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ARTICLES
The Ökrös EnsembleTransylvanian village music from Gypsy, Hungarian and Romanian tradition Rounder CD 5160 In the world of Balkan music, this is a rather different record; not the typical Balkan blare of bagpipes, brass, accordion, but an astringent palette of mainly bowed strings – violin, three-string viola, cello, and cimbalom. The ensemble is led by Sandor Fodor, known as 'Neti', one of the great Kalotaszeg violinists, and a senior member of the Hungarian music scene (born in 1922, two years after the Hungarian cession of Transylvania in the Treaty of Trianon). Transylvania has a mixed heritage; it's been part of both Hungary and Romania, and is still in many ways disputed territory. (Indeed it was a Hungarian Lutheran pastor from Transylvania whom some credit with having kicked off the revolution that broke Ceaucescu.) And as elsewhere in Eastern Europe, the Rom musical tradition is also strong. All three traditions are represented on this record, but the Hungarian tradition predominates (as you'd expect from a Hungarian band). Is the tradition authentic? Well, at least one piece is; the lament presented here as Szaloki Agi Keservese was recorded by composer and ethnomusicologist Bela Bartok in 1937. In line with the traditional performance ethic, though, what we hear on the disc is part free-style improvisation. And there is a fair mix of genres including the friss (fast csardas), csardas and legenyes. I found it quite difficult to get on the right wavelength with this disc. The fast stuff isn't flashy as it is in much Balkan music; there's no klezmechanics or violin virtuosity. Even in the fast sections of pieces, the speeds seem to be quite deliberate, and the accompaniment occasionally therefore sounds a bit plunky. At one point, the cimbalom seems to come badly unstuck from the rest of the ensemble, so that it sounds almost as if a negligent sound engineer let a bit of a Soviet realist piano concerto creep on to one of the mixers. But I've heard this before in Romanian music – the cimbalom seems to have carte blanche to investigate its own harmonic mode. However, persevering with this recording pays dividends. Probably the most characteristic tracks are the slower ones, particularly the songs – two out of three of which are laments (no lyrics or translation provided, unfortunately). It has a particular rather tart melancholy which stems from the prevailing minor mode, a tendency to ornaments that scoop up from below the note, and a very slow moving bass, almost (not quite) too slow to maintain the rhythm. There's a particularly moving moment in Szaloki Agi Keservese when the voice and violin take the tune together, the ornaments alone diverging and introducing dissonance. (sound clip) The Ökrös Ensemble has none of the outrageous virtuosity or joy of some of the other Hungarian bands I've heard. For instance, comparing this record with the Muzsikas Blues for Transylvania and Bartok Album, the style seems much less rhythmically punchy, Neti's violin style less aggressively bowed and with much less attack on the notes than Peter Eri's or Mihai Sipos's. The sound of Muzsikas is also much fuller, pushing the strings for expression – a squealier sound, though I don't mean that in an uncomplimentary way. Neti tends to gain his effects through ornamentation and gradually swelling the note, rather than through stress – for instance the slow trills at the start of the hajnali on track 9. In short, Ökrös is less punchy, more pure in tone. (sound clip) I suspect this might not be a popular CD for that very reason. But it does have a great, rather understated charm – one born of control and technical mastery, rather than the more Dionysiac qualities more often associated with the music of the region. The presentation, unfortunately, is rather 'folksy' in the great style of eastern European tourist offices, though I did admire the wonderful moustaches that seem to be part of the band's uniform. It's particularly annoying not to have lyrics when we're told that one of the songs can symbolise peaceful coexistence between Rom, Romanian and Hungarian "since the lament is sung in all three languages"… (Having travelled a little in Romania, I have to say I find the idea of Romanians living in harmony with the Rom somewhat naïve … ) The notes to the first track tell what a csardas is, but don't say where this particular pair of tunes come from, or how it was learned. This is particularly disappointing when you consider the very high level of informed comment provided on Rykodisk's issues of Muzsikas. Andrea Kirkby - 23.2.2000.
The music that inspired BartókAuthentic village music from Hungary and Transylvania
ÖKRÖS FOLK MUSIC ENSEMBLE from Budapest, with KÁLMÁN BALOGH cimbalom virtuosoÁGI SZALÓKI folk singer “ … Hungarian string players who have remembered the ethnic research of Bartók and Kodály in their revivals of peasant tunes… rough, joyous energy… Mr. Balogh played some impressive cimbalom solos, scampering through melodic variations or showering the music with arpeggios, the set was a showcase for the violinists, who drew sighs from the slower melodies and accelerated into breakneck turns and trills and curlicues…remarkable virtuosity.” Saturday, March 2, 2002 @ 4:30 pm
The Hungarian Cultural Center, New York The ÖKRÖS FOLK MUSIC ENSEMBLEwith KÁLMÁN BALOGH, cimbalom virtuosoand ÁGI SZALÓKI, folk singer The ÖKRÖS ENSEMBLE, the leading folk revival band in Hungary, is a special treat for music lovers. They have the marvelous ability to present the soul of their music, performing on authentic instruments. Csaba Ökrös, the leader of the Ensemble, is one of the most respected revival violinists in Hungary. He teams up with other excellent musicians to present authentic and unique Hungarian folk music, elevating it to a high level of artistry. Members include Miklós Molnár, László Mester and Géza Pénzes who are considered the best folk musicians in Hungary with impressive global recording and performance background. Members of the Ensemble are ROUNDER RECORDS recording artists. KÁLMÁN BALOGH is an internationally celebrated cimbalom (hammered dulcimer) artist who, in the gypsy musical tradition, is a versatile performer accomplished on the Hungarian concert cimbalom as well as in the folk and jazz idioms. He is a graduate of the Budapest Ferenc Liszt Academy of Music and has performed with great success throughout the world. He has helped to establish the Hungarian cimbalom as a contemporary instrument. In their performance Ensemble performs virtuosi renditions of Hungarian and Transylvanian music with full accompaniment of the rarely heard cimbalom and female vocal. Centrum Management
Csaba Ökrös the Violinist of the Devil We can hear Csaba Ökrös and his musician friends on the occasion of a special concert at 8 on Saturday in Fonó Community Center, where besides folk music, personal compositions and forgotten Hungarian melodies will sound. The name of Csaba Ökrös is a notion itself. He is one of the most excellent figures of the dance house movement of more than three decades past, and has been mentioned as the devil’s violinist. Nobody has been able to follow suit the suggestive performance and the light and marvelous virtuosity, which he fills with unbelievably deep content even in the case of a simple scale. Csaba Ökrös is the music itself. Maybe not many people know that he not only deals with authentic folk music in the narrow sense, but he also tries out himself in other styles, namely in classical music. Besides, he is also outstanding at developing folk melodies in style, which are preserved on sheets and can not be collected recently. These together might seem to be eclectic, still it isn’t, and thus, every melody comes from a common root. Csaba Ökrös deals with folk music in the “Bartók sense” as with a clear out, immensely perfect musical language, and he composes his pieces upon this basis. A composer who has become what he is from a folk musician and collector might be closer to the thoughts of Bartók and Kodály than who doesn’t know well enough the experiences connected to folk music and determining of the composition techniques of the pair of composers. The melodies learnt back from the sheets are surely authentic. He has obtained the greatest honorable mention with his style in the past few decades. He could evoke the play of the primates who he worked with so well that we couldn’t even decide who was playing indeed. Otherwise, we can have a foretaste of this, since authentic melodies can be listened to at the concert, and at the end we can be amused at the dancing accompanied by the joyful music of Csaba Ökrös. by: Eszter Veronika Kiss (Magyar Nemzet 2007.)
Exciting Trip to the World of Classical Music
What Csaba Ökrös knows not many do so. He lives with the music, he breathes together with the rhythm of it; it’s like the violin would have been born into his hand. There are no large movements, no spectacular performance, but every second is natural. Everybody is fascinated by Csaba Ökrös’s music. We have always known that he has an extraordinary talent; he has already shown that he can perfectly pick up elements of styles, and his play is quite virtuous and suggestive. However, now he has proven to be excellent at other styles as well, and he has set on stage on just the same evening with the same musicians. As likely as not the greatest surprise is his trip to the world of composing and classical music, as far as it can be considered as a by pass, since this evolves a lot more thorough work than mere use of styles. Classical pieces have been naturally connected with folk music, but it was not simple processing, harmonizing, but Csaba Ökrös has been using the turns and rhythms of the folk music as a musical language in a Bartók sense. The resurrection and resuscitation of the recordings kept on old sheets was not a challenge for neither Csaba Ökrös nor for his great musician colleagues, since this musical world has become “their own flesh”. Yet these recordings sounded so well that it was a real amazement. It is like some pieces of Harmonia Coelestis, in which the connections between historical performance, baroque music and folk musical practice, which preserves the previous ones were enlightened. A company of musicians is quiet rare, in which the bassist plays the classical cello in one moment, and he sits down to the piano in the other moment, or the man who plays the dulcimer can play de continuo as well. This group of musician inspires Csaba Ökrös a great much. Even their processing of world and folk music in a classical sense doesn’t belong to the traditional trend. Here the melodies have such a deep effects on us, and the musicians highlight the gist of folk music so well that we are amazed at the song which we thought we had known everything about it. by : Eszter Veronika Kiss (Magyar Nemzet 2007.)
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