Szakcsi - Sa-chi (1988) LP
Artist: Szakcsi
Title: Sa-chi
Year Of Release: 1988
Label: GRP Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue) 24/96, FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 48:47
Total Size: 828 / 166 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Sa-chi
Year Of Release: 1988
Label: GRP Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue) 24/96, FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 48:47
Total Size: 828 / 166 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
A1 Peace For Pastorius 4:44
A2 Dark Beauty 4:05
A3 Still Dreaming 3:57
A4 One Morning 3:31
A5 Ria 6:40
B1 Orange And Black 3:35
B2 Pure Passion 5:21
B3 Broken English 8:10
B4 Arabesque 3:52
B5 Good Times / Old Times 3:57
Dave and I are excited to present for the first time in the free world an album by a most exciting pianist...
Szakcsi (pronounced Sa-chi) was born in Budapest, Hungary on July 9, 1943. At the age of nine he began studying piano with a student of Bйla Bбrtok and immediately began composing short piano pieces. Three years later he entered the Budapest secondary school of music. At the age of fifteen, he discovered jazz by listening to Willis Conover on Radio Free Europe. Szakcsi remembers that "...it was very hard to find American jazz records in Hungary ...the first pianist to make a deep impression on me was Les McCann."
While in his early twenties Szakcsi was able to leave Hungary to learn more about jazz. In 1971, he ventured out of the Eastern block countries to Western Europe, and later that year he made a brief trip to New York. It was on this trip that he first heard Weather Report, Miles Davis, Pat Metheny, and the Mahavishnu Orchestra featuring Billy Cobham perform live. He returned to Budapest in 1972 and was appointed a professorship in Jazz Studies at the Budapest Music Conservatory.
Today, Szakcsi is a star in Hungary, composing music for the Budapest Theatre and for feature films (including the T.V film "Ballet" which was awarded first prize by the critics at the Montreaux Film Festival as well as the famous Hungarian Radio Prize). In 1986, Szakcsi was presented with Hungary's leading award for a musician, the Franz Liszt prize for outstanding musicianship in both composition and performance.
Szakcsi's solo piano work evolved over a fifteen year span. "One reason I started playing solo is because I could never find the right rhythm section. There are not many very good rhythm section players in Hungary." His work is a unique blend of European romantic classical music, Mozart, Chopin, and traditional Asian, Indian, and African music ...all melded with a Gypsy influence.
"The idea of this album is to show my soul, spirit, heart, feelings...) want the audience to understand these things. I'm looking for that contact between myself and the audience".
We feel contact has been made. Enjoy!
-Larry Rosen
Szakcsi (pronounced Sa-chi) was born in Budapest, Hungary on July 9, 1943. At the age of nine he began studying piano with a student of Bйla Bбrtok and immediately began composing short piano pieces. Three years later he entered the Budapest secondary school of music. At the age of fifteen, he discovered jazz by listening to Willis Conover on Radio Free Europe. Szakcsi remembers that "...it was very hard to find American jazz records in Hungary ...the first pianist to make a deep impression on me was Les McCann."
While in his early twenties Szakcsi was able to leave Hungary to learn more about jazz. In 1971, he ventured out of the Eastern block countries to Western Europe, and later that year he made a brief trip to New York. It was on this trip that he first heard Weather Report, Miles Davis, Pat Metheny, and the Mahavishnu Orchestra featuring Billy Cobham perform live. He returned to Budapest in 1972 and was appointed a professorship in Jazz Studies at the Budapest Music Conservatory.
Today, Szakcsi is a star in Hungary, composing music for the Budapest Theatre and for feature films (including the T.V film "Ballet" which was awarded first prize by the critics at the Montreaux Film Festival as well as the famous Hungarian Radio Prize). In 1986, Szakcsi was presented with Hungary's leading award for a musician, the Franz Liszt prize for outstanding musicianship in both composition and performance.
Szakcsi's solo piano work evolved over a fifteen year span. "One reason I started playing solo is because I could never find the right rhythm section. There are not many very good rhythm section players in Hungary." His work is a unique blend of European romantic classical music, Mozart, Chopin, and traditional Asian, Indian, and African music ...all melded with a Gypsy influence.
"The idea of this album is to show my soul, spirit, heart, feelings...) want the audience to understand these things. I'm looking for that contact between myself and the audience".
We feel contact has been made. Enjoy!
-Larry Rosen