The Modern Art Orchestra is Hungary’s leading
big band and the resident band of the Budapest
Music Center, presenting its incredibly broad
and ever-expanding repertoire in highly
successful series at both the Concert Hall and
the Opus Jazz Club. With their latest album,
they have set out to interpret the choral works
of Zoltán Kodály, one of the leading figures
in Hungarian ethnomusicology and musical
education.
One of the most characteristic features of the
work of Kornél Fekete-Kovács and the Modern Art
Orchestra is the integration of the various strands of
contemporary classical music and jazz into a single
artistic vision. This is reflected in the list of musicians
they have chosen to work with. They have now
teamed up with the Kodály Choir Debrecen, whose
repertoire includes not only the best of a cappella and
oratorio literature, but also, even more importantly,
contemporary music, with hundreds of premieres to
their name.
The approach of the current album differs from
that of Modern Art Orchestra’s 2018 release,
which reflected on Bartók’s 15 Hungarian Peasant
Songs: on the previous album, the compositions
and improvisations were less separable in their
performance, while here Kodály’s choral works –
including the iconic The Peacock – present a crosssection
of the composer’s oeuvre, followed by folk
song-inspired big band and choral paraphrases by the
band members.
The artistic director of the Modern Art Orchestra,
Kornél Fekete-Kovács, has been a key figure in the
Hungarian big band scene from the very beginning,
not only gathering Hungary’s most talented musicians
around him, but also playing with foreign artists
such as Johnny Griffin, Benny Golson, Tom Harrell,
Peter Erskine, Rick Margitza, Herbie Mann, and Kurt
Elling. His close relationship with BMC Records is
evidenced by several albums, including Integro /
Grandeur (2010, Fekete-Kovács Quintet & Pannon
Philharmonic) and the 2022 album Different Aspects
of Silence (with Veronika Harcsa, Dan Bárta, and the
Robert Balzar Trio).
The Modern Art Orchestra has recorded a total of
four albums for BMC Records. In 2014, saxophonistcomposer
Kristóf Bacsó, a member of the
orchestra, recorded his own compositions. In 2020,
Foundations: Yamas and Niyamas, lauched to become
the label’s third most listened-to release on streaming
platforms. 2018 saw the release of the most direct
precursor to this Kodály album, 15 Hungarian Peasant
Songs, a tribute to Bartók, on which David Liebman,
Veronika Harcsa, Mihály Dresch and Miklós Lukács
joined the band for a few tracks. The album received
great international reception, and has been followed
by tours abroad, with the band most recently
presenting the material in Germany.