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Korniss Péter Photo Archive. In December 2020 photographer Korniss Péter donated the archive of his work from more than 5 decades (more than 34000 photos) – to Hungary’s Museum of Fine Arts. The well-organized archive is now housed in the Central European Art History Research Institute as the special Korniss Péter Archive. Amongst subjects of Korniss’ photography are: peasant life and tradition in Transylvania and Hungary, blue collar workers in Hungary, professional dancers and many more subjects. Also in December he was awarded the ‘Kriterion Wreath’ given to those who have presented Transylvanian culture to the world. A new volume of his photos was also published: “Korniss Péter Photography 1959–2017” in celebration of the event. Printed here are Grozdits Károly’s interview and an edited version of Barabási Albert-László’s laudation.

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Literature: A piece written in memory of the Transylvanian Hungarian painter and graphics artist Kusztos Endre (1925–2015). This tribute by Transylvanian writer and journalist Lokodi Imre won the grand prize in the prose, poetry and essay category in a literature contest organized by the Petőfi Literary Association upon the 100th anniversary of the Trianon Peace Treaty. It is full of beautiful, especially Transylvanian imagery including references to the hawthorn trees, bears, the round shadow of God’s straw hat, linden trees, shepherds, plum trees. “But a row of plum trees remind us of Endre bácsi and I see his memory heading down a bear’s path.” Published on November 23, 2020 at: helyorseg.ma

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Dance for children in traditional life of Jobbágytelke/Sâmbriaș, Transylvania. The researcher quotes mainly from interviews with folks from the village born before WWII. Dances for the ‘little ones’ were usually held separately from the adult dance events. Children meant elementary school children under the age of 14. Dances for kids were held around Carnival, Easter or in the summer. Fewer musicians played than for the adult dance events: perhaps violin, cimbalom, sometimes only a clarinet, flute, etc. The dance learning mainly occurred in a spontaneous way. Sometimes adults would come to watch, then perhaps show the kids something. The musicians and location were paid for the same way as the adult dance events: in hand made straw hats. The kids’ dances were held in people’s homes, in barns, perhaps outdoors in good weather, often danced barefoot. Mostly children were not allowed at the adult dance events. They ‘kids dance’ started at 2pm or so and lasted until dark. By Dóka Krisztina, includes bibliography.

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New recording: Erdőfű Népi Kamarazenekar Fonó FA 456-2. Erdőfű Band is a group of dance house musicians active in Hungary. The members of Erdőfű are all dedicated to traditional folk music of the Carpathian Basin which they perform in the authentic style both for dance houses and in concert. The goal of their music workshop is to give their audiences a comprehensive view of the rich variety of folk music played by string bands for Hungarians and other ethnic groups all over the region. CD available at Fonó web shop, other distributors and in digital form.

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Interview with Csoóri Sándor Sündi – folk musician, composer/arranger. This is the grandson of Csoóri Sándor the poet and writer (1930–2016); and the son of Csoóri Sándor (b. 1956) the folk musician (Muzsikás, Ifjú Muzsikás). Csoóri Sándor “Sündi” (born 1984) began playing music as a young teenager in Budapest playing viola with his father in the band Ifjú Muzsikás. He went on to play with a group of his peers in Buda Folk Band, now he plays with Ötödik Évszak, Dresch String Quartet and has been successful composing and arranging music for dance companies and theatre. Interview by Jávorszky Béla Szilárd first published in “Fonó 25” by Héttoronyfesztivál and the Fonó. Budapest, 2020.

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Book review: Csoóri Sándor: [Wood shavings on the ground /notes on Hungarianness, art, folk art and public life] Published by Erdélyi Szalon IAT, Szentendre, Hungary 2020. Editors: dr. Balogh Júlia, Pálfy G. István ISBN 978-615-5068-51-5. The fifteenth volume of Csoóri Sándor (1930–2016 the poet)’s works, some of which are published for the first time here posthumously. “An opportunity to connect not with thought as a product, but with his way of thinking and it’s winding roads.” Review by Grozdits Károly first published at: librarius.hu 2020 January 6.

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New publication: [The mystery of movement – Papers honoring the work of Fügedi János]. Edited by: Pál-Kovács Dóra, Szőnyi Vivien. L’Harmattan. Budapest. 2020. This publication is a collection of papers celebrating and discussing the theme of dance notation and the work of Fügedi János – Hungary’s leading expert on dance notation and a director of the dance research department at the Hungarian Institute of Musicology, Hungarian Academy of Sciences. The volume includes academic studies by 26 contributors all of whom are experts on the subject matter or are from closely related fields. The majority of the studies are written in Hungarian; with some in English from international contributors. The book is divided into 4 chapters and includes Fügedi János’ selected bibliography. Report by Székely Anna.

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Old writings still relevant today – P. Vas János’ column. A short history of daily eating patterns in Hungary. "According to Hungarian sources from the middle ages the nobility, middle classes, and farmers all usually ate only twice a day: an early lunch during the morning hours (between 9 and 10am) and an early supper in the late afternoon." This was apparanty true all over Europe. The Hungarian peasantry started eating three meals a day at the beginning of the 20th century. By Kisbán Eszter from "Kis magyar néprajz a rádióban". Minerva. Budapest, 1978.

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Kékfestő – Traditional Hungarian textile printing and indigo dying. This is a description of the small indigo textile printing and dying workshop in Kecskemét, Hungary created by the authors of the article. Also described is the group they have founded: Friends of Hungarian Indigo Textile Dying, in the framework of which they organize meetings and relevant workshops for those interested in the craft. A summary is included of their travels to a peninsula in the Gujarat region of India where many traditional textile crafts are practiced. By Hungarian textile artists Vidák István and Nagy Mari.

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Farewell to ethnographer Csupor István (1952–2020). Csupor István began working at the Museum of Ethnography’s ceramics collection in 1983. He was a student of Kresz Mária and earned a PhD in ethnography at ELTE University in Budapest. He worked at the Museum of Ethnography for 33 years during which time he completed an important project reviewing the 22,000 piece ceramics collection. He published 11 volumes and 49 studies – all on folk ceramics. He curated exhibitions, founded the Dr. Kresz Mária Foundation and Ceramics Center and was president of the Hungarian Heritage House Folk Crafts Consulting Body. He retired officially from the Museum of Ethnography in 2015, but remained more than active in his field. The farewell by Vida Gabriella from the website of the Museum of Ethnography are printed here.

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New Publication: Bonchida folk music I–II. Virágvölgyi Márta and Árendás Péter. Two volumes totaling 380 pages include ethnographic background material and technical studies of playing technique of the Transylvanian traditional musicians of the village of Bonchida/Bonțida. The focus is on the repertoire of four lead fiddlers, it also includes playing technique for accompaniment and a DVD. Published as part of a series by the Óbudai Népzenei Iskola and Zenei Anyanyelv Alapítvány with support from the Csoóri Sándor Fund. Budapest 2020. Recommended by Koncz Gergő.

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Opinion: on the dance house movement’s and Hungarian folk culture’s relationship to the digital world and technology, especially during the Corona virus pandemic. "...a digital revolution didn’t occur in folk culture…they haven’t been prepared for using social media, their messages get lost in the digital labyrinth....” He points out all the advantages of communication, marketing and outreach and ‘being trendy’ via social media and the internet as a means for spreading the word of Hungarian folk culture. He feels reform in these areas is necessary so that Hungarian children can grow up knowing about their culture... By Gundy Kristóf.

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A 2004 conversation with Halmos Béla. There have been so many interviews with Halmos Béla (1946-2013), but perhaps it’s been awhile since we’ve read one. He was a good talker. Here once again we are reminded of the impressive scope of Béla’s activities in and his total dedication to the dance house movement. As one of the founders of the movement, until his death in 2013 he was active as a musician, ethnomusicologist/researcher, he worked on TV programs documenting the dance house so that those beyond the inner circles might know what was going on, and a documentary film series about the movement’s village master musicians/singers, he established the dance house archive at the Hungarian Heritage House, and of course he saw the value of conversation and community. Interview by Fehér Anikó.

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Life in Bukovina – from the writings and drawings of Lőrincz Gergely from the village of Istensegíts/Țibeni. The first story is told in Bukovinan Hungarian dialect, about how much can happen in village life during the time from the first toll of the church bells before mass until the final tolls actually calling the villagers in for mass. This includes getting dressed in the Sunday church clothing, cutting oneself shaving, exchanges with family members and neighbors and musings about the local pub. The other story reads more like a tall tale: "János bám" had been a wagon driver for a countryside agricultural cooperative who liked to drink 3 or 4 shots every morning at the local pub. When he died, two angels had a tough time carrying their heavy load up to heaven. When they handed his soul over to Saint Peter, he gave János the task of saying halleluja from 6am til noon, and hosanna from noon til 6pm. János was so bad at his task that God recommended he go back down to ease his soul and have a few wine spritzers with his friends... Kóka Rozália’s column.

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On History’s Path – Kóka Rozália tracks the fates of Székely Hungarian families relocated from Bukovina: Fabián Margit was born in the village of Andrásmező/Tomislavci in the Bacska region of northern Serbia in 1943 during WW II. Her family were Székely Hungarians recently arrived in Serbia from Bukovina. Less than 2 years after she was born Margit’s family had to flee from Serbia. They ended up in Hungary’s Tolna County, where she was able to study beyond elementary school to teachers training college. Eventually she became an active ethnographer focusing her collection work and publications on the customs and traditions of Bukovina Székely Hungarians. She came from a tradition preserving family known as good singers. List of publications included.

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Traditional basket weaving in Hungarian Csángó villages of Moldavia. Baskets in this region were made of various thicknesses of wicker or willow switches. Traditionally the Hungarians in these villages lived mainly from subsistence farming. Often the older members of the extended family who could no longer work in the fields were the ones who wove baskets. This study explains this traditional craft in the village of Pusztina/Pustiana (Romania), the role of basket weaving as a livelihood, collecting and preparing the willow switches (wicker), the basket weaving process, selling baskets, the traditional uses of the many forms of baskets. Today handmade baskets are being pushed out of everyday life by plastic bags and other containers. By Halász Péter.

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Food and tradition: “flekken” – a roasted or grilled slice of meat – these days usually pork. This article provides mainly historical references to this popular meat dish. Flekken has lots of history and connections to the Transylvanian city of Marosvásárhely/Târgu Mureș from the end of the 1800s and beginning of the 1900s. There is lengthy discussion of various pubs there that were known for their flekken. Flekken was and is a favorite meal served with beer or wine in pubs and restaurants. A recipe is provided for slices of meat marinated for at least 24 hours (in garlic, oil, small amount of mustard, salt, pepper, dash of paprika) with the slices stacked. When grilling, the pieces of meat should only be turned once – right after a small bit of juice arrives to the surface of the meat. Meat cooked too long or turned too many times will be tough, dry and rubbery. By Juhász Katalin.



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Remembering Mrs Pulika János, Tankó Gizella (1933–2021 Feb. 1.) of Gyimesközéplok/Lunca de Jos, Harghita County, Romania. She met her husband traditional fiddler Pulika János when she was 14. Ten years older than her, he was already making his living as a local traditional fiddler. They eloped when she was 16. By the time she was 21 she had 4 children. Then according to custom in Gyimes, she learned to play hit cello (in Hungarian „ütőgardon”), so she could accompany her husband when he played at local events. The traditional band in Gyimes consists of two musicians: a fiddler with usually his wife playing hit cello. Together they played for balls, work parties, weddings, christenings, and other celebrations in the Gyimes region. Her husband died in 1989. Hungary recognized her as an excellent traditional musician with the title of „Master of Folk Arts” in 2009. She was an exceptionally kind woman, well known by the táncház movement. By András Orsolya.

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Farewell to Czilika György „Gyuszi” 1958–2021 traditional musician from Bogartelke/Băgara, Kalotaszeg Region, Transylvania (Cluj County, Romania); known as the last of the great lead fiddlers of the Czilika family dynasty of musicians. His son became a classical musician. Czilika György played at weddings, village balls, christenings in his region of Transylvania: Magyarvista/ Viștea, Türe/Turea, Bogártelke/Băgara, Nádasdaróc/ Dorolțu and Inaktelke/Inucu in Cluj County. From the mid 1990s he was often invited to Hungary to play for dance house events. His music is preserved on at least 3 recordings and on you tube.. Having the honor of accompanying him, the typical Czilika style ornamentation and his clear, honest and kind blue eyes are rememberd. By Henics Tamás.

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Interview with Ágoston Béla musician, composer and recipient of a Halmos Béla Program grant supporting creative work for folk musicians (especially welcome support for musicians during the COVID pandemic). Ágoston Béla is more than a folk musician however, he is active in jazz, world and underground rock music as well. He plays saxophone, bagpipe, clarinet, etc and his projects include bands named: Zuboly, Agostones, Mágustones, FLEMM, Aborder Klezmer Band and others. This grant allows him to work on a piece called „Csongor és Tünde”, an ’ethno operetta’ and not his first work in this genre. By Dömötör Endre.

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A bit of ethnography for the radio. A piece on the rules for living the old peasant life; all areas of life were regulated. Certain kinds of work were done on certain days of the week and there were the days when work was forbidden. Across Hungary baking bread and washing clothes was forbidden on Friday and Saturday. In many places spinning and sewing was not to be done on Friday or on Tuesday. A young man could go courting only on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. A second piece tells about magic and spells. There were recipes for attracting a sweetheart, sending away a witch or a storm, casting a spell on someone, curing the ill. One example: it was said that the bones of a frog caught on Saint George’s Day worked very well for attracting a lover. Many of the things needed to cast spells or to cure the ill had to be collected either at dawn or at midnight, from 9 places, or from the cemetery, in silence and so on. By Pócs Éva from „Kis Magyar néprajz a rádióban” RTV, Minerva, Budapest. 1978.

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The playing technique of the fiddlers from Transylvania’s Gyimes region (Part I.). The study begins with a statement on why the author chose this topic (his travels from Budapest to the region, etc). It provides a brief description of the region and summary of history and population, then describes the traditional band, the instruments and fiddling techniques. Includes bibliography. This study was submitted in 2018 as part of the author’s application for the title of Young Master of Folk Arts. By Mihó Attila.

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„Science for the movement – the Jászberény example” This is a review of books by Bathó Edit recently published (in 2020) by the Jászberény Cultural Foundation. Bathó Edit, director of the Jász Museum since 1994, has apparently done outstanding work researching folk culture in her own area – Hungary’s Jászság Region. Putting the research to good use, she has also been instrumental in preserving and reviving tradition in the area. Her work and the publications are commended. By Juhász Katalin.

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Folk music in Western India’s Kutch District of the Gudjarat Province. While not ethnomusicologists, the writers of this account are textile folk artists who travel to India often. Here they provide observations and impressions of a concert they attended in the city of Bhuj some 6 years ago. By Nagy Mari, Vidák István.

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Tradition related to death in the village of Lészped/Lespezi in Romanian Moldavia as described by Hungarian Csángó Moldavian informants from the village. These are rural customs of an impoverished agrarian culture, where everything to do with death occurred in the home, until the 3rd day when a procession carried a dead relative to mass, then to the cemetery for burial. Subject matter presented: Signs/superstitions of impending death, dying, customs for preparing the body, crying/wailing for the dead, the funeral procession from the house to the church for mass then burial, remembering the dead, the feast at home after the burial, the grieving period. Rather than visiting the dead in the cemetery, everyone ‘visits’ the dead in their thoughts, dreams, in family conversation... By Halász Péter.

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Farewell to Dr. Gerzanics Magdolna. Born in Ungvár (today in Ukraine) in 1934, she died on February 3rd, 2021 in Bietigheim-Bissingen, Germany. She grew up in Zala County, Hungary and was a Hungarian enthnographer, folk music researcher, journalist, former director of the Vass Lajos Folk Music Association. She remained active until her last days. She always supported the Transcarpathian Hungarians. Her doctoral dissertation for ELTE University’s Department of Ethnography examined folk music tradition, customs and folk arts of 3 Hungarian, 3 German and 3 Slovak villages in Komárom- Esztergom County. Printed here is the final correspondence between her and Kóka Rozália who interviewed her for the series on women’s lives. The interview appeared in folkMAGazin 2008 issues 2 and 3.

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Obituary: Almási István 1934-2021 Transylvanian ethnomusicologist, member of the Hungarian Academy of the Arts. Almási István was born in Kolozsvár/Cluj Napoca, Tranylvania. He was educated in Transylvania and worked until retirement as a scientific researcher at the Institute of Folklore (of the Romanian Academy of Sciences) in Kolozsvár. His work included collection, research and publication on folk music from areas of Transylvania known in Hungarian research as: Érmellék, Szilágyság, Lápos mente, Aranyosszék, Kis-Küküllő – Maros köze, Nyárád mente, Homoród mente, Háromszék. His most recent publications were: A népzene jegyében (2009) and Most jöttem Erdélyből (2019). From announcement by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Musicology.

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Obituary: Dr. Paksa Katalin folk music researcher at the Hungarian Institute of Musicology since 1971. She began her 50 year career working under ethnomusicologists Bálint Sándor and Vargyas Lajos. Her work embraced all areas of ethnomusicology: collection, transcription, categorization, comparison of Hungarian and neighboring ethnic groups, monographic music history examination, research on traditional folk performance, ornamentation, connections between folk and composed music. She was born in Zalaegerszeg, then studied in Pécs and at the Hungarian Academy of Music. She died on February 13th 2021 at the age of 77. By Matyovszky Márta (zaol.hu).

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Life in Old Bukovina (Kóka Rozália’s column). The story of a man called Ambarus, a farmer, the kind of person who named his dog named Friend; a peaceful man who loved animals, his fellow man, God and nature. His wife, on the other hand, carried two swords and used them often… One day Ambarus went out to plow. At lunch time he sat down and ate the scanty lunch his wife packed for him, afterwards he was just about to enjoy the one precious cigarette that had been doled out to him, but first he needed a drink of water. Tragically he dropped his cigarette down the well. By Lőrincz Gergely.

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On the Path of History – Kóka Rozália’s series. (Part I.) Rudolf László was born in Bátaszék in Hungary’s Tolna County in the 1950s. His mother was from Józseffalva/Vornicenii Mici in Bukovina. He spent his childhood amongst his mother’s family who had all come from Bukovina. László was a good student. He finished both elementary and secondary school in Bátszék, loved the books of Jules Verne and was a local chess champion. Good in mathematics, he received a scholarship to study engineering in the city of Donetsk, Ukraine (then part of the Soviet Union). After finishing his degree he returned to Hungary and worked for a time at power plants until he was drafted for the compulsory 2 years of Hungarian military service. Afterwards he got work as a computer programmer in the town of Szekszárd. The first time he went with his mother to Bukovina in Romania to visit her home village of Józseffalva was in 1981. He left there in tears. To be continued. From a conversation recorded on February 25, 2021.

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Left-handed Transylvanian stringed instrument players. Classical music training obliges left-handed musicians to adapt to the right-handed playing format. However, left-handed Transylvanian village musicians did not have to adapt to the rules of the right-handed classical music world. Their approaches to adapting their instruments have been varied – no particular rule had to be followed: the village musicians have done whatever works for them to get the sound they need. This is a list of left-handed traditional violinists, viola/kontra, cello and double bass players. The list was formed on the basis of personal observation during collection work, and from collection results, photos and recordings in archives at the Hungarian Heritage House. By Árendás Péter.

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Conversation with Kelemen László – director of the Hungarian Heritage House (HHH). This year the HHH marks 20 years since it was established. Kelemen László was a key person in the process of rethinking/reformulating the institutions that became the HHH as a government institution with Kelemen as director. His goal has been to build a secure structure to house the Hungarian State Folk Ensemble and various folk archives, provide a „home” for the dance house movement and support education towards keeping folk culture alive. He talks about the importance of developing and using ‘virtual’ means for information sharing and stresses re-teaching/reintroduction as the next important phase – meaning a process of reintroducing folk arts (music, dance, song, crafts, story-telling) back into their original habitat. Kelemen’s mandate as director runs out this year and he wants to hand things over to the younger folks. He intends to obtain a PhD from the Academy of Music and return to his native Transylvania to develop the already established Transylvanian branch of the HHH. By Csinta Samu.

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Food and tradition: Meals as ritual – blessings for food and drink from the Old Testament to the school cafeteria – Part I. Traditions from the Jewish and Christian cultures based on historical and ethnographic data are discussed, including; blessings for before the meal in the old testament tradition, Christian blessings for meals, blessings for the table in Hungarian folk culture, blessing the food in the religious liturgy (Christian), the „Saint John blessing” for wine and weddings. By Juhász Katalin.



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A life dedicated to the service of the Moldavian Csángó Hungarians. Domokos Pál Péter 1901–1992 was a Hungarian Székely gentleman from Várdotfalva (today part of Csíkszereda/Miercurea Ciuc, Transylvania). He was a Széchenyi-award winning Hungarian teacher, historian, ethnographer who researched the history and culture of the Hungarian Csángó people of Moldavia. His first trip to Moldavia to visit the Csángó people was in 1928, when inspired by Bartók’s book „A magyar népdal”, he went to collect traditional songs from the Csángó Hungarians there, as an area Bartók been unable to visit. Thus began his life-long mission making sure that the Moldavian Csángó Hungarians would be neither forgotten, nor neglected by Hungary nor completely assimilated by the Romanians. Following Domokos, Jagamas János, Veress Sándor, Balla Péter, Lükő Gábor and Kallós Zoltán did important ethnographic collection work in the region. The Csángó Moldavian ethnic group has constantly been under threat of assimilation practices by from the Romanian government and the Orthodox church. This interview was done in 1985 for a Radio Free Europe program and is published here by Domokos Mária.

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Karibi éjszaka [Carribean night] – Széki Soós János’ column. A story about a Hungarian tourist on holiday in the Carribean begins when he is listening to local Puerto Rican music. After the Puerto Rican band, came another band that played international standards. The musicians were Hungarians of course. Our tourist describes other Hungarians he met including the musicians and also a prostitute from the café. Excerpt from the novel „Iker” [Twin] by Simó Márton.

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New publication: Marton László Távolodó: Érintés II. (World Music 2000–2020). Somos Kiadó, 2021. Budapest. ISBN: 978-615-81718-0-9. Marton László Távolodó is a well-known world music reviewer and journalist, concert and music producer, and member of the jury for World Music Charts Europe. This is his second book in Hungarian on international and Hungarian world music. The book is organized in four sections: America, Africa, Europe, Hungary. Printed here is the preface of the book by the author Marton László Távolodó.

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Interview with Balogh Melinda – Melinda won support from the Halmos Béla Program for development of a theatre production about the travels of Kőrösi Csoma Sándor (Transylvanian philologist and orientalist 1784–1842) who travelled from Transylvania to India searching for traces of the Hungarian people. Melinda is a folk singer whose solo record „Napkerék” (2019) presenting traditional songs and music of the Transylvanian Roma, has been very well received. She started out from Kecskemét, danced for 10 years with the Jászság Ensemble, and has sung with every local band along the way. She works with a group called BaHorKa incorporating folk song, tales and music into stage performances. Here she also talks about her creative process for developing the new theatre production. Interview by Dömötör Endre.

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New publication: Zsíros Tibor: [Pictures, Memories of Moldavia and Transylvania 1974–1990]. Fekete Sas, 2021 Budapest. ISBN 978 615 6168 139 includes CD. Selected photographs and the forward to this book are printed in this issue of folkMAGazin. In the forward, geophysicist Zsíros Tibor describes his first trip to Transylvania in 1974 with some of the conditions and challenges of travelling there, also describing the amazing humanity of the people he met there.

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The playing technique of the fiddlers from Transylvania’s Gyimes region (Part II.). The second part of the study provides a list of 29 fiddlers known in the region between the late 1800s and the present, with basic data on each one. It describes differences between the Gypsy musicians and the ‘peasant musicians’ of Gyimes and makes a technical comparison of the two playing styles. Includes bibliography. This study was submitted in 2018 as part of the author’s application for the title of Young Master of Folk Arts. By Mihó Attila.

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Traditional ceramics in Hungarian Csángó communities in Moldavia. In places where the land wasn’t sufficient for growing food, the population was forced to try to support themselves through various traditional household crafts such as ceramics. Making pottery was possible of course only in places where soil, tradition and market demand supported it. Procedures of making clay from the earth, throwing the pots, types of pots made, decorating, firing, glazing, barter compensation and sale of the pottery are described. The ceramics of Gorzafalva/Oituz in Bacău County, Romania are concentrated on, as this is where the craft survived the longest. The last Hungarian Moldavian Csángó potter Aszalós Viktor was born in 1936. By Halász Péter.

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Old writings still relevant today – P. Vas János’ column. The famous storytellers spoke well and had a good memory. They were well-respected in the village communities, during peasant work, and in military service. People longed to listen to storytellers. News of a good storyteller spread far and wide; people came to learn from them. A storyteller didn’t create a story alone: hundreds of years of anyonymous, talented and excellent storytellers passed the tales down. What was referred to as the ’Hungarian method’ or the ’Budapest school’ for studying traditional storytellers and their tales was developed between the two world wars and was actually based on the Russian method. Ortutay Gyula 1978 from „Kis magyar néprajz a rádióban” [a bit of ethnography for the radio]. Minerva. Budapest, 1978.

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Szomjas György – who chronicled a world destined to be forgotten. A discussion of the work of the late film director Szomjas György (1940–2021) as regards to the dance house movement and folk music. Sebő Ferenc talks about a trip to Transylvania with Szomjas György in 1972. Sebő also notes two of Szomjas’ feature films important for their use of folk music: „Talpuk alatt füyül a szél” and „Rosszemberek” – both so-called outlaw (betyár) films. In addition to his other film work, Szomjas „became the chronicler of the dance house movement…his value in this area is undisputed and imperishable. He took on the task of dealing with [the dance house] in film. He noticed and listened to everyone [from the movement, from the period] who was worth listening to.” Interview with Sebő Ferenc by Grozdits Károly.

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Interview with rock musician, music, film, theatre producer Jantyik Csaba about his work with the late Szomjas György (1940–2021). Halmos Béla introduced Jantyik Csaba to Szomjas about a 10 years ago. After that Csaba worked closely with Szomjas on many projects including documentary films, both the theatre production and the film entitled „Betyárjaték”; on a total of 35 films and other projects. Csaba was a fan of Szomjas’ ’city films’ first of all, then through their work together, became familiar with the folk music side of Szomjas’ work. By Grozdits Károly.

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Conversation with folk singer Horváti Kata – main character in the late Szomjas György’s film „Vagabond” (2003). This film was a documentary/fiction film about the dance house movement. „It was important for the main characters in the film to be played by young people from the dance house – not actors….with only slight exaggeration, half the dance house movement was in the film and everyone participated as if it were another dance house event, another adventure.” The film was shown at festivals in Berlin, Moscow, Leeuwarden and in Budapest. Alongside his other projects Szomjas’ continued making documentary films about important figures of the dance house movement until his death. By Grozdits Károly.

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Gypsy music? Peasant music? Folk music! The Hungarian State Folk Ensemble’s 70th Anniversary. Important changes in the Hungarian State Folk Ensemble began in 1981 when Timár Sándor was named artistic director. Timár arrived from his post as director of the Bartók Ensemble with the goal of transplanting his new model for staging folk dance/folklore to update the State Ensemble’s repertoire. Until that time the State Ensemble had been functioning on the original model used since it was established in 1951. „…it would be great if the three artistic bodies of the ensemble [dance corps, chorus, musicians] were able to use Hungarian folk dance, music and song in its original form – the simpler natural form…” This article continues by tracing the succession of the folk musicians from the dance house movement that have played for the ensemble since 1981. By Árendás Péter, Szecsődi Barbara and Vavrinecz András.

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New publication: Hajnáczky Tamás: Bura Károly cigányprímás – Aktivista, revizionista, vizionarista [Bura Károly – Gypsy violinist, activist, revisionist, visionary] Noran Libro Kiadó, 2021. Budapest ISBN 978-963-517-203-0. A small monography introducing the life and career of the legendary Hungarian Gypsy lead violinist Bura Károly (1881–1934). It follows the path of Bura Károly’s life during the stormy period of history when the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy fell apart, and then when the Hungarian Gypsy musicians (along with their compatriots) lived through the traumas of the Treaty of Trianon. The book tells the history of the Hungarian Gypsy musicians who had to endure political measures and the ‘storms of history’ while their active lives were important in building both Hungarian and Gypsy culture. Historical science has largely overlooked the lives of people from the Gypsy ethnic group. Hajnáczky’s forward from the book and a recommendation by Elena Marushiakova are printed here.

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Life in Bukovina – from the writings and drawings of Lőrincz Gergely from the village of Istensegíts/Țibeni. Told in Bukovinan Hungarian dialect, this story is about the birth of a baby boy, Istánka, born in the fall during the potato harvest. His father was sent for the midwife who lived on the lower edge of the village. On the way home, he stopped by the pub – not to drink – but to get a bottle of pálinka which was part of the pay for the midwife’s services. It was hoped that the baby boy would be as good a handy man as the grandfather he was named for. In fact the little boy had a gift for drawing, but the hard work needed for survival in a Bukovinan village perhaps 100 years ago – didn’t allow time for a child to cultivate such artistic talents. But Istánka became a good man who appreciated the beautiful things in life. He married the most beautiful girl in the village who also had a beautiful soul. Kóka Rozália’s column.

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On the Path of History – Kóka Rozália’s series. Part 2. Rudolf László was born in Bátaszék in Hungary’s Tolna County in the 1950s. His mother was from Józseffalva/Vornicenii Mici, Bukovina. He grew up amongst his mother’s family – all Székely Hungarians from Bukovina. He went to Bukovina for the first time in 1981 with his mother to visit her home village. He was deeply moved and returned to the village many, many times over the next four years. As a result he became interested in tracing the family tree of his Bukovina relatives. A computer programmer by trade he developed his own computer program for mapping family trees out from Józseffalva’s church birth, death and marriage records. Later the project extended to mapping out family trees of the whole village. Then he took on the same project for other Bukovina Székely villages, working from church records with his computer program. In the process he also amassed a sizable collection of photographs and became active in an international organization of people from Bukovina. From a conversation recorded on February 25, 2021.

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Timár Sándor’s folk dance and folklore collection work in Elek, Hungary. Famous in the Hungarian dance house movement for his folk dance teaching methods and choreography, Timár began doing folk dance collection and doumentation work with the Romanians in the village of Elek (in Eastern Hungary) in 1954. He first concentrated on dance traditions there in the period between the two world wars. This article discusses the various films he made and Timár’s field notes. He returned to Elek to do collection work several times in 1954–55. Again in the mid 60s, in 1972, in the 1980s and twice in 1992. Timár founded the Bartók Ensemble in 1958 but continued doing folk dance field collection work with the help of his colleagues and students. Article includes table of his collection trips, and location of field notes and films stored in the archives. By Timár Mihály.

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Laposa Julcsi young folk fiddler from Hungary’s Zala County collaborated with Kaláka Band on a book-recording – the 4th in a series called „NÉPI hang-színek” [FOLK sound-colors]. This volume features music and customs of the spring and summer. Julcsi is from a younger generation that grew up on Kaláka’s music and felt honored to be able to collaborate with them. Julcsi is used to working in authentic folk music, this project with Kaláka dips into world music. The goal of the series is to playfully introduce and hand over culture to children within a cultural/recreational framework. The tunes are presented in keys easily sung and played on the flute. The publication won support from the Halmos Béla Program, Fonó Music Hall and City of Zalaegerszeg. Interview by Kertész Dalma.

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Interview with Pávai István – esteemed honorary director of the Hungarian Heritage House. Mr. Pávai talks about his career and work as an ethnomusicologist, starting in his native Transylvania, and then after he relocated to Budapest in 1994 to work with the folk music collections of the Hungarian Museum of Ethnography and the Institute of Musicology. When the Hungarian Heritage House was established in 2001 (20 years ago!) he also joined the staff there. He has been instrumental in the folk music collection project known as „Utolsó Óra/Final Hour”, has developed and initiated cataloging, archival procedures and related data bases for the collections of all three institutions, has curated important exhibitions at the Hungarian Heritage House honoring the folk music collection work of Bartók Béla, Kodály Zoltán, Lajtha László and Vikár Béla and authored the accompanying publications. The list of his other publications is lengthy. By Csinta Samu.

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Meals as ritual part two: Blessings for food and drink from the Old Testament through the school cafeteria. This describes various traditional Hungarian blessings/graces for the meal - covering the following subject areas: Kun language table blessing, sung Saint John’s blessings, sung Calvinist table blessings, sung Catholic table blessings, Székely table blessings, humour and table blessings. By ethnographer Juhász Katalin.



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Remembering Zsoldos István „Pista bácsi” Forrószeg, Szék/Sic, Transylvania (Romania) 1934 October 4 – 2021 May 9. Zsoldos István had an outstanding knowledge of the local traditional dances, particularly the men’s dance known locally as „tempo”. This study sums up Pista bácsi’s descriptions of his generation that produced a large number of excellent men dancers in the village. He spoke of „the golden age of Szék dance and music” as the period when he was young. In the early 1930s an unusually large number of boys were born who reached the age of 12-14 during WWII. One of the Szék musicians described the Forrószeg dance house of the time to be like a beehive. The „sponsors” taught the boys to dance. „…from the end of the 1940s to the end of the 1950s there were weekends in Szék when 6-8 dance events were held at the same time.” Musicians and others known as excellent dancers are described, as well as Pista bácsi’s wedding in 1959. By dance ethnographer Varga Sándor.

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A short piece about a trip to the village of Ördöngösfüzes/in Transylvania’s Mezőség region in the mid 1980s. The village is well-known amongst dance house movement folks for its beautiful dances and music. This is a humble description of amateur dance and music collection efforts at a wedding there. They soon ran out of super 8 film and empty cassettes, so they „watched the dancers, drank the beer and were present at the event.” They had hoped to see some kind of unusual wedding dance tradition. The local people told them such a thing would occur at dawn. They were surprised/disappointed when well into morning the next day people stood up excitedly to dance what is known as the ’stork dance’, in Hungarian „gólyatánc” – a couple dance from the layer of dances danced by the bourgeoise from the end of the 19th century (perhaps something similar to this: ) By Szávai József.

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Telázsi Band – Méra, Kalotaszeg, Transylvania. In mid June 2021, Henics Tamás (photographer, Ladikos music festival founder and director, musician, medical researcher) who lives in Western Hungary/Austria was finally able to go to the Kalotaszeg village of Méra (in Romania) after a year and a half of COVID restrictions. His friends in Méra greeted him with live music played by a newly formed traditional band: Telázsi Band which grew out of members of the local Kalotaszeg Folk Dance Ensemble. Tamás says they are ready to play for any local dance event – be that sheep’s milk measuring events, hiring of shepherds, weddings, christenings, etc. By Henics Tamás.

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New publication: Máder László: Népdalszótár [Hungarian Folk Song Dictionary]. Akkord Zenei Kiadó Kft. 2021. [In Hungarian] Highly recommended for those interested in understanding the true meaning of Hungarian folk song texts. Many expressions in Hungarian folk song texts are not understandable for young people today because so many words are no longer in everyday use. Sources used for the dictionary were by folk music researchers Kodály Zoltán, Vargyas Lajos and Járdányi Pál. Review by Vavrinecz András.

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Digital folk dance 2021 – In February of 2021 the Hungarian Heritage House with the Hungarian Academy of Dance sponsored a discussion of good practices for online dance teaching. Sixteen projects were submitted and an online conference was held on March 27th. It was attended by 140 people. A jury of folk dance teaching experts judged the entries. Submitted projects covered folk dance teaching for all age groups from pre-school aged children through adults. The initiative was prompted by online teaching requirements during the COVID pandemic. Entries by Gordos Anna, Tóth Bence and Kozma Gergely were praised. Reports by Sándor Ildikó, Kozma Gergely, Tóth Bence and Verhóczki Milán.

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Interview with Ács Gyula – Classical musician, folk musician, folk music collector, composer, conductor, teacher who has received Halmos Béla Program funding for composition of a piece based on Hungarian folk music. Since 1984 Ács Gyula has worked with the Avas, Kisbojtár, Szinvavölgyi Vasas Folk Dance Ensembles, he founded Borókás Band, and was a member of Vörös Rébék folk rock band. He has composed classical works based on folk music for the Reményi Ede Chamber Orchestra. He is now nearly finished composing a cycle of songs called „Tetratónia” for which he recieved the grant funding. The inspiration came from tetratonic songs amongst the ’old style’ layer of Hungarian folk songs – from a ’small-ranged old Turkish layer’. These have inspired the cycle of songs Ács is working on. They will be sung by Török Tilla, some have already been recorded. By Dömötör Endre.

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Széki Soós János: Crown of Thorns – part II. Széki Soós János is from the village of Szék in Transylvania’s Mezőség region. His short stories provide vivid pictures of life there and personalities in the village. This story is about a time soon after the changes of 1989, when the Ceaușescu style milicia still had power, but it was beginning to crack and the people were fed up. A man named Szép Laji was jailed temporarily when he told off the local policeman who ordered him to stop singing in the pub… „the police don’t serve to protect us, instead they dominate and take advantage…” The local police had actually been confiscating the villagers’ jewelry, which was eventurally found and returned to them.

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Conversation with the late Almási István (1934-2021). Almási was a Hungarian folk music researcher from the Transylvanian city of Kolozsvár/Cluj Napoca. This conversation touched on: the fiddler Csoma Ferenc from the Mezőség village of Esztény/Stoiana; the 6 years Hungarian composer Erkel spent in Kolozsvár/Cluj Napoca from 1828; Bereczky János’ book on ’new style’ melodies in Hungarian folk music; ’new style’ as opposed to ’old style’ Hungarian folk music; Bartók and Kodály on ’new style’ folk music. Almási István said, „technically in terms of style if one wanted to collect good [traditional] music, it could be found only amongst the Gypsies”. Another quote from Almási: „Today ’new style’ folk songs are discouraged for performance at folk singing competitions. But this isn’t the competitor’s mistake, it’s the organizers’. I insist that there are beautiful ’new style’ folk songs…Why do they prohibit ’new style’ songs? The folk song competitor isn’t going to be the one preserving the ’old style’ songs. She/he is not the authentic carrier…” By Fehér Anikó (from 2016, Kolozsvár/Cluj, Romania).

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Galambos Tibor (Budapest, 1931. Sept. 16.) professional dancer, choreographer, documentary filmmaker, cultural and arts manager, director of Budapest’s Fészek Arts Club for 40 years. This article pays tribute to the life work of Galambos Tibor upon his 90th birthday. He danced professionally for 20 years (SZOT, Honvéd, Budapest Folk Dance Ensembles), started the Néptáncantológia (folk dance Anthology – yearly showcase of the best folk dance choreographies), was active in establishing „Táncművészet” magazine, the Táncszövetség, Táncfórum and the National Dance Theatre. Choreographer of 69 stage productions (for the Vasas, Avas, Vadrózsák, Erkel Ensembles), he is still active with the Erkel Ferenc Folk Dance Ensemble. He has produced and co-directed 28 films documenting works, masters, contemporary life and artistic vision in the Hungarian dance world. By Galambos’ student, Dr. Ónodi Béla.

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Two articles on the first national dance house festival, the „Táncháztalálkozó”. One is a conversation with Nyikos István – who was the first organizer of the festival. The festival was held for the first time on March 28th, 1982 at the Sport Arena in Budapest as a part of Budapest’s Spring Festival. Nyikos István worked at the time as adminstrative director for the Radnóti Stage and was involved in the dance house movement. He, Romhányi László (director of Budapest’s Thália theatre at the time) and folk musician Jánosi András formulated a plan for the first festival. There were some 1000 performers from all over Hungary at the first festival. It was about 9 years after the first dance house was held in Budapest and dance houses were popping up like mushrooms all over the country. Romhányi with Halmos Béla planned and directed the evening gala program. The massive yearly national dance house festivals have been organized ever since using basically the same format as the first one. Interview by Grozdits Károly. [Dance House Woodstock in the Sport Arena: Folk Arena] – a review of the first dance house festival that appeared in Új Tükör on May 2, 1982 XIX. 18. „…[dance house] is a form of recreation that still exists today in Transylvania, but these days in Hungary it is reteaching culture – a folk dance event that has become a means for getting aquainted and having fun...” By Deme Tamás.

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Traditional hunting practices amongst the Moldavian Hungarians. In Moldavian Hungarian communities we can’t speak about upper-class sport of hunting with guns. Peasant methods of trapping, snaring, digging pits were used; aided by dogs, smoke, poison, homemade traps and metal traps made by Gypsy metal smiths, but rarely guns. They hunted fox, badger, rabbits, perhaps something like a weasel, mice, wild cats, birds, deer, stags, wild boar, wolves, more rarely bear. Wolves and wild boar were caught in pits with many sharpened stakes placed in the bottom of the pit that impaled and hopefully killed them. The main goal was to procure food. Badgers for example had good meat, their fat was preferred over pig fat and their tough skin made good shoes (local moccasins) and bags. The study begins by describing how to capture wild bee families… Information from many sources, time periods and personal collection over many decades is summarized here. By Halász Péter.

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Old writings still relevant today – P. Vas János’ column. More selections from from „Kis magyar néprajz a rádióban” [A bit of ethnography for the radio]. Minerva. Budapest, 1978. Two pieces discussing the Hungarian words „had” (army, forces, troops, war, host, crowd, band pack) and „nemzetség” (family, clan, kin). ’ Nemzetség’ in peasant life meant the system of family relations – meaning blood relations on the father’s side, including ancestors already dead and those still alive. While the expression ’nemzetség’ meant a system of family relations, the word ’had’ meant a group of relatives and was used as such particularly in Heves, Borsod, Szolnok, Hajdú and Szabolcs counties. Girls until marriage belong to their father’s clan; from the wedding on they belong to the husband’s. By Szabó Piroska. The Székely Clans. Research done amongst families of Székely Hungarians from Hadikfalva/Dornești (Bukovina) showed that clans were comprised of seven generations from the point of view of one person. Three ascending generations and three descending generations. The elders of the clans of the village would meet from time to time to discuss important matters of the village. The patrilinear clan is the structure that has functioned over the centuries since the arrival of the Hungarian tribes to the Carpathian Basin. By Sárkány Mihály.

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On the Path of History – Kóka Rozália’s series. Interview with folk singer Fábián Éva – Part 1. Éva is a singer well-known from Kalamajka and Egyszólam ensembles. She was born in the Hungarian town of Szekszárd in 1959 and grew up in the village of Györe both in Hungary’s Tolna County. Her entire family (on both sides) were Székely Hungarians from the village of Andrásfalva/Măneuți in Bukovina. Éva tells about stubbornly insisting on being allowed to take music lessons as a young child. During elementary school, she competed every year in a folk song competition in the nearby town of Bonyhád. Back then the singing and music came instinctively without conscious knowledge of her Bukovina roots. Once following the advice of a singing teacher, Éva’s father gathered family members together and asked them to sing, thus providing Éva with a vocabulary of songs from her Bukovina relatives that she could sing at the competitions. She went to secondary school in Szekszárd and studied to be a pre-school teacher, where she attended 8 hours of singing lessons a week and learned excellent methods for teaching singing. Éva didn’t become actively conscious of her Bukovina heritage until 1975 when she was pursuaded to attend a camp for Bukovina Hungarians organized by Kóka Rozália… To be continued.

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Conversation with Sebő Ferenc one of the founders of the Hungarian Heritage House (HHH) – A good description of the background of this institution and discussion of the institutions that preceded it. The precursor institutions all had similar goals to the HHH, but the various political and cultural movements over the years naturally influenced their work, structures, and usage of folk material. The Institute of Folk Culture – the Népművészeti Intézet - was established in 1951 with the goal of directing the amateur folk movements. Despite political-philosophical views of the time, an enormous amount of field collection work was able to be accomplished in the early 1950s. 1956 naturally ‘brought change in the ideological winds’ and the institution was renamed Institute of People’s Recreation/Education, the „Népművelési Intézet”, where folk arts didn’t get the same emphasis as before, however a „folk dance department” was established, the task of which was to serve the folk dance movement, and field collection work was able to continue here. In 1964 the dance department was closed and their archives sent over to the Hungarian Academy of Science. In the beginning of the 1970s when the dance house movement took the „folk dances and music down from the stage” and began using them for [urban] recreational purposes, a new phase of tradition preservation began. Everyone was surprised by its popularity. Sebő negotiated with four governments before they were finally able to establish the present HHH, which could supply „appropriate government funding to secure tradition preservation in every form”. Specifically, at the time (20 years ago) that meant an institution which would embrace and support the Hungarian State Folk Dance Ensemble and the revival movement (the dance house movement) with archives, research and recreational work toward preserving Hungarian folk traditions. By Csinta Samu.

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Dances of Tyukod (Szabolcs-Szatmár County, Hungary). This article provides background information from dance collection fieldwork done in the area (mainly from 2000, 1960-61, and the 1950s) meant to assist those preparing for the 25th National Solo Dance Festival or anyone interested in traditional dances of the region. The dances concentrated on are: „magyar verbung” (which was danced as a solo men’s dance, as well as in a couple), „magyar szóló” – though the difference between the two remains unclear. Magyar verbung (sometimes also called verbunk) was danced to tunes that began on the lower strings of the fiddle. The dance is individual and improvised, everyone dances their own combinations of figures, but one main rule was that it began with and included „bokázó” (a heel clicking step). Specific tunes mentioned for these dances are: „Szól a füge madár”, „Ritka búza”. Influence/possible influence of a dance master and dance school in 1910 in Szatmárnémedi is mentioned. Some young men in Tyukod were taught by their fathers to dance in one place (not to travel the entire dance space). The names Gyenge Gáspár, Kajus László, Kiss Tibor, Szuromi Mária are mentioned as good dancers. By Busai Norbert.

Page 48
Two Hungarian textile artists who visited Delhi, India in January 2020 describe street vendors and street food. Street vendors sell from dawn til late into the night. They sell fruit and vegetables, flowers (most popular: marigolds, roses), pastries, sweet potatoes, incense, leaves, prepared foods, drinks (tea, buffalo milk), fresh pressed fruit juices, other street foods. They take their wares to places where the most people come and go: train stations, bus stations, the old town, subway entrances. Mostly the vendors were men selling from four wheeled carts, though other interesting solutions were seen. By Nagy Mari and Vidák István.

Page 50
A Peasant Boy Emigrates – Part 1. Lives of Bukovinan Hungarians – Kóka Rozália’s column. It was early January 1957 when three Bukovina Székely Hungarian boys decided to leave Hungary and find the world, since it seemed like the Soviets would be ruling Hungary for a long time. They set out from the village of Csátalja on Hungary’s southern border and crossed over into Serbia where they were sent to a camp in Stara Moravica and received scanty provisions from the Red Cross. Later single men were seperated out and sent to a camp in the Balkan Mountains where German SS soldiers had been imprisoned after WWII. Most of this story is about the time they spent there, the kind of people they met, the local Serbians and conditions in the camp. They were bored and waiting, but they were allowed to fish and swim in the Drina River. After a time those in the camp who had relatives abroad who would pay their tickets and sponsor them, began to leave. Those with no relatives or contacts had to wait for work opportunites, and there weren’t many for uneducated farmers. Finally in October of 1957 our protagonist signed a contract to go to Belgium and work as a miner. They were taken by train through Zrenjanin, then Titel and on to the west. From the writings and drawings of Lőrincz Gergely.

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Traditional Hungarian Foods – Kürtőskalács „(Romanian: Colac/Cozonac secuiesc; German: Baumstriezel) is made from sweet, yeast dough, of which a strip is formed and then wrapped around a truncated cone-shaped baking spit, and rolled in granulated sugar. It is roasted over charcoal while basted with melted butter until its surface cooks to a golden-brown color. During the baking process the sugar stuck on the kürtőskalács caramelizes and forms a shiny, crispy crust.” (Wikipedia). Forms of this simple roasted sweet are found in many cultures all the way back to ancient Greek times – more recently (from the 16th century) amongst the Hungarians, Germans, Lithuanian-Poles, Austrians, French, Swedish, Czechs and Slovaks – appearing under various local names. A wealth of information can be found at www.kurtos.eu. The Hungarian or more precisely Székely Transylvanian version is unique because of the caramelized sugar coating. Nowadays it is a popular street and market food. Hungarian recipes for this specialty are found from the late 1600s on. Eight recipes are provided here. By ethnographer Juhász Katalin.



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Are the Hungarians a nomadic, or an agrarian people? – Part 1. The skewed picture of Hungarians – reasons for historical tragedies and current problems. This study examines and argues these statements: The arrival of the Hungarian tribes to the Carpathian Basin put an end to the spread of the flourishing Slav religions. The Hungarians massacred everyone that came into their path, then settled down in their places. Was this really how it happened? Allegedly, even in 1996 certain Slavic neighbors referred to the Hungarians as ’thieving nomads’. A lecture given in 2006 by ethnographer, university professor, politician Andrásfalvy Bertalan who celebrates his 90th birthday on the 17th of November 2021.

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Pesovár Ernő (1926–2008) – the choreographer. Pesovár Ernő was also a folk dance researcher, dance historian and dance writer. This writing presents Pesovár Ernő’s choreography work, the main body of which ocurred between 1959 and 1978 when he was director and choreographer of Ungaresca Dance Ensemble in Szombathely, Hungary. He choreographed a total of 48 dance productions the majority which are discussed at least to some degree in this article. His choreographies were either: historical (14 of 48), music inspired, poetry or literature inspired, or folklore inspired. He used works by Hungarian composers: Petró, Bartók, Liszt, Rózsavölgyi, Szőllősy, Bihari, etc. Includes full list of the choreographies. By Horváth János „Gedi”.

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Excerpts from a short story by Lokodi Imre: „Kolozsvári vadhere”. A story told by a young man who rents a room from an old couple who live in a green house in the Transylvanian city of Kolozsvár/Cluj Napoca. He describes the old couple’s quirks and habits, their granddaughter Illus, the ladder to the attic, the young women from nearby Györgyfalva who would go down to the Szamos River. He also mentions their horse named Sári, two people in the neighborhood who have committed suicide, and how the old man of the green house had begun to resemble the young man’s grandfather who had been harassed by the communists.

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Adding sound to silent films documenting Hungarian folk dance: The film archives of the Hungarian Institute of Musicology contain an extensive collection on traditional dances of the Hungarian language regions. This article discusses the process of synchronizing existing silent films of dance – with the sound recordings of the music that were documented simultanously. Most of the silent films were made on 16 and 8 mm film. A professional film scanner which allows digitalization frame by frame and software to restore the the images are used for the process. This article summarizes process, problems and background behind the work being done for the Dance Research Department of the Hungarian Institute of Musicology. List of the archive films already synchronized with the music is included – many are available online at the link provided in the article in Hungarian, and on YouTube. The work is being done by Galát Péter, Antal Áron and Vavrinecz András in cooperation with colleagues of Dance Research Department of the Institute. The project receives support from the Csoóri Sándor Program and Martin György Folk Dance Association. Report by Galát Péter.

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Vas County’s village museum – conversation with museologist Nagy Endre who has been with the museum for some 35 years. The skanzen is located in the town of Szombathely in Western Hungary and concentrates on preserving traditional architecture of Hungary’s Vas County. Nagy tells about efforts presently in motion dedicated to keeping traditional building methods alive. The museum is participating in a project called EUREVITA – an EU program with cooperation between Austria and Hungary – which included a recent course for adults on clay/adobe type building methods. Interview by Grozdits Károly.

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This is the speech that officially opened the Vas County Village Museum on August 20, 1973 in Szombathely, Hungary. The speech was given by Hungarian ethnographer and politician Dr. Ortutay Gyula. „The museum presents traditional architecture of all the ethnic groups in the county … Hungarian, Slovenian (»Vend«), Croatian and German.” Names of the sub-regions of Vas County represented at the museum are: Őrség, Hegyhát, Völgység, Kemenesalja, Rábavölgy, Kőszeghegyalja, Kisalföld, Vendvidék. First published in Vasi Szemle 1974/1. 

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New publication: Kiss Ferenc: Kötelékek – Vízöntő and Kolinda ensembles and other tales. Etnofon Kiadó. Budapest. 2021. „This is not just a document of a time period, but a handbook for surviving the ’supreme power’, proof that dissecting the past is worthwhile!” (Novák Péter). Musician, composer, publisher, writer, veteran of Budapest’s folk music scene Kiss Ferenc shares thoughts on the mentality of Hungarian folk musicians, their life style, world and the unavoidable bureaucracy. They shed light on some of Hungary’s problems in the late 1900s. „Stories live on, are continuously retold and varied”. Announcements by Kiss Ferenc and Novák Péter.

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New recording: Nagy Gábor – Ördögmuzsika – Palóc pásztorzene [Shepherd’s music of Hungary’s Palóc region]. In 1995 when Nagy Gábor heard Csoóri Sándor play bagpipe at a Muzsikás concert, he decided he had to learn to play the instrument. In 1996 he met Pál István the Palóc shepherd, musician and ethnographic informant well-known in dance house circles. From then on Nagy Gábor travelled to the Palóc village of Tereske to visit Pál István and learn from him. This record presents repertoire learned from Pál István over two decades.

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Basic ingredients, places and tools for preparing food used traditionally by Csángó Hungarians in Moldavia – Part 1. „In Moldavia, like in other traditional communities food served first of all to nourish the body – presentation and taste were [not necessarily priorities]”. „…the WC attendant at the bus station in Bakó/Bacău (RO) – a man from the village of Lészped/Lespezi – was contentedly eating plums with bites of bread. I asked if that was his lunch. Yes, he said, I love it.” Cooking was traditionally done in pots over small open fires in kitchen areas often seperate from the rest of the house. Many, many variations of wood burning stoves are known. Pots and cauldrons, frying pans, simple baking tins were the main cookware. A main staple food of the Moldavian Csángó people is corn meal (polenta, málé, mamaliga, puliszka); bread is a more recent addition to the diet. Mainly they ate vegetables and meats they produced themselves, purchasing only salt, yeast, rice, sugar, dried noodles for soup. An array of edible wild plants were collected seasonally. Religious fasting customs and practices for pig slaughtering are described. By Halász Péter.

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Novák Ferenc received the Kriterion Wreath Award. This Hungarian Transylvanian cultural award is given to exceptional personalities whose work has brought news of Transylvania to the world. Novák Ferenc „Tata” was born in Transylvania in 1931. Though he has lived the greater portion of his life in Hungary, the experiences of his Transylvanian childhood have greatly influenced his art and work. Novák was a founder of the Bihari Folk Dance Ensemble, artistic director and choreographer of the Honvéd Ensemble (now the National Folk Dance Ensemble) for some 30 years, and was amongst those who started the dance house movement. „His life and work has touched the lives of so many”. From the laudation at the award ceremony on October 9, 2021 at the Hungarian Heritage House in Budapest – by Korniss Péter.

Page 28
On the Path of History – Kóka Rozália’s series. Interview with folk singer Fábián Éva – Part 2. Éva is a singer well-known from Kalamajka and Egyszólam ensembles. She was born in 1959. She grew up in the village of Györe in Hungary’s Tolna County. Her family (on both sides) were Bukovina Székely Hungarians originally from the village of Andrásfalva/Măneuți. Éva’s interview continues with more about her early work as a nursery school teacher, the Kalamajka children’s dance houses, being a member of/working with Kalamajka and Egyszólam ensembles, the fate of the Kalamajka Ensemble, her joy in the fact that her son became a folk musician, some stories from her Bukovina family history.

Page 31
New recording: Érdi Bukovinai Székely Népdalkör [Érd Bukovina Székely Folk Song Circle] 2021. Presenting folk songs, legends, myths preserved by the Bukovina Székely people in the town of Érd, Hungary. Main themes of the material presented on this recording are the Virgin Mary and two of Hungary’s kings: Saint István and Saint László. Announcement by Kóka Rozália.

Page 31
New publication: Fábián Éva mesél [Fábián Éva story teller]. This publication summarizes the knowledge of story teller Fábián Éva. She is well-known in the dance house movement also as singer with Kalamajka Ensemble and Egyszólam. Éva teaches both story telling and singing and is a frequent leader of children’s programs at the Hungarian Heritage House. The book in printed form with accompanying DVD (including a portrait film) will not be commercially released – it is available only to those in the teaching and story telling profession. However, the publication is available to the general public online via Hagyományok Háza (Hungarian Heritage House).

Page 32
The invitation to dance – in Hungarian tradition (Part 1.) This study examines customs, history and practices for inviting a partner to dance in a non-specified time in the past in traditional village society. It is organized under the following headings: the moment of inspiration [desire to dance]; learned and voluntary expresssion of invitation to dance; unwritten rules and the working reality – women’s and men’s roles; expressing the desire to dance; how men invite women to dance; the woman’s initiation/accepted individual methods; gestures and methods for inviting a partner to dance. For the most part, in traditional village communities: „the boy makes the moves, the girl waits”. Two levels of invitation to dance are discussed: invitation to the dance event and invitation to dance while already at a dance event. The author worked from 150 examples of related documentation found in a Hungarian Heritage House archive – the „Médiatár”. By Redő Júlia.

Page 36
Master hurdy-gurdy player and instrument maker Szerényi Béla has become a member of the Hungarian Academy of Arts. He has been playing hurdy-gurdy since 1986, was a student of traditional musician and instrument maker Bársony Mihály of Tiszaalpár, holds numerous awards for his artistry and craft. Excerpts from presentations given at the event when he took his chair amongst the members of the Academy on September 3, 2021 at the Pesti Vigadó, Budapest.

Page 37
Lakatos Károly – Hungarian story teller from Pálpataka/Valea lui Pavel in Transylvania’s Székelyföld region (Harghita County, Romania) received the title Master of Folk Arts in August 2021. Lakatos Károly was born in 1949, one of 8 children of a Székely Hungarian family in an isolated rural area of western Harghita County – where he still lives. Archaic traditions have survived longer in this remote area given that electricity and paved roads are newer additions. He has earned a living by raising Hungarian long-horned cattle, forestry work and making wooden toys and decorations. Lakatos Károly’s story telling falls under the ‘creative’ category (as opposed to the ‘reproducing or duplicating’ type). He creates his own stories using traditional story motifs. To date, 157 of his stories have been recorded. He was discovered by the folklore researchers about five years ago. His repertoire is currently being prepared for publication. One of his tales: „The Blacksmith and Mary” accompanies this report by Magyar Zoltán.

Page 40
Hungarian Heritage House celebrates its 20th anniversary. Interviews with department directors on the nature of their work, challenges and future of the institution. Sándor Ildikó, Collection Director of the Folkarts Methodology Workshop reports also on a meeting of 100 folkdance, folk music, folk crafts professionals who teach regulalry all over the Hungarian language region. Dr. Árendás Péter, Collection Director of the Library and Archive of Folklore Documentation, discusses mainly working with and maintaining the folk music collections and work with Kelemen László and Pávai István. Hont Angéla Director of Organization and Communications discusses „challenges of finding the best channels for getting news on Hungarian Heritage House’s wide variety of activities out to the interested public”. By Csinta Samu.

Page 44
New publication – Jávorszky Béla Szilárd: Kása Béla fotográfus (Kossuth Kiadó, 2021. Budapest, Hungary). Photographer Kása Béla (born Pécs, Hungary 1952) was educated as an art photographer in Köln, Germany (diploma 1979) and worked for both Stern and GEO magazines. He went to Transylvania the first time in 1973. Ever since then he returns regularly to photograph the village people. Main themes of his photography have been: the Transylvanian village musicians and their families, herders of Hungary’s Hortobágy region, wandering Gypsies of Dobruja, Transylvania, Moldavia, potters of Körösrév/Vadu Crișului (Romania), Irish Travellers, India’s Rabari tribes. He has exhibited in Europe, USA and in India. Béla „always finds the soul and tone for whoever he’s photographing”. Excerpts from the book.

Page 49
New publication: Csernók Klára – Árendás Péter: „Szilágysági népzene. Kanalas Imre dallamai” [Folk Music of Transylvania’s Szilágyság Region. Melodies played by Kanalas Imre] Hagyományok Háza. Budapest 2021. This volume presents tunes played by lead fiddler Kanalas Imre (1934–2018) from the village of Selymesilosva/Ilișua in the Tövishát district of the Szilágyság Region. It contains 59 traditional melodies known locally as: figurázó, verbunk (men’s dances), asztali nóta (table songs) and csárdás, ugrálós (couple dances) – that were documented in 1995 and 1996. The book intended for teaching/learning, also presents viola and double bass accompaniment. Includes sound and video material.

Page 50
A Peasant Boy Emigrates – Part 2. Lives of Bukovinan Hungarians – Kóka Rozália’s column. In early January 1957 three Bukovina Székely Hungarian boys decided to leave Hungary and find the world, because it seemed like the Soviets would be ruling Hungary for a long time. After many months in a refugee camp in the Balkan Mountains, in October of 1957 Lőrincz Gergely signed a contract to work in a Belgian mine. This part of the story vividly describes the two years Gergely spent working in a coal mine – every part of which was incredibly difficult, uncomfortable, dangerous, unhealthy, slave-like labor. In the meantime he began to pick up the languages and find his way somewhat. After two years, in 1959, when he finally got vacation time, he decided it was time to move on. He took a train to Germany to visit relatives from Bukovina who had moved there in 1940. From the writings and drawings of Lőrincz Gergely. To be continued.

Page 53
Milk, butter, cottage cheeses, cheese – dairy products in Hungarian folk tradition. After a brief review of milk’s symbolism in the Bible and role in Hungarian folklore, this article gives a summary of traditional practices and methods for home processing milk: namely milk from cows, sheep, goats, Transylvanian water buffalo. According to custom, cow’s and buffalo’s milk was handled by the women, while sheep’s milk was handled by the shepherds. Processing methods using rennet and without rennet are described; some instructions for making various kinds of cottage cheese and curd cheeses are given. Recipes provided are: cottage cheese filled dumplings; polenta with ewe’s ricotta-like cheese; making cheese, cottage and whey cheese; various dishes with ricotta/whey cheese; a fresh yoghurt-like cheese that Hungarian cattle herders make for themselves and eat for breakfast and supper. By Juhász Katalin.




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Romani design/Romani culture – this article touches on several areas: the design work of two sisters Varga Erika and Varga Helena, who „place authentic costume in a contemporary context”. Also described is a series of exhibitions at Budapest’s Museum of Industrial Arts wherein contemporary designers are invited to produce new works inspired by pieces from the museum’s collection. There is comment on the relationship that the Hungarian Romani community has with religion (Roman Catholic and Orthodox) and on the Csatka Pilgrimage (in Northwestern Hungary): „Csatka is an important pilgrimage destination for Gypsies of the Carpathian Basin”. Finally Hungarian Roma music is briefly described mentioning ’city Gypsy music’, the most famous Hungarian Roma composer Dankó Pista (1858-1903), and use of the water jug and spoons as instruments in traditional Roma music. By Molnár Tímea.

Page 5
A bit of ethnography on Hungarian Radio. Two pieces: one discussing the village kántor referring to the local singing master/singing leader and music teacher – who was also the church organist and assistant to the local priest or clergy. The other piece discusses the local school teacher also referred to as the school rector or mester in traditional village communities, who may have had tasks similar to the kántor with regards to music and singing, but was also school teacher for the village children. Both were positions of respect in a village. By Erdélyi Zsuzsanna and Jávor Kata from „Kis magyar néprajz a rádióban” RTV, Minerva, Budapest. 1978.

Page 6
The skewed picture of Hungarians – reasons for historical tragedies and current problems. Part 2. This study examines and argues statements such as: The arrival of the Hungarian tribes to the Carpathian Basin put an end to the spread of the flourishing Slavic religions; The Hungarians massacred everyone that came into their path, then moved into their places. Was this really how it happened?; Even in 1996 certain Slavic neighbors referred to the Hungarians as ’thieving nomads’. This is a lecture given in 2006 by retired ethnographer, university professor, politician Andrásfalvy Bertalan (born 1931 Sopron, Hungary). Transcribed by Henics Tamás.

Page 7

Exhibition of folk art collected by ethnographer Andrásfalvy Bertalan celebrating his 90th birthday. The exhibition will be held from November 17th, 2021 through March 1, 2022 in the city of Pécs. It includes traditional costume pieces and textiles, photographs, films, maps and other documentation from the many decades of Andrásfalvy’s career and research, revealing also his methods of researching traditional music and dance.

Page 9

New Publication: Andrásfalvy Bertalán: Mátyás és a török basa [Mátyás and the Turkish Pasha]. Forty five Hungarian folk tales collected by Andrásfalvy Bertalan from eleven story tellers in nine communities mostly in Hungary’s Tolna County. The collection work was done between 1950 and 1963. The publication includes an audio book. The volume was funded by the Hungarian National Cultural Fund and Petőfi Cultural Agency, with professional support from Eötvös Loránd University, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungarian Institute of Musicology, Pécs Museum of Ethnography. In Hungarian. Published by Magyar Versmondók Egyesülete, 2021, Budapest.

Page 11
Young Masters of Folk Art. This article briefly discusses the process of application to earn this title and procedure of assessment by juries of folk arts experts. The article concentrates on applicants for the title of Young Master of Folk Arts in the folk dance category. The author himself is a folk dancer who holds this title and who has been serving on the juries for this section since 2017. This year he was surprised when for the first time since he’s been involved in the jurying process, the decision of the jury of folk dance experts was overridden by the committee at the Ministry and the title was bestowed on a dancing couple that had not been amongst those chosen by the jury of dance experts. In light of this, the jury member who wrote this report resigns from further related jury service. He states that when the decision of the jury of dance experts is not respected, there is no need to continue. By Dr. Ónodi Béla, certified dance teacher, university professor, Young Master of Folk Arts.

Page 12
The 25th National Solo Folk Dance Festival was held October 29-31 in Békéscsaba, Hungary. This two day dance competition for adult folk dancers is held every 2 years. A jury of folk dance experts rates the dancers and decides on awards. Busai Norbert was president of the jury this year. The best men dancers recieve Golden Spur awards, the women Golden Pearl awards. There are first time winners, second time winners and ’eternal’ holders of these awards. This year 14 special awards were also given. Dancers compete with three dances: two compulsory dance progressions and one improvised dance of the dancer’s choice. Entrants either dance solo, or in a couple. „This year for the first time in six years, there wasn’t a difference in level of dancing expertise between the compulsory performance and the improvised performance…The tempo of dance technique development is at times frightening...” List of winning dancers in the Hungarian article. Report by Fodor Zsófia, photos by Majnik Zsolt.

Page 15
New CD – Góbé Band – Bartók 44 duó - Fonó 2021. A double CD presenting Bartók’s 44 duets for violin along with the original source material all played by members of Góbé Band with guest musicians.

Page 16
Four new recordings: reviewed and recommended. „…So, the question is: Can the new folklore – created by this or that folk or world music project or band, for concerts, festivals and dance houses – be sent out to anyone outside of these circles? Here are four records that deserve recommendation to a wider circle...” The four records are: Kalász Banda: „Mozgásban” (Fonó 2021); Szabó Dániel and band: „Pázsint – Népzene Székelyföldről és a Felső-Maros mentéről” [Folk Music from Transylvania’s Székelyföld and Upper Maros Region] (Fonó 2021); a children’s record by Paár Julcsi’s Hangoló project: „Kerekutca” (Fonó 2021); Nagy Gábor and Pál István with Csizmadia Anna: „Ördögmuzsika” (self released 2021). Reviews by Rácz Mihály on langolo.hu 2021.10.28.

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Children’s story telling competitions in Transylvania’s Gyimes Valley. A series of children’s story telling contests grew out of a trip Kóka Rozália took to Gyimes in the spring of 2014 to perform at a celebration there. She was befriended by a 10 year girl who asked if she had brought any books with her. As a result of this question Rozália returned to Hungary and collected 1500 story books which she took to Gyimes in October of the same year. The first story telling contest was held February 21st, 2015. It was organized by local schools, teachers and clergy in the Gyimes Region and supported by the Lakatos Demeter Csángó Magyar Cultural Association, the folk arts section of the Hungarian Academy of Arts, and Hungarian educators from the nearby town of Csíkszereda/Miercurea Ciuc, Romania. Further story telling contests were held in the fall of 2015 and the spring of 2016. In 2017 the event grew into a story telling and folk song contest, and was held again in 2018 and 2019. The 2020 contest was cancelled because of the COVID epidemic. Report by Kóka Rozália. First published in the journal „Művelődés –Gyimesek” 2021/1-2. Kolozsvár, Romania.

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New publication: Jávorszky Béla Szilárd: 80 Szomjas év [80 Szomjas years]. Kossuth Kiadó, Budapest 2021 – in Hungarian. This is a book on the life of the late Hungarian film director Szomjas György (1940–2021). The author worked with Szomjas in the weeks before he died, with Szomjas telling his own life story in seven sessions recorded on dictaphone. Szomjas planned the book together with Jávorszky, who writes: „It is Szomjas’ memoir – it is his book and his story”. Szomjas’ films are visual documents of Hungarian popular life. He directed fiction films, documentaries and TV programs. Music was important or took a main role in most of his films. He loved both rock and roll and folk music. A portion of his work documented Hungarian traditional music – both Budapest’s revival folk movement and the traditional village master musicians. This book was released on November 26, 2021.

Page 22
Basic ingredients, places and tools for preparing food used traditionally by Csángó Hungarians in Moldavia – Part 2. „In Moldavia, like in other traditional communities food served first of all to nourish the body – presentation and taste were [not necessarily priorities]”. „…the WC attendant at the bus station in Bakó/Bacău (RO) – a man from the village of Lészped/Lespezi – was contentedly eating plums with bites of bread. I asked if that was his lunch. Yes, he said, I love it.” Cooking was traditionally done in pots over small open fires in kitchen areas often seperate from the rest of the house. Many, many variations of wood burning stoves are known. Pots and cauldrons, frying pans, simple baking tins were the main cookware. A main staple food of the Moldavian Csángó people is corn meal (polenta, málé, mamaliga, puliszka); bread is a more recent addition to the diet. Mainly they ate vegetables and meats they produced themselves, purchasing only salt, yeast, rice, sugar, dried noodles for soup. An array of edible wild plants were collected seasonally. Religious fasting customs and practices for pig slaughtering are described. By Halász Péter.

Page 25
New CD – Magonc Ensemble, 2021 – an independent release. This CD presents traditional Hungarian folk music performed by 284 people: children and adults, students and teachers from three Budapest Waldorf Schools. It was recorded outdoors at the Téka Camp in Nagykálló, Hungary – directed by Lányi György.

Page 26
On the Path of History – Kóka Rozália’s series. Jakab Éva – singer, school teacher, chorus leader from Tolna County, Hungary. Jakab Éva was born in 1960 in the town of Bonyhád. All of her relatives are Bukovina Székely people hailing mainly from the Bukovina village of Andrásfalva/Măneuți. As a child Éva spent summers with her grandmother in the village of Aparhant (Tolna County, Hungary) doing the customary farm chores of a Székely Bukovina family. When the time came, her family permitted her to continue her education, so she went to secondary school and then to teachers training school. This is the story of her life’s path as a teacher who was also a good singer and chorus leader. She led choruses in many different communities in Tolna County (Kölesd, Kéty, Kisdorog, Aparhant, Kakasd, Nagymányok, Tevel). She was encouraged to discover the songs of her Bukovinan heritage. When her chorus had a successful performance at a Bukovina Festival in Hungary, they went on to perform at festivals in Transylvania and in Transylvanian villages where Bukovina Székely people had once lived.

Page 30
The invitation to dance – in Hungarian tradition (Part 2.) This study examines customs, history and practices for inviting a partner to dance in a non-specified time in the past in traditional village society. It is organized under the following headings: the moment of inspiration [desire to dance]; learned and voluntary expresssion of invitation to dance; unwritten rules and the working reality – women’s and men’s roles; expressing the desire to dance; how men invite women to dance; the woman’s initiation/accepted individual methods; gestures and methods for inviting a partner to dance. For the most part, in traditional village communities: „the boy makes the moves, the girl waits”. Two levels of invitation to dance are discussed: invitation to the dance event and invitation to dance while already at a dance event. The author worked from 150 examples of related documentation found in a Hungarian Heritage House archive – the „Médiatár”. By Redő Júlia.

Page 34
Conversation with Both Miklós – new director of the Hungarian Heritage House. After 20 years with Kelemen László as head of the Hungarian Heritage House (HHH), this government funded institution has named a new director: Both Miklós. Besides the main center in Budapest, HHH has been expanding into a network of related institutions. New director Both Miklós is a musician who has been involved in the dance house movement since the mid 1990s. He began working at HHH in 2019, already knowing many of the other employees there for years. He plans to reorganize inner workings of the institution, forming groups with an administrator in each group, thus freeing up the other colleagues to concentrate on work in their area of folklore. Both Miklós names three types of people that participate in ’the movement’: there are the researchers; the performers – the dancers and musicians that perform folk material that has been collected by the researchers; and the organizers. He intends to encourage cooperation between other folklore organizations. By Csinta Samu.

Page 37
Conversation with ethnographic researcher Törő Balázs on his project documenting fences and gates of Lake Balaton summer homes built in the 1960s and 1970s. For the most part these gates and fences were made by local craftsmen or the owners themselves. Törő Balázs is a native of Balatonakali on the northern shore of Lake Balaton. He works at the Laczkó Dezső Museum in Veszprém. He has also done research on Balaton summer communities and on the colonies of small family vineyards located on the outskirts of the villages. There is an exhibition of photographs from his fence/gate project in the waiting room of the Révfülöp train station. The exhibit opened on October 1st, 2021. Interview by Grozdits Károly.

Page 42
A Peasant Boy Emigrates – Part 3. Lives of Bukovinan Hungarians – Kóka Rozália’s column. In early January 1957 three Bukovina Székely Hungarian boys decided to leave Hungary and find the world, because it seemed like the Soviets would be ruling Hungary for a long time. After many months in a refugee camp in the Balkan Mountains, in October of 1957 Lőrincz Gergely signed a contract to work in a Belgian mine. He travelled to Belgium, then after working in the mine for two years, he moved on to Germany. First he worked on the estate of a ’Baron Arentin’ in Bavaria. He was injured at work and spent half a year in hospital. He married, they had a son, but his marriage was not happy; his wife was dishonest about money. It ended in divorce. Over time he got German citizenship and was hired by the postal service in Munich, where he worked until retirement in 1989. At some point on a visit to Hungary he met a sweetheart from his youth, Etelka. They were both single – she was a widow, he was divorced – so they decided to spend whatever years they had left, together. He moved to Baja, Hungary in 1991 where he finally found a secure home and peaceful life.

Page 44
Christmas in the Transylvanian village of Inaktelke/Inucu, Kolozs County, Romania. This is a short story about a trip to the village in the 1970s to document Christmas celebrations and the Christmas Ball. A car-full of young people travelled from Hungary with a very large video camera and a small television. The trip there and filming was full of obstacles (difficulties at the border, snowy weather, bad batteries, lighting, etc). They successfully filmed the procession of the villagers in holiday dress going to mass on Dec. 25th and dancing at the Christmas ball in the evening. „…we weren’t professional documentors, we were just ’mock collectors’, enthusiastic folk dancers, city folks from Hungary…but the [experiences, dances, music] are etched in our memories… and will remain in our hearts forever”. By Szávai József.

Page 45
Food and Tradition – Christmas dinner in the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. In the Carpathian Basin Christmas is December 24th. This study summarizes December 24th eating habits of the various ethnic groups that inhabited this region at the end of the 19th century. December 24th was a day of fasting – which meant that meat was not consumed until return from December 24th’s midnight mass. Described here are Christmas meals of: Hungarians, Christmas in the Nyitra Region (today in Slovakia), a middle class family in Eastern Hungary, the Slovaks, Ruthenians (Transcarpathia), Bulgarians and Serbs from the Bánság Region in Southern Hungary, Croatians, Slovenians, Austrians and Germans. There are recipes for various Christmas breads, bean soups, cabbage soup, roast turkey. By Ethnographer Juhász Katalin.

Page 49
New CD – Sarjú Banda – Fonó 2021. A CD of traditional Hungarian music played by young folk musicians (aged 13 to 20 years). They first became known during the 2015 kids PÁVA folk talent competition broadcast on Hungarian TV. Sarjú Banda plays, for example, at monthly teen dance houses at the Fonó and recently returned from a tour of Hungarian communities in the USA in the fall of 2021. This is their first CD. Their directors and advisors are Salamon Bea, Kuczera Barbara and their families. Members of the band: Hajdú-Németh Balázs, Hajdú-Németh László, Szilágyi Szabolcs, Csoóri Bendegúz, Horváth Áron, Gál Tibor.


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folkMAGazin special issue XVII
Honoring Karsai Zsigmond – traditional dancer, artist on the 100th anniversary of his birth. Karsai was born in 1920 in the Transylvanian village of Lőrincréve/Leorinţ; he died in the village of Pécel, Hungary in 2011. This is a collection of writings on Karsai and items selected from his correspondence and documents. „He was an outstanding preserving personality, an excellent ethnographic informant….his dance vocabulary condensed every valuable aspect of tradition of his birthplace.” He received Hungary’s title „Traditional Master of Folk Arts” in 1961.


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folkMAGazin surprise special issue XIII. March 2021
This special issue celebrates choreographer, folk dance theatre director, ethnographer Novák Ferenc „Tata” on his 90th birthday, with photographs by Korniss Péter from the 1960s to the present. A collection of 15 interviews on experiences working with Tata: interviewed are dancers from the Bihari and Honvéd ensembles, and musicians he has worked and collaborated with for his choreographies and other folk theatre productions. Interviewers: Berán István, Fodor Zsófia, Grozdits Károly, Herczku Ágnes, Jávorszky Béla Szilárd.