'Metropole Orkest: Arakatak', National Concert Hall Budapest, 16 September

  • 12 Sep 2022 12:48 PM
'Metropole Orkest: Arakatak', National Concert Hall Budapest, 16 September
For more than 75 years, the peerless Metropole Orkest has been creating uplifting shows with the world's leading music artists in the genres of jazz, pop, electronica and world music. It has both a traditional big band line-up and an orchestral version of close to 100 members.

For the opening concert of the Bridging Europe Festival, we can look forward to a 60-member incarnation of the orchestra performing brand new pieces from the pens of Vince Mendoza, Donny McCaslin, Cory Wong, Mark Guiliana and Morris Kliphuis, under the baton of the orchestra's permanent guest conductor Miho Hazama.

The objective of Metropole Orkest remains unchanged since it was founded in Hilversum in 1945: to transmit to people a feeling of joy and liberty.

The musicians were recruited from various countries across Europe, and soon the fame of the orchestra spread beyond the boundaries of both the Netherlands and Europe as a whole. Their first principal conductor, Dolf van der Linden, occupied the orchestra pulpit unti 1980, and was responsible for laying the foundations of the orchestra's success.

 In 2005, Vince Mendoza became their first American conductor. The Metropole Orkest have released more than 150 albums. Their concerts and records have featured artists of the calibre of Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Pat Metheny, Brian Eno, Herbie Hancock, Bono, Caro Emerald, Snarky Puppy, Gregory Porter and Robert Glasper.

They have completed a wealth of film scores and TV and radio broadcasts. They can also boast four Grammy awards and a further 21 nominations. Their current permanent guest conductor has also been nominated: Miho Hazama, a Japanese native of New York, has been mentioned as a worthy successor to Maria Schneider and Jim McNeely.

We can now look forward to live renditions - in most cases for the first time - of large-band jazz pieces commissioned by the orchestra and typically inspired by pop and funk.

Venue: 
National Concert Hall Budapest
1095 Budapest, Komor Marcell utca 1.

Date and time:
Friday 16 September 8 pm.

More: 
mupa.hu

  • How does this content make you feel?
  • International Workers' Day Celebrated In Hungary On 1 May

    International Workers' Day Celebrated In Hungary On 1 May

    • 30 Apr 2024 3:33 PM

    International Workers' Day (also known as May Day) is a celebration of the international labour movement. May 1 is a national holiday in more than 80 countries and celebrated officially in many other countries, including Hungary.

  • Events Related to 15 March Commemoration of 1848 Hungarian Revolution in Budapest

    Events Related to 15 March Commemoration of 1848 Hungarian Revolution in Budapest

    • 14 Mar 2024 7:17 AM

    On March 15, 1848 - as part of the European revolutionary wave - a revolution broke out in Pest-Buda, and it triumphed without bloodshed with the slogans of national sovereignty and civil transformation ("equality, freedom, brotherhood"). Modern parliamentary Hungary was born, and the process leading to the War of Independence began, aiming to abolish Habsburg rule and achieve independence and constitutional establishment.

  • Marathon Northern Romanticism, Palace of Arts Budapest, 4 February

    Marathon Northern Romanticism, Palace of Arts Budapest, 4 February

    • 30 Jan 2024 5:29 PM

    Every year since 2008, the Budapest Festival Orchestra and Müpa Budapest have put on an all-day marathon production, most of them presenting the very best work of a given composer, with a series of consecutive concerts running from morning until late in the evening in the Béla Bartók National Concert Hall and the Festival Theatre.

  • Müpa at Heart of Culture in Budapest

    Müpa at Heart of Culture in Budapest

    • 22 Mar 2023 1:18 PM

    Idly looking around online for things of a cultural bent to do in the capital, I landed on the Müpa Budapest website and was struck by how many of the events were sold out, particularly as we’re talking pretty high culture.