4 December 2024, 19.00-21.00
Solti Hall
Workshops of the Liszt Academy
Concert by the Students of the Jazz Department Presented by Liszt Academy
Carter: Tight
Horváth Balázs – Hárs Róza: My Life and You
Hancock: The sorcerer
Adrienn Bangó (vocals), Balázs Horváth (piano), Sándor Süke (double bass), Máté Éles (drums)
Preparatory professor: Árpád Oláh Tzumo
Corea: Long Fall
Jobim: If You Never Come to Me
Hekselman: V-Blues
Levente Kálmánchelyi (guitar), Szabolcs Horváth (piano), Gergely Vajda (double bass), Mátyás Szigeti (drums)
Preparatory professor: Áron Tálas
INTERMISSION
Williams: Pee Wee
Monk: Criss-Cross
Máté Balogh: Up Above the Sky
Jones: Three Card Molly
Máté Balogh (saxophone), Sándor Suke (double bass), Tamás Fazekas (drums)
Preparatory professor: Mihály Borbély
Bolyki Barnabás: Ki viszi át a szerelmet (Nagy László versére)
Péch Lóránt: October
Horváth Botond: Bebisz Blues
Barnabás Bolyki (vocals), Csaba Nagy-Czirok (saxophone), Botond Horváth (guitar), Lóránt Péch (piano), Lőrinc Mohácsy (double bass), Illés Arató (drums)
Preparatory professor: János Ávéd
The history of jazz education in Hungary spans nearly half a century. Institutionalized teaching of the genre was integrated into the state music school system early on, first at the secondary level and then at the basic level, making it one of the first in Europe to do so. The “coming of age” was marked by the launch of the college division at the time of the regime change, which trained both performers and jazz educators, thus establishing the conditions for a professional, tiered education system. Both players in this emancipatory process have proven themselves; the Jazz Department has demonstrated that this “free musical style” can be taught and assessed on a deep professional basis, while the Liszt Academy, which embraced this groundbreaking initiative, has shown that it is open to innovation, especially when it represents an international level of artistic excellence. Indeed, this latter point is indisputable, as evidenced by the impressive list of former and recent graduates, many of whom have returned to their alma mater as instructors. Among these outstanding individuals are Károly Binder, Tamás Berki, Kálmán Oláh, Gyula Babos, Attila László, and Béla Lattmann, to name just a few from the list of exceptional artists. As a result of these achievements, it is no coincidence that more and more people across Europe are talking about “Hungarian jazz” as a distinct and unmistakable flavor—an impressive feat in this inherently cosmopolitan genre.
Presented by
Liszt Academy Concert Centre
Tickets:
Admission to the concert is free. Tickets can be claimed at the website and at the Ticket Office of the Liszt Academy one month before the concert.
Concert series:
Other events in the concert series:
19:00
19:00
19:00
Love Hurts
Solti Hall
19:00
19:00
Password: Tempest
Solti Hall
19:00