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"Human imagination and musicality LOOK MAGAZIN
What style of music would you say this is? The unifying force in our music is language – a language which actually has no real meaning. It’s difficult to explain what this is – I’d call it a sort of musical language, because it’s born out of the laws that govern music, which can’t be ignored – so I can’t just sing anything. This holds our music together, and it’s also the things that gives us the most freedom. The music can be a little bluesy, a little jazzy, a little Serbian, a little Russian or Arabic, we can play and travel as much as we want, because we have no language restricctions. Human imagination and musicality are the only things that can limit us. So as a matter of fact, your music can not really be categorized? Not really, no. I like many different kinds of music, and I know my way around a lot of genres, for instrance I’ve done drum and bass even music for dance pieces, and now I’m also working on a dance production with the Artus Dance Theater. Although I often bring the themes, the band members all bring their own music to the process, and since two of them are doing a lot of jazz nowadays, that is precisely why the second album will be a little jazzier. So this trend is in us as well, but I certainly wouldn’t call what we do „world music,” because we don’t want to enter a competition, we just want to remain independent and unique. How was your music received by the public early on? At the beginning we weren’t so bold and daring, and our music and its sound were more connected to the language of childhood. Now we are much braver about doing this, because we have seen the kind of response it gets both in Hungary and abroad. Not long ago we were at the Soho Association festival in Ráday Street, and people came up to us asking where they could join our fan club, and where they could hear us regularly. I think that this music, which comes from very deep inside and which has the meaning of life for me, is not just entertainment. I believe it resonates in others as well, because it’s something that comes from deep down. How well-known is the band? The thing that is well known is the name, which catches the ear of people who haven’t even heard the music, so people often say that they have heard of us. And my name has figured along side other people as well, for example I wrote two songs for one of Miklós Jancsó’s films, and had a role in too. I used to do theater, and I’ve done music for cartoons as well. Somehow my name gets around, and since it is part of the band’s name, it comes up in more places, among different people in diverse walks of life. I think it’s important that I don’t aim at one age group or one type of people, so everybody can enjoy this kind of music, from little, children who can barely walk, to elderly people. Are you pursuing an acting career? In the next theater piece, which will premiere in October, I won’t just be singing. In „Cain’s Hat” I sang throughout the performance, and I also wrote the music for it, so I sang for the recordings myself. But now I’m going to act as well, speaking lines in Hungarian. You performed at quite a few festivals this summer? Yes, we regularly go to Kapolcs, and we also play at Trafó, and that’s where our album release will be on December 30th. Among the festivals I really like are Pepsi Island, and I like Kapolcs too. It’s a fantastic feeling when you feel that people are there who already know what it’s about, and who came just for this reason. They always do their part, they shout and dance, so we don’t have to warm up the atmosphere, because they already know what they’re going to hear before the first song, and they’re waiting for it, because thay anticipate it. Where do you tour abroad? This year we were in Belgrade, and it was a great experience to play there, because just like the Czechs, the people yelled and danced right through the concert. We’ve been to the Czech Republic many times, and feel that people of Slavic blood like this music, and this manifestation of I. Because I don’t just sing – I show people the music that comes out of me. Among the Western European countries we’ve been invited to Gent next year. When is your new album coming out? It has to be finished by November, and it will probably be available in December. There will be lots of surprises on it, because for the first time I’m going to sing French chansons with a two-guitar acconpaniment. The atmosphere will be completely different from the previous albums, but it was a problem that the improvisation could only be done in French. This is the language of music that I spoke of before, and the good thing is that it’s about music, and how much the music can stand. In this language, you can be an earth mother or a shaman, but you can also be a little child. You can show certain things just by the way you sing, and I think this gives you enormous freedom. Where will you be performing these days? In the middle of next month we will be in Moscow. In Hungary, for the time being, we will play next in December in November,and I will also have a lot of work to do for the play, which will premiere in the middle of October. We won’t be performing in Budapest for a while, and unfortunately our concert at the Giant Poster Exhibition was cancelled because of rain. But this year there was also a long period when we didn’t have any performances, because there are people in the band who play elsewhere as well, and they were touring a lot abroad, also there weren’t many invitations. But I think that after the second CD we won’t be able to keep up with ourselves, because this material – in my opinion, and in the opinion of others who I’ve showed it to – turned out to be so strong that we won’t be able to handle all the concerts. I imagine that up until now you haven’t really rejected any invitations. We did once or twice, for example when they invited us to a shopping center, to play for the shoppers in the morning – we said no. The truth is that I don’t like the atmosphere. I wouldn’t have had any problem with the people, but just with the situation. Are there any places where you really like to perform? Usually at festivals or any kind of small club, as long as it’s appropriate. People should know where they are going, and decide to go there. They should be able to absorb the music – it shouldn’t be an arcade or a passageway – everything should have its own place and it’s own atmosphere. |