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world music, jazz, popular music
Hidden treasures from jazz history - from ragtime to hot jazz
35 years of the Bohém Ragtime Jazz Band
29 August 2020 Saturday
6 pm - 7:45 pm
Festival Theatre
NEW ORLEANS SWING FESTIVAL

Bohém Ragtime Jazz Band:

piano, violin, vocals, bandleader Tamás Ittzés
trumpet József Lebanov
trombone Zsolt Bera
clarinet, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone, vocals Zoltán Mátrai
banjo, guitar Csaba Hegedüs
tuba, double bass József Török
drums Alfréd Falusi

Featuring:

Pepita Dance Ensemble
trumpet soloist and host Béla Szalóky

Guests:

trumpet, trombone Attila Korb
vocals Éva Bolba, Mariann Mudrák

'Doctors should prescribe them to the half of the world that is neurotic,' is what one critic had to say about the music of the Bohém Ragtime Jazz Band, which turns 35 this year. This time, these virtuosic instrumentalists and jokesters from Kecskemét will be focusing on songs from the golden age of jazz history by Jabbo Smith, Jimmy Noone and Jelly Roll Morton.

The trademark of the Bohém Ragtime Jazz Band, which is led by Tamás Ittzés and has long enjoyed a significant international reputation, is versatility. It only appears to be contradictory that what they have played at their concerts and on the more than 20 records they have released so far has always been traditional jazz, bringing to life the atmosphere of the America of circa 1910-1940, or of Budapest during the interwar period. While this repertoire is stylistically extraordinarily rich, what the 'Bohemians' do with their colourful arrangements and characteristic performance style, a great deal of humor, and with aid enlisted from singers and dancers, makes it even more varied. They have performed at every major international jazz festival focused on their genre of jazz (Oslo, Breda, Pori, Rimini, Sacramento, etc.), and they have also held their own festival every year since 1992. This end-of-summer concert shines the spotlight not on the traditional greatest stars (Gershwin, Armstrong, Ellington and the like), but on hidden treasure that, while they are still known and played today, their creators themselves have been forgotten by 'ungrateful posterity'.

Presented by: Müpa Budapest

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