Béla Halmos, one of the
founding fathers of the Hungarian folk music revival movement, passed
away at his home in Budapest yesterday. He was 68. Béla was one of my great friends and a role model
as I was growing up. He was, in fact, one of the main reasons I live
in Hungary today.
In 1972 I was staying at my Uncle's house in
Veszprém when I saw a TV documentary following two long haired but
serious young Hungarians as they went from village to village in
Hungary sticking microphones into old people's faces, collecting folk
music, and then attempting to reproduce it themselves. I was
fascinated, and so my uncle began taking me to friends of his who
played the fiddle or the Hungarian zither. Eventually my uncle bought
me a cheap Czech fiddle (which is hanging on the wall behind me as I
type) and started me on my lifelong path to making screaming East
European fiddle music. That TV show was a window on the very
beginning of the Dance House movement.
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At the original dance house, Kossuth Klub, Zuglo, 1972 |
Eventually, I got to meet Béla Halmos in 1986 in Boston Massachusetts, when Beth Cohen and her all
Woman Hungarian folk band brought him over to play for Dance
workshops. The serious unsmiling guy in the film turned out to be a
rather jolly fellow with a taste for Chinese and Japanese food and a
wonderfully competent, if quirky, command of English. Béla Halmos took Hungarian
musical culture out of the academic and folkloristic realm and put it
back into the hands of everyday people, especially young people, and
set an example that would grow into a movement. That movement –
beginning with 1970s communist era Hungarian youth in bad hippie
haircuts – grew into a unifying social force for Hungarians called
the Tanchaz, or Dance House movement. Dance House put the fun back
into folk dancing, put fiddles back in the hands of teen musicians,
returned the csárdás to its place as a sexy dance for young
Hungarians, and helped Hungarians retain their unique cultural
identity at a time when the prevailing Communist ideology still
strove for a Stalinoid cultural sameness in the identity of the World
Proletariat. What Béla Halmos did was simply genius: he learned to
play the fiddle in Hungarian village style. And then he played. A
lot. Everywhere.
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Fiddling in the bar at the Fono Club |
Béla bácsi (Uncle Béla) was as central to the shift
in consciousness that led to the fall of Communism as any samizdat
publisher or Radio Free Europe broadcaster. Bela helped shift a
cultural viewpoint, and he did it simply by saying “This is how we
sound.” And then he would pick up a fiddle and show you. I
mentioned Bela a couple of posts ago when he was playing a set of
dances from Szék at the Dance House Day celebration at Franz Liszt
Sq. in Pest in June. While at the Smithsonian Folklife Festival I
asked several organizers there “Why isn't Béla bácsi here?”
since anything celebrating Dance House culture on a large scale could have included the participation of one of its founders and key
popularizers. Béla Halmos was (with Ferenc Sebő) the founder of the
first of the Hungarian Folk revival band back in the early 1970s, the
Sebo-Halmos band. As such, he had a stature in the scene equivalent
to, say, that of a Pete Seeger in the USA or a Ewan MacColl in the UK
as the Father of the Folk Scene. Trained in classical violin and
studying to be an engineer, Halmos met Sebő as students taking part
in a folk song competition around 1969. Rejecting the over-arranged
restaurant Gypsy music style of the folklore troupes, Sebő and Halmos
wanted to sound like the village musicians they had heard on field
recordings of folk music recorded by ethnomusicologists like Bartók and Lajtha.
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Playing with Icsan in Szek, around 1973 |
They sought out the dance ethnographer Gyorgy Martin who
shared his huge collection of original recordings of Transylvanian
folk bands and steered them in the right direction of getting on a
train and going to the “pure source” of the village musicians
themselves in Transylvania, where the older Hungarian traditions
still maintain their context in rural villages. Béla found his sound
in the village of Szek, in the north Transylvanian plain, and his
mentor was Adám István, named “Icsán” - a hard-boiled old village
Gypsy fiddler whose repertoire and fiddle style were absorbed by Béla to became the core of the Dance House revival.
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"Icsan" |
While the Dance House
movement was “tolerated” during the 1980s, after 1990 Béla and
other Dance House researchers worked to make the folk dance movement
a part of the education system and bring it to a wider audience. Béla produced a long running TV series on Hungarian folk music as well as taking a
position at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences as a musicologist and
archivist, all the while teaching workshops and performing concerts
and dances.He preferred the simple joys of a weekend night playing
fiddle for a room full of sweaty dancers to almost anything –
except maybe a few strong shots of palinka after the set, as long as
somebody had the foresight to bring along some spicy salami or bacon
to settle the stomach. Which I always did. Béla Halmos' influence
will far out shadow the sorrow at his passing: he leaves behind
thousands of active musicians, singers, and dancers all over the
world whose love of the arcane village band sounds of Transylvania
is directly the result of his life's work. Béla was one of the strongest supporters of what we were doing in Di Naye Kapelye, and included us in several of his music series and TV projects. He had a broad, relativistic modern Anthropologists' view of the world, not the provincial East European “folklore” vision so many still profess. He was not a ranting nationalist, but he loved Hungarian culture while valuing the multicultural aspects of life in the Carpathian basin. He was a cultural treasure as well as a cultural activist, a real Renaissance man. But most of all, he was a nice guy. A wonderfully nice guy. A good friend. He knew what was good. As his mentor, Icsán the fiddler used to say "Ami jó, az jó." What is good , is good. Bela simply did good work.
He played a dance in Budapest like he belonged in a village in the Mezőség. He was a good teacher, a good man. We will miss him, but we will feel his influence for many, many years to come whenever a fiddle comes out of a case, and a Hungarian tune comes out of a fiddle. Nyugodj békében Béla!
3 comments:
Thanks for this heartfelt memorial. Bela really did have an influence on us foreigners. It's safe to say that Bela transmitted the experience of Hungarian/Szek music in such a way that I ended up going into ethnomusicology in Hungarian-speaking territory. He left us too soon but he left us with a lot! --
Great!
Very informative, Bob. Nice, touching tribute on one of the true masters of East European folk music. I can relate because my Romanian paternal grandparents had started me down my lifelong path as I was growing up listening to the Romanian band music of John Boldi and Neil Bondshu which were based in East Chicago, Indiana. They were all brass bands whooping up Romanian folk music 1930's and 40's big band style. But thank you anyway for a nice, touching, informative piece.
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