Friss Folk / Chalga
Chalga is the kind of music that would be heard from an imaginary Kuruc military camp in the late 1600s on a night after a successful siege, with a couple of rock, jazz, and seventies funk records mixed in the loot. more
Chalga is the kind of music that would be heard from an imaginary Kuruc military camp in the late 1600s on a night after a successful siege, with a couple of rock, jazz, and seventies funk records mixed in the loot. more
Ön egy múltbeli eseményre keresett rá. Kérjük, válogasson aktuális kínálatunkból a Jegy.hu keresőjében!
Last event date: Friday, February 10 2023 8:00PM
The band uses Balkan and Hungarian folk music unscrupulously. It might as well be pop music, like the original Bulgarian chalga, if they had a regular 4/4 song that could be danced by everyone. But fortunately the band has its eyes on something much more complex.
Chalga's history dates back to the mid-2000s. After numerous festival performances and two CDs (Sabir, 2006; Erdő, erdő, 2010), the band went on a hiatus. They reactivated in 2018: significantly transformed, playing music that's more fresh and less folky. The band's members are well known musicians from the Hungarian rock, jazz, folk and world music scenes. Their 2022 album, Ezért van az (Therefore it is) made its way on the World Music Charts Europe, and mesmerized audiences.
Table reservations are automatically added during ticket purchase.
Please note that if you purchase an odd number of seats, you might have to share the table with others, especially if the concert is sold out.
For the best dining experience please arrive around 7pm.
We hold reservations until 8pm.
The highly successful concert series of bassoonist György Lakatos and Concerto Armonico is based around Vivaldi's concertos. This time they will perform a selection of concertos for one, two, three and even four soloists, with a short Hungarian introduction by György Lakatos.
Benjamin Appl recorded songs by Schubert, Brahms, and Kurtág on his album Lines of Life, released in 2025. On the album, the composers and their works are closely intertwined in the truest sense. Listeners will not only marvel at how Kurtág's music keeps the world of 19th-century German songs alive in various ways, but will also notice that at times Schubert or Brahms seem to continue or develop phrases, motifs, or ideas from Kurtág.
Kurtág György: Einige Sätze aus den Sudelbüchern Georg Christoph Lichtenbergs, op. 37a Kurtág György: Kafka-töredékek, op. 24
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