Hungarian táncház
Transcription
Hungarian táncház
Beginner’s guide Festival pass source in the early days of the táncház movement. In his book The Story of Hungarian Folk, Béla Jávorszky quotes photographer Péter Korniss on his first visit to Szék: ‘It was like travelling back in time. Yet you could feel that it was all very real. The dance partners were circling in the dim and humid room, the straw hats and red ribbons flying. The girls were sitting around the wall lit by oil lamps, waiting to be asked for a dance.’ The invitation for the first táncház announced: ‘Music & Dance – just like in Szék.’ The archaic lifestyle and culture of fellow Hungarians in Transylvania was a revelation in 70s Hungary. At that time, the issue of the Hungarian minority in Romania was virtually taboo as it risked raising tensions between two fraternal socialist countries. One of the interesting, but unintended, political consequences of the táncház movement was that it brought Transylvania out into the open. Béla Halmos and Ferenc Sebő, the two musicians playing for the first táncház events are recognised as the pioneers. But by the time the public events kicked off on a regular basis, they’d accepted a six-month job playing at a restaurant in Japan and it was the newlyformed Muzsikás who became the first regular táncház band – with lead violin(s), accompanying viola (kontra) and sawing double bass. The music is astonishingly beautiful: searing violin melodies, starting off springy and slow and ending fast and furious, are accompanied by rhythmic major chords. The music is governed by the dance. Generally táncház music is long suites of dances starting slow and finishing fast. A táncház always included live music and was usually preceded by instruction in the dances from those who’d travelled to witness the real thing. The attendees were young urban professionals – dressed in jeans, not folk costumes – fascinated by this little-known culture. One of the glorious aspects of Transylvanian music is the different regional styles. The music of Szék is distinctive in its own right and the music of Mezőség, the region where it’s situated, is different from the music of Kalotaszeg, which is different from the music of Gyimes and so on. Music from various regions of Hungary, like Transdanubia and Szatmár, also appeared on the táncház map. Through the 70s and 80s the movement grew and grew. Since 1982 a táncház festival has been held in the Budapest Sports Arena at the end of March. The musicians quickly learned the various styles from different parts of Transylvania and there were dance houses every day of the week in Budapest playing not just Hungarian, but Romanian, South Slav, Balkan, Greek and Irish music. Marta Sebestyén, the singer who frequently performed with Muzsikás, became a celebrity. Alongside Muzsikás, dozens of other táncház bands appeared, including Téka, the Ökrös Ensemble and Tükrös. With the fall of communism in 1989, people wondered whether the movement would lose its impetus. While it hasn’t declined, it has changed. The venues have switched from cultural centres to more commercial locations like ‘folk pubs’ and Fonó, a privately-funded venue that opened in 1995. With the borders opened, village musicians from Transylvania like Sándor ‘Neti’ Fodor, and the Palatka and Szászcsávás Bands were able to come to Budapest (and Europe and the US) as celebrated guests. Hundreds of these Transylvanian musicians have been recorded at Fonó for the Final Hour project and released on CD. While there might be fewer dance houses each week, there are far more summer camps in Hungary, Transylvania and beyond. In 2011 the táncház movement was recognised by UNESCO as an intangible cultural heritage. To see how influential the movement has been, you only need to look at the traditional music scene in Poland, which has embraced its ideas and is supporting revival bands and organising festivals. BEST ALBUMS Sebő Ensemble Music in Folk Dancing Rooms (Hungaroton, 1978) This was the first recording to showcase the basic repertoire of the early táncház movement. It was only released on LP and is now a collectors’ item. Muzsikás Fly Bird, Fly (Nascente, 2011) Muzsikás never really released táncház albums, but this is an excellent Best Of. Reviewed in #81. The Ökrös Ensemble Transylvanian Village Music Táncház music is long suites of dances starting slow and finishing fast Péter Korniss Hungarian táncház The Hungarian dance house movement was a unique grassroots phenomenon in the former Eastern Bloc that still resonates today. Simon Broughton reports T 82 s o n g l i n e s › issue 112 So what was going on in Hungary? And why were thousands of young people so desperate to connect with traditional music? From the 1950s on, the folk music traditions of Sovietdominated Eastern Europe – from Poland to Bulgaria – had been hijacked by state ensembles performing sanitised music with costumes and choreographed dance routines. It was the same in Hungary. But the communist leader János Kádár – in power since the unsuccessful Revolution of 1956 – had evolved a policy of what was dubbed ‘Goulash Communism.’ This allowed for a w w w . s o n g l i n e s . c o. u k w w w . s o n g l i n e s . c o. u k This is a great táncház band led by Csaba Ökrös, here featuring Transylvanian fiddler ‘Neti’ Sándor and one of the new female vocalists, Ági Szaloki. Tükrös Hungarian Village Music from the 20th Century (FolkEuropa, 2000) A really fine recording of village music from Szatmár in north-east Hungary, played by one of the leading current bands. BEST COMPILATION Various Artists Hungarian World Music: From Traditional to World Music (FolkEuropa, 2010) A three-CD compilation that includes many of the best táncház bands from the 70s to 2000s. Reviewed in #76. + DATE Some of the leading bands will perform at WOMEX in Budapest on October 21 The best online source for Hungarian folk albums is www.hangveto.hu IF YOU LIKE HUNGARIAN TáNCHáZ, THEN TRY… Janusz Prusinowski Trio Mazurki (Sluchaj Uchem, 2008) Simon Broughton he start of the Hungarian táncház movement can be dated very precisely. The first event was held on May 6 1972 in Ferenc Liszt Square in the centre of Budapest. But this and two subsequent events were for invited guests only; the first public dance house took place in February 1973. It was completely sold out with the sort of crowd you’d expect for a rock concert. People were climbing in through the toilet windows, in a rush to hear completely traditional Hungarian folk music! The police arrived with blaring sirens to organise the crowd. more liberal economy and political and cultural freedoms that didn’t exist in the neighbouring countries. In Hungary there weren’t the food queues of Poland or Romania and the regime was more open. “Whoever is not against us, is with us,” said Kádár. Two things combined to create the táncház effect in Hungary: firstly, the cultural freedom for people to start a bottom-up, grass roots musical movement and secondly, the discovery of the rich living tradition of Hungarian music in Transylvania in neighbouring Romania. The ‘godfather’ of the movement was the folk music and dance researcher György Martin at the Academy of Sciences, who’d travelled extensively in Transylvania. The term táncház (dance house) wasn’t a common Hungarian word, but the local name for where people gathered to dance in the Transylvanian village of Szék. Szék is a predominantly Hungarian village that a handful of dancers and musicians had visited and became the primary musical (Rounder, 2000) A whole generation later, the traditional scene in Poland has dramatically taken off with this trio being the leading revival band. issue 112 › songlines 83