featured image: youtube.com

Join the traditional Hungarian Busó festival in Mohács

#mohács #busó #hungary #carnival

Hungary’s most famous carnival is currently taking place in the city of Mohács (Southern Hungary). This year, 1600 Busó’s are walking the streets, while about 80-100 thousand visitors are visiting the city during these days.

Busójárás or Busó-walking is an old, traditional custom at carnival time, held every year at the end of February and to until Shrove Tuesday. At this time of the year people are on the streets, dancing and singing and making a street-procession, many of which people are dressed in frightening, monster-like masks and fur coats.

According to hvg.hu’s report, this year a record-high number of 1600 people are going to be dressed up as a Busó, and 80-100 thousand visitors are expected.

From the 28th of February to 5th of March, the 6-day-long festival includes 80 programs in 35 locations within the city.

On Shrove Tuesday, the usual programs will be held, such as:

Coffin-burning (which symbolises the ‘death’ of winter), carnival street-procession, folk singing competition, dancing performances and mask-making lessons from the best mask-carvers of Hungary.

The very first memo of a busó-walking ceremony is from 1783, and it is originated from the ‘sokác’ ethnic group (or Šokci in Croatian). Legend has it that during the time of the Turkish occupation, the ‘sokác’ ethnic group were trying to find hideaways from the Turkish soldiers. When they found Mohács Island as a hiding place, the sokác dressed up in masks and disguise to scare the superstitious Turkish away from the island. The Turkish were rushing away, and supposedly this is the precise origin of the busó-walking in Mohács.

[button link=”https://dailynewshungary.com/buso-festival-drove-away-winter-photo-gallery/” type=”big” newwindow=”yes”] Photo gallery: Buso festival in 2018[/button]

Featured image: MTI/ Tamás Sóki 

The New York Times amazed by Recirquel Company Budapest

nonsolus recirquel budapest circus

The performances of Recirquel Company Budapest captivate all spectators. They take you on a relaxing journey where you can enjoy a story told through acrobatics and ballet.

The New York Times writes about Non Solus, the latest show performed by the Recirquel Company Budapest, commenting that “a dancer becomes an acrobat, and an acrobat becomes a dancer” in this spectacle.

The American newspaper has contacted Bence Vági, Non Solus’s choreographer and director, and Renátó Illés, one of the acrobats, as the performance is on show at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.

Non Solus (Not Alone) translates the story of the body (Gábor Zsíros) and soul (Renátó Illés) travelling together from birth to death into the language of aerial dancing, electronic music and Bach.

Vági was inspired by the transcendental silence that surrounded him while watching the sunset in the Atacama Desert in Chile.

He compared the desert to the theatre, as both are vast, empty places where one is left alone with their thoughts.

Vági told The New York Times that acrobatics and circus performances carry a lot of danger, and a good grip is extremely important, as a performer is literally holding someone else’s life in their hands. Even though training begins with a period where mats are placed underneath the tightrope, this safety aid is later removed, so acrobats are left with nothing else but focus and trust in each other. Because of the complexity of the choreography and also because of safety reasons, pairing two people for a 60-minute show is very much like pairing sportspeople for the Olympics.

[button link=”https://dailynewshungary.com/exciting-things-to-do-in-budapest-in-february/” color=”silver” newwindow=”yes”] You can check out the company’s production entitled My Land until the 22nd of February at the Palace of Arts in Budapest[/button]

The choreographer finds that live danger makes the performance much more exciting for the audience: “In circus, you see performers doing things that you think are not possible to do. They are superheroes.”

Illés said that dangerous tricks make one an admirable and skilled acrobat, but not necessarily an exceptional performer.

Non Solus presents the intertwining of body and soul and the connection between dance and circus. Vági studied ballet and has a background in dancing, and despite great interest in the circus, he was never a member of a circus company. As he was fascinated by the mechanisms of a circus, he researched the history of the circus, eventually incorporating circus elements and the atmosphere of a circus into a dance show, creating Recirquel seven years ago. Vági claims that the circus is an ancient art form that demands and deserves a tremendous amount of respect.

He described the way the Non Solus dance is infused with the traditional circus in the following manner: “It’s a show with only two people, but actually the set multiplies everything,” he said. “It is constructed with mirrored walls that face or tilt toward the audience. So it always reflects an image of the choreography.

“Even in this show, we have the mirrors and this 360-degree perspective, so the ancient magic of circus comes back to us.”

In addition, he stated that in these past years, circus schools in Montreal, Belgium or in Budapest had allowed more and more movement, and this freedom of movement created abstraction and, with that, more story.

However, there is a significant difference between dance and circus acrobatics, even though both are theatre genres. A theatre performance cannot work without communication, but while dance can speak through its broad vocabulary thanks to the various styles, the circus is limited, since the performer is 10 metres high in the air, balancing on a tightrope: not much movement is allowed up there since balance is of key importance. Lately, the circus has become a lot like dancing, but at the end of the day, the danger factor is still there. With dancing, one can get injured, but their life is never at stake.

featured image: https://vimeo.com/315586873

Check out the new National Dance Theatre building – PHOTOS

new national dance theatre

President János Áder on Friday evening inaugurated the new building of the National Dance Theatre in Budapest’s Millenáris Park as part of the opening gala for the Budapest Dance Festival.

In his speech, Áder said the new theatre’s mission will be to “represent, give space, present, captivate, educate and initiate” by becoming the home of top, internationally renowned Hungarian dance ensembles.

“It should be a place where culture is formed, shaped and invigorated,” the president said.

The new National Dance Theatre, which was reconstructed from an industrial building, cost 4.6 billion forints (EUR 14.4m) and was financed from state funds.

Its two halls have a combined seating capacity of around 500.

Featured image: MTI

Success! Hungarian theatre group Attraction amazes American judges! – VIDEO

america's got talent, attraction, success

The Hungarian shadow theatre company, Attraction, became world-famous when they appeared on Britain’s Got Talent in 2013 and won the series. Their win was especially incredible since they became the first (and as of now, only), foreign act to win the talent show. Now, they are determined to win over the U.S., too, and they seem to be on the right path for that.

Attraction are currently on the series of America’s Got Talent, the only ones representing Hungary. This past Tuesday, they got a standing ovation after their performance on the show – reports Szeretlekmagyarorszag. Fifty different acts from 184 nations got the chance to present something, and the Hungarian group won the approval of the American audience (and the judges).

The founder and leader of the group, Zoltán Szűcs, believes that

“If you are talented and good, you will sooner or later reach your goals, and people will pay attention to you.”

This has certainly worked for the group so far. In 2013, they made history by being the first foreign act to win Britain’s Got Talent. Later, in 2018, they also won Britain’s Got Talent World Cup, winning the judges’ approval over all the other acts of the last twelve years. Now, they are the only Hungarian group in the American talent show, and they also get numerous invites to other prestigious events from all over the world.

Check out their amazing performance below:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VgobOISXoFs

For more news, check out this article about the girl who mesmerised the America’s Got Talent judges last year.

Featured image: facebook.com/pg/AttractionLatvanyszinhaz

Traditional ways to say Goodbye to Winter: Carnival time in Hungary!

busójárás festival Mohács Hungary

Carnival is all about joy, entertainment, having fun and preserving the carnival rituals in Hungary. The whole point of carnivals was to oust winter and warmly welcome the new season: spring. Officially, carnival season is from Twelfth Day (5th or 6th January) to the last week before Lent. During ‘carnival tail’,  one can carouse and have lots of fun loudly. Carnival’s most attractive and spectacular part is when people parade in fancy or scary masquerades.

There are a couple of Hungarian traditions to chase away winter and welcome spring. The most well-known is busójárás and tikverőzés. Besides these two, other old Hungarian traditions are still alive, szeretlekmagyarorszag.hu gathered some unique Hungarian festivals at this time of year.

WHEN IS IT?

Officially, in 2019, carnival season is from Twelfth Day (5th or 6th January) to the 6th of March. The first day of carnival tail is ‘Carnival Sunday’. This day used to be the day of choosing one’s mate. The girls sent bouquets of posy to those boys whom they liked, and the boys put that girl’s bouquet on their hat that they liked back. So, this is how the young boys and girls chose each other as mates.

The second day (Monday) was women’s carnival day; the day when women could carouse and drink alcohol just like men.

The last day of carnival tail, Shrove Tuesday, marks the beginning of Lent, the 40-day fasting period before Easter. This year, Shrove Tuesday is on the 5th of March 2019.

the.history.of.european.carnival-Lingelbach_Karneval_in_Rome
Painting ‘Karneval in Rom’ circa 1650

TIKVERŐZÉS IN MOHA:

Moha has a history with its tradition ‘tikverőzés that is on Shrove Tuesday. Boys wear masquerades as clowns with rag tapes or chimney sweeps. They go from house to house and gather eggs from hen-houses. The clowns imitate beating the hens to make them ‘more fertile’. The chimney sweeps make everyone’s clothes sooty. These guests drink wine and eat doughnuts.

The citizens of Moha still preserve their habits even today. The ‘tikverőzés’ made its way to the National Cultural and Intellectual Heritage List in 2011.

Tikverőzés’ is on the 5th of March 2019 in Moha.

BUSÓ WALKING IN MOHÁCS:

The tradition called ‘busó walking‘ in Mohács is probably the most famous Hungarian folk custom to oust winter. People walk around and sing in horrifying wooden masks and in fur coats. They also make a parade with loud music and ‘busó dance’. At the end of the day, busós burn a coffin that symbolises winter.

Legend has it that the natives chased away the Turkish during the night, so ‘busójárás’ in Mohács is also linked to chasing away the Turkish nation from Hungary.

UNESCO in 2009 enrolled ‘busójárás’ in the representative list of the Spiritual Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

Busójárás in Mohács is held between February 28th and March 5th.

CARNIVAL TAIL FESTIVAL IN SZENTENDRE:

In the city centre of Szentendre, a festival similar to the Venice Carnival is held, with masquerades, stunts, music and folk music. After dark, the Main Square is lit up when the torch parade begins, and the fire jugglers start to make their spectacular show.

The Carnival in Szentendre is on the 2nd-3rd of March 2019.

Szentendre Carnival short film from 2017:

TRADITIONAL CARNIVAL IN PANYOLA:

The tradition of ousting winter from the small village ‘Panyola’ is becoming more and more popular. The day starts with traditional pig slaughters, then comes the next program: drinking Panyola pálinka, eating the pork, and then it is time for the parade with masquerades. There is also a little storytelling chat night about the old traditions, playing films, photo exhibitions, a doughnut contest with tasting, concerts and dancing.

The Panyola Carnival is on the 9th of February 2019.

https://www.facebook.com/panyolafesztival/photos/bc.AbopVeq5eEp9MCdv0lbJmqNsDfdQx00jG5yuS04LMOVZf1IKq2jtHYONCDoSX4jGt2v6AUdFzqay1_GmaFoB5oLzIV_H0XnTb9xDg46dPNyYnyENMx4Dhr4NZeniXvI2pyEk2j5JUnlu5fNqwbPpEB8Qdv1SAzpYP8ht4dCcxbil5VGFzuiNVlYX6GedsE96Fhrr9HK8YwMnDr4WJcBQF5zE/764978040554172/?type=1&opaqueCursor=AbpHaOrpg02Rdf1ezVBG_ckeuRcdLJXm2opMLLU0wALahjKlmTllSpasHYF2hfZs4Ygb-GfOM9DVYnCB3nKCIaoZ1kU6igL7yxj5sG-AnszhT5g1wyyKrrbpqKuD8PkB-UqUV4gZX2Z217bQ1E3JxXxPawSN0sURjpu-V15aiB0G8pgzxG-dZOqlDeTreJ6yHoySxQ-3veA4bk8SN1EA6Wd7p9PV2sFF4boVgWG3mldjLH1onDxQt_26df6G41o_n5vMmT4hpQAQ4e4tR4_yDCaXH56H5jY5dmL-3gaDbP2yoiSPua9Nma3zflCEofcrqYNGb6YENNY0R5ZiNMvZqC3cgSN7keNuVzqVwW3FvgFP7Oi0PZi1xfBlNYspk_aKeiczTohNQXr6VsGRf-I_avy1PgH3RcB_H0MqobSJryQCUf77UbrkMSfrcUArCVEa-s_3vkX5cfvo9Tef5dW499WUm4iDdFRLI2Ygie7XkiWlYUPOnZoyonD0FFGg2N54xRFf4dzrMcxCrgSj1gwi7BeS&theater

THE FUNERAL OF WINTER IN TIHANY:

There is a solemn event in Tihany, where the participants can travel around the town making lots of noise. There is also a very fun event called Tihany New Wine Competition – people taste mulled wine at this event.

The funeral of winter in Tihany is on the 23rd of February 2019.

Photo: Alpár Kató – Daily News Hungary

English-language webpage makes Hungarian folk dance popular in the world – Videos

I Dance Hungary, dance, folk, music, culture

The brand-new Internet webpage called I Dance Hungary was established to help Hungarian communities who do not necessarily speak Hungarian to get closer to the culture and tradition of the Hungarian folk dance.

Origo reported that the new webpage started operating on Friday and, besides making the folk dance culture popular, it also brings Hungarian culture in general closer to anyone who visits this site. Mihály Kovács-Rosonczy, the founder of the webpage, said that:

“The Hungarian folk music and dance are treasures which help to understand our national culture.”

Orsolya Karlócai, the manager of the Friends of Hungary Foundation which helped in establishing this brand-new project, said that the aim of this webpage was to create a bridge between the Carpathian Basin and Hungarian people living abroad and to shape Hungary’s look in foreigners’ eyes. She also reported that:

Hungarian folk dance is the main component of this bridge, creating an opportunity for everyone to learn about Hungary, even non-Hungarian speakers as well.”

I Dance Hungary’s webpage offers English-language learning videos about Hungarian folk dances with exemplary Hungarian folk dancers who help to teach the first steps of folk dance to everyone who is interested in dancing. The music is provided by well-known Hungarian folk musicians who play the most popular Hungarian folk songs.

These videos also feature special scenes where people can learn about the Hungarian region where the folk dance is from.

https://www.facebook.com/idancehungary/videos/389966081815557/

Coordinator of the Rákóczi Association Alejandra Brum, who is from Uruguay, said that her parents emigrated to South-America one hundred years ago from Hungary, and they do not speak the language anymore, neither does she. When she was eight years old, her mother took her to a Hungarian folk dance class in Montevideo, and Brum loved every moment of it.

“I fell in love with Hungarian culture. I learned the Hungarian language and moved here when I was eighteen years old. It is important to pass down the tradition of Hungarian folk dance to the next generation.”

Featured image: www.facebook.com/idancehungary

Hungarian folk dancers went out dancing in London – VIDEO

Fricska, dancers, folk music

The Hungarian folk dance group called Fricska was invited to a private celebration at His Royal Highness Prince Charles’s birthday in the British capital where they also had the opportunity to meet Queen Elizabeth II.

According to szeretlekmagyarorszag.hu, the Hungarian folk dance group’s most memorable moment from Prince Charles’ birthday celebration is when they shook hands with Her Majesty The Queen.

Fricska was invited to this private occasion because the Royal Family loves and enjoys Hungarian folk music and folk dance and always insist on them at their celebrations. Hungarian folk music band called Szalonna és Bandája also performed for His Royal Highness.

Two members of the band, Bence Máté Papp and Bálint Gergely Papp, said that it was an amazing and unforgettable experience.

“We were completely astonished when we entered Buckingham Palace. Everything was golden, and the walls were covered with enormous paintings. Beautiful crystal chandeliers were hanging on the ceiling, and we saw an enormous pipe organ in the throne room.” – said the boys.

After their performance, they met Queen Elizabeth II who congratulated them.

“Her Majesty even asked me whether my hands hurt after the performance. It was incredible how genial she was.” – said Máté Bence Papp.

Before the performance, they also conquered the streets of London with their Hungarian folk dance choreographies.

http://www.facebook.com/fricskatancegyuttes/videos/2223760104523895/

 

Máté Bence Papp is an acquaintance of mine and told me more about their visit to London. Their accommodation was at the Hotel Ritz which is separated from the Royal Palace with only one park. They have never stayed in such luxurious conditions as the hotel has. He added that everyone treated them well and they received a warm welcome from the moment they arrived in London.

Before their performance, they had to learn the Royal protocol and were also warned not to dance too harshly because Queen Elizabeth II might get frightened. Her Majesty was sitting and watching their performance from approximately two metres.

“We are used to our dynamic dancing, so we started off as we usually do. After the first harsh clap, I saw that the Queen got frightened a bit. That was the moment when I truly realised who we are dancing for in a place which has more than a thousand-year-old history“  – added Máté.

The group has been dancing together since 2009. Besides London, they have performed in several significant cities like New York City, Düsseldorf, Rio de Janeiro, Beijing, Monte-Carlo and Paris. Their name, Fricska, means game: performing authentic Hungarian folk dance in a modern way.

Fricska, dance, Buckingham, London
Photo: www.facebook.com/fricskatancegyuttes

Featured image: www.facebook.com/fricskatancegyuttes

Hungarian State Folk Ensemble: Wonderful Nativity

Hungarian National dance Ensemble

As the holidays are approaching, Hungarian theatres and cultural institutuions start sharing their Christmas offers. Let us highlight a fascinating family and youth event by the Hungarian State Folk Ensemble and Müpa Budapest.

The Hungarian Folk Ensemble’s exciting premiere production presents Christmas Eve, the Christmas vigil and the joy and excitement of waiting, the games and traditions of folk origins and the Christian tradition of welcoming the birth of Jesus, as well as the fairytale-like, magical stories which have developed around this day.

The audience will have the chance to live through the joyful moments of the last day of advent, from early morning to late evening, from the magical creation of snow by the fairies at dawn to the secret meeting of the snowmen,

the preparation of magical honey-scented Christmas foods and the ceremony of setting up and decorating the Christmas tree.

With no little humour, the emboldened horses pulling a sleigh, the fierce snowball battles and the paired ice dancers make up the Nativity procession, one of the most popular mystery plays of the Christmas period, where all participants in this magical journey come together at the end of the performance to experience together sincere joy at the arrival of the Redeemer, the incarnation of the Son of God.

The Hungarian State Folk Ensemble’s advent dance drama in seven parts (Hótündérek tánca; Csusszan a szánkó; HTT – Hóemberek Titkos Találkozója; Csilingelő lovas szán; Süssünk, süssünk valamit; Szabad-e bejönni ide betlehemmel?; Jaj, de szép a karácsonyfa) create a genuine festive atmosphere, bringing us closer to the secrets of Christmas and reminding us of that childhood joy of anticipation.

This performance is recommended for families.

The première is a co-production of Müpa Budapest, Hungarian State Folk Ensemble and the Hungarian Heritage House.

Date: 21 December, 2018, Friday, 6 pm-7:15 pm

Click HERE for ticket information!

Featured image: www.facebook.com/MagyarNemzetiTáncegyüttes

This is a Hungarian virtue! An amazing flashmob in Debrecen – VIDEO

Three Hungarian cities, Debrecen, Győr and Veszprém have submitted bids for Europe’s 2023 Cultural Capital title.

The three cities in the east, northwest and west, respectively, were selected by a body of the European Commission in February this year based on preliminary plans for a one-year cultural programme.

Representatives of the selection committee will now visit each city and make a final decision at a session on December 13-14.

Debrecen 2023 – Flashmob

Debrecen 2023 presents: Flashmob by Hajdú Folk Dance Ensemble of Debrecen and Pendely Vocal Ensemble.

Location: downtown market hall. Debrecen, 2018

 

The song in English:
“On the top of tower of Ladány
A raven sits in pure black.
That raven, my love, mourns us,
They want, but they can’t, forbid us from each other.

There is a house in the Ladány village.
I’m going there, even my heart hurts.
Every time I pass by this house
Every time, my little angel, I think of you”

The song in Hungarian:
A ladányi, a ladányi torony tetejébe 
Ül egy holló tiszta feketébe. 
Az a holló, sej-haj babám minket gyászol, 
El akarnak, de nem tudnak tiltani egymástól. 

A ladányi faluvégen áll egy cserepes ház. 
Abba járok, még a szívem is fáj. 
Valahányszor arra megyek el előtte, 
Mindannyiszor kisangyalom, te jutsz az eszembe.

Cultural Capital is a European Union initiative aimed at highlighting shared cultural characteristics across the community, while promoting cultural diversity as well as the international character of cities through culture.

Get more details here:
https://m.facebook.com/pendelyenekegyuttes
https://www.facebook.com/hajdufolk/
https://www.facebook.com/2023debrecen/


HUNGARIAN FOLKLORE FLASH MOB AT THE BUDAPEST’S DANUBE PROMENADE – VIDEO

flash mob budapest

The winners of Petőfi and Kőrösi Program’s scholarships organized a flash mob at Budapest’s Danube Promenade. A group of Hungarian dancers and musicians, called Műegyetemi Néptáncegyüttes helped them to do a spectacular choreography, and we are sure that they have done a great job. Watch out this flashmob HERE.


DARTH VADER DANCING AT THE BUDAPEST AIRPORT?! – EPIC STAR WARS FLASHMOB VIDEO

Star Wars flashmob Budapest Airport

The KLM Royal Dutch Airlines organised a unique flashmob at the Liszt Ferenc Airport to commemorate the International Star Wars Day (May the fourth). VIDEO HERE.

Traditional Hungarian folk dance types – VIDEOS

folk dance

Like many other nations, Hungarians have always been very proud of their traditional folk dance. Every year, there are folk dance festivals organised all over the country to keep the tradition alive and celebrate those fantastic dance groups who practice the oldest forms of folk dance today. Let us take a look at the most well-known types of Hungarian folk dance.

Hungarian folk dance types can be divided into two major groups: the old style Hungarian dances and the new style Hungarian dances.

[button link=”https://dailynewshungary.com/from-hong-kong-to-kalotaszeg-hungarian-folk-dance-around-the-world/” type=”big” color=”lightblue” newwindow=”yes”] From Hong Kong to Kalotaszeg: Hungarian folk dance around the world[/button]

Old style Hungarian dances

Karikázó (the maiden’s round dance)

Karikázó is a really special type of folk dance, most popular in the southern and northern regions of the country. It is performed by women only, who form a circle and dance while being accompanied by the singing of folk songs.

In the past, this dance was often combined with children’s games, differentiating it from the chain dances of the Balkans. Karikázó was the main form of dancing in the Middle Ages in Europe. However, more modern pair or couple dances soon took the place of karikázó. Today, one can also see women doing the karikázó on rare, special occasions like national holidays or small town festivals.

Pásztortánc (Herdsmen’s Dances) and botoló (stick dance)

Both pásztortánc and botoló are (and used to be) performed by men. While men danced the pásztortánc, they were accompanied by bagpipes, shawms, fiddles, and drums.

The Botoló (Stick Dance) is a wild hajdú dance of the old times which used to be performed with the help of a stick. However, recreational folk dances are usually not done with a stick.

Legényes and ugrós (Lad’s and Leaping Dances)

The Legényes and the ugrós are men’s solo dances, very typical of the Kalotaszeg region of Transylvania. These types of dances are usually performed by young men, but older men can dance them as well. These are freestyle, solo dances usually performed in front of a band.

These dances are characterized by jumping, running and heel clicking. Until today, the legényes is still one of the most popular dances of the Hungarian peasantry. Sometimes women participate too, in the form of standing in lines on the side and singing verses while the man dances.

New style Hungarian dances

New style dances developed in the 18th and 19th centuries, characterised by Hungarian embroidered costumes and energetic music.

Verbunk (recruiting dance)

Verbunk is also a solo man’s dance which evolved from the recruitment process of the Austro-Hungarian army. When the Austro-Hungarian armies were established, many tools were used for recruitment purposes, including musical entertainments and jollifications. Trained recruitment professionals visited the smallest towns in the country, entertaining the local (often peasant) crowd, dancing and drinking, marketing how amazing army life is. A lot of young men were lured into a lifelong army contract this way.

The dance itself is often improvised. The verbunk is different from the ugrós-legényes in its musical accompaniment. Ugrós-legényes has a much faster tempo, it is more “old-school”, while the verbunk has a really even rhythm (every measure of the 4/4 beat is accented).

Csárdás

The csárdás dance can be traced back to the Renaissance period. Its music is very similar to that of the verbunk. Traditionally there are two types: the slow csárdás (which has an even rhythmic pattern) and the quick csárdás (which has an esztam (oom-pah) beat).

Csárdás has many variations. It is a couple dance, always danced in pairs. It is also improvised. The tempo of the csárdás starts slowly, and then has a gradually accelerating tempo.

Featured image: Budapesti Főváros Bartók Táncegyüttes/Facebook.com/bartokdance

Christianity to be theme of 2019/2020 Hungarian State Opera season

Budapest OPera

Christianity will be the highlighted topic of the Hungarian State Opera’s 2019/2020 season, director Szilveszter Ókovács told MTI.

The opera performances on the programme will deal with Christianity in a deep and thorough manner, Ókovács said. These will include not only Biblical stories, but operas that celebrate or even clash with Christianity, such as Wagner’s Tannhauser, he added.

The season will wind up in May 2020 with a Christianity-themed festival, held in the run-up to the 52nd International Eucharistic Conference which Budapest will host in September, he said.

Touching on the Hungarian State Opera’s autumn tour, Ókovács said the opera and the Hungarian State Ballet are scheduled for 14 performances of six productions at the David H Koch Theater in New York’s Lincoln Center. The chance to perform full productions in New York is a first for the opera and presents an “enormous opportunity”, he added.

Among the productions on the Lincoln Center programme is the iconic Hungarian opera Bánk bán, which will be sung on the 125th anniversary of the composer Ferenc Erkel’s death.

Between August 31 and September 9, the opera will bring Donizetti’s comic opera L’elisir d’amore, sung in Hungarian, to eight venues in Transylvania.

A specially outfitted lorry will serve as the stage for the production.

The opera will visit Italy, as part of the 2018/2019 Puccini’s Italy season, on September 14-20. It will perform in six cities, including Lucca, the birthplace of Puccini.

At the end of September, the opera will tour the capitals of the other Visegrád Group countries: Prague, Warsaw and Bratislava. Czech, Polish and Slovakian artists, as well as Hungarians, will take the stage together during the tour.

Featued image: www.facebook.com/Operaház

Hungarian girl with Down syndrome on stage

Tímea Bőczy can do a standing split while twirling a baton in her hand. She also has Down syndrome, but you cannot tell when she is on stage, reports abcug.hu.

She has been training for 14 years, since the time her trainer recognized her extraordinary talent. Her family is poor, she cannot pay tuition and her doctors and special needs teachers did not encourage her, yet here she is, winning competitions against healthy acrobats. 

Tímea has a moderate form of Down syndrome, but since she stepped foot in the gym at 5-years-old, it was clear that she was very talented. Her trainer is Beatrix Kovács, and when she asks Tímea to raise her leg higher or to stand up straight, she does it immediately. She has tremendous willpower.

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It is hard for her to speak, but she is always so happy. She is practically glowing when she gets a compliment. They are working with music, Tímea’s favorite is Coldplay. Her coach teaches a mixture of dance moves, drama, and acrobatic elements.

Artista gymnast circus Down syndrome
Photo: facebook.com

From the very first time, she was at least as good as the rest of the class, if not better, so she was never excluded from the group. She competes just like every other acrobat, she never got special treatment just because she has Down syndrome. The only thing that mattered was her knowledge. She won the Berczik Sára competition both in 2014 and this year, she got the Göllesz Viktor and MATEHETSZ scholarships, got special awards at talent shows and performed at the Circus Night in Zamárdi. 

She is experienced enough that sometimes she is asked to lead the training and be the coach. She is incredibly flexible and she moves beautifully and with strength. When you are seeing her perform, it is easy to forget that she has Down Syndrome. Her coach said: “My goal was for the audience to not realize that she has disabilities.”

Because of her success, Tímea does not frequent competitions that are organized for people with disabilities. She is always competing against healthy people. 

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Despite her talent, it was not always easy to get Tímea the training she wanted. Her father died, she has two other siblings, and her mother would not have the money to enroll her in intensive training classes if she did not get help form Beatrix and others.

Another problem was that Tímea’s doctors did not support her doing acrobatics. One of the common physical signs of Down Syndrome include poor muscle tone and loose ligaments, and her doctors thought it would not be good for her to exercise heavily. Today it seems like those classes that she did several times every week helped her develop some serious muscles.

She is also capable of remembering complex choreography, or she could improvise if the situation called for it. She also learned to use public transportation, and now she commutes 20 kilometers for her training all by herself. This is also a huge feat for someone with Down syndrome. 

 

Featured image: facebook.com/Bőczy Tímea Down-szindrómás tehetség Pécs

25th anniversary of international folk festival in the Hungarian city of Százhalombatta

Summerfest 2018 festival

Summerfest, a major international folk festival, is celebrating 25 years of dancing and music-making from 12 to 22 August in Százhalombatta, with participants from 20 countries.

From Bolivia to Senegal, from Taiwan to America, acts from a multitude of nations will be represented in Százhalombatta, south of Budapest, public current affairs channel M1 said on Wednesday.

József Szigetvári, the festival’s director, said Hungarian families will be putting up dancers from Tahiti, Bolivia and Kyrgyzstan among many other foreign performers. Over the past 25 years countless friendships have come about in this fashion, he added.

Transcarpathian acts will be special guests at this year’s event, he noted, adding that the festival would thereby highlight the “heroic struggle of Hungarians living amid the most dangerous situations”.

A new Transcarpathian dance ensemble will mount its premiere on August 17 in Százhalombatta, presenting and passing on the heritage of Transcarpathian Hungarian folk dancing, he said.

Szigetvári underlined the authenticity of the programmes, with traditional folk dances and original costumes and music.

Forrás Néptáncegyüttes will represent Hungary at the festival and the opening ceremony will take place in Százhalombatta’s St. Stephen’s Square.

Boban Markovic and his orchestra, István Pál Szalonna and his band, György Ferenczi and the Rackajam Orchestra, Eszencia and Tarsoly Orchestra will be among highlighted performers.

Participating countries are bringing along children’s toys typical of their country to the city, Szigetvári said.

Featured image: www.facebook.com/Summerfest

Local talent to perform in The Passion of Csíksomlyó homecoming

dance theatre tradition

The Hungarian National Theatre and the Hungarian National Dance Ensemble are bringing The Passion of Csíksomlyó depicting the suffering of Christ to Sumuleu Ciuc (Csíksomlyó), Romania on August 18, featuring local talent, director of the National Theatre Attila Vidnyánszky said on Wednesday.

The play, which debuted last year at the National Theatre, will be performed outdoors and will feature hundreds of Transylvanian musicians and dancers, Vidnyánszky told Duna Television.

“We produced the play together with the local talent,” Vidnyánszky said. “Everyone involved could consider it as somewhat their own.”

The play will also feature performances by Franciscan monk Csaba Böjte’s children’s choir as well as opera singer Levente Molnár.

The dialogue comes from 18th century Franciscan school plays performed in Sumuleu Ciuc, lines taken directly from scripture, archaic folk songs, stories and legends, and poet Géza Szőcs’s Passion, Vidnyánszky said.

Featured image: www.facebook.com/MagyarTeátrum

From Hong Kong to Kalotaszeg: Hungarian folk dance around the world

Kenneth Tse did not have any previous connections to Hungary or Hungarians when he started learning about Hungarian folk dances and folk music at an international dancing event. He fell in love with it and decided to visit Hungary in 1997, magyaridok.hu reports.

He said that it was wonderful to be at a barn dance with this kind of connection between musicians and dancers. In many dances, the music is just a necessity, but here it brings life to the dance. He adds that barn dances are a community event in Hungary and everyone has an active part in it, even those who are there only to have a drink and a nice conversation.

After this, he invited three dance teachers to Hong Kong: Sándor Tímár choreographer (who still keeps in touch with him, watches videos of his performances and points out mistakes if there are any), Zoltán József Nagy (aka Púder) and János Fazekas (aka Fazi). Kenneth Tse spent about five-six years learning from them, then started to come up with his own choreography. His dance troupe, the Knack Cordial Folk Group, was just celebrating their 20th anniversary. 

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About 60-70 per cent of the dances they perform are from Transylvania; the rest are from Hungary and other countries. He also loves the Hungarian dresses and finds it important to have authentic clothes when they are performing folk dances from Sárköz, Somogy, Kalotaszeg or Kalocsa. 

“The beautiful clothes may be one thing that motivates people to learn Hungarian dances. Whenever I am in Transylvania or Hungary, I always look up people selling their family treasures, which is how we have managed to put together twenty outfits for women in our troupe. It would be hard to make these in Asia, even getting the right kind of thread and pattern would be problematic, so it is better to get original clothes from the source. This is what I have always done, not just with the outfits, but also with the dances and music. As I have told my troupe:

if we come to Hungary, I want people to see that we are not destroying their culture, but keeping their high standards” says Kenneth Tse. 

He has been working together with the Hungarian Folk Embassy since 2016 when he met their leader in a rather interesting way. They were at a book fair in Taipei when the Hungarian delegation realised that the man from Hong Kong seems to know the steps of Hungarian folk dances. They invited him up to the stage where he danced with István Berecz. The next day Kenneth showed up with his 16 dancers, and Mihály Rosonczy-Kovács immediately started cooperation with Kenneth Tse, which is why he gets to spend some time now in Hungary. 

If you would like to see them perform, the Knack Cordial Folk Group will be at a dance camp in Kalotaszentkirály on the first of August.

Featured image: facebook.com/Kenneth Tse

The Dolly Sisters, the Hungarian twins who conquered the variety scene of the 1920s

dolly sisters

Hollywood is full of Hungarian talents and colourful personalities who have engraved their names in stone as far as the show business is concerned. It is not just Zsazsa Gábor who had the whole world lying at her feet, but the Dolly Sisters too, who performed in front of royalties and millionaires. Újságmúzeum tells the story of the Hungarian twin sisters who rose from poverty to worldwide fame.

The twins had a rough childhood, characterised by severe poverty. They were born in 1892 in Balassagyarmat, from where their monger father had the family move to Budapest when the girls were three years old. The father’s motive behind this was to save the family from starving and to provide the twins with a good education. However, he could not make ends meet, so the family moved to New York when Janka and Rózsi were thirteen.

Their story is like a true fairy-tale: two little girls arriving in the USA, famished, exhausted and afraid of the new world, eventually growing up to become the most famous dancers of the time.

People desperately trying to make a living usually take up all sorts of jobs that they have the slightest knowledge about or affinity to. Dancing was quite an important part of little girls’ education in those decades, so Janka and Rózsi took dance classes back in Budapest. Making use of their skills, the girls started performing at cafés, clubs to support their family.

https://www.facebook.com/ujsagmuzeum/photos/pcb.361885257666968/361884671000360/?type=3&theater

What started off as making a decent living, became a story of riches and fame, as the girls became more and more popular thanks to their astonishing performance. At the age of eighteen, they were already performing in Broadway productions and silent films.

Not much later, Harry Fox, the father of foxtrot fell in love with Janka, married her, and became the duo’s manager. It was at that time when they started using the ‘Dolly Sisters’ stage name.

dolly sisters
photo: WikiCommons – unknown uploader

After having won the heart of all America, in 1920, the sisters decided to tour in Europe too. By this time the twins were flush with money, but could not handle their wealth well and were spending carelessly. Rózsi fell victim to the casinos, and as it usually is, she lost a great deal of money on several instances. However, she had big wins, like once in Cannes, where she won 28 million French francs. Needless to say, she lost it just as fast.

They have visited Budapest frequently during their European tours, where Janka even adopted two Hungarian girls.

When the sister duo grew tired of the spotlight, they decided to split up and retire, especially since they have made enough money for the rest of their lives. Janka opened a shop in Paris and bought the Singer family’s castle as her home. Rózsi married the son of a filthy rich tobacco factory owner, but the father refused to aid the couple financially, so they lived on Rózsi’s money.

https://www.facebook.com/ujsagmuzeum/photos/pcb.361885257666968/361884764333684/?type=3&theater

The happy life reached an end for Janka when she was involved in a car accident on the French Riviera in 1933. Her injuries suffered to the face were so severe that she had to undergo plastic surgery multiple times. Her scars and a sunk marriage drove her into depression and not even a fresh marriage could lighten her up. She committed suicide in Hotel Shelton at the young age of 49.

Rózsi, on the other hand, lived a long life, which ended with a stroke on New Year’s Eve in 1970.

May they rest in peace and be remembered forever.

featured image: https://www.facebook.com/ujsagmuzeum