This month, the band of Gábor Gadó and
Veronika Harcsa present their second album.
Their first album, Shekhinah (2023), receiving
Citizen Jazz magazine’s ÉLU award, featured
Gadó’s fresh compositions with lyrics by
Veronika Harcsa. The Language of Flowers,
on the other hand, brings to life compositions
written by Gadó more than two decades ago
to lyrics by Eszter Molnár, and thus revives
the brightest era of Hungarian vocal jazz,
hallmarked by the work of Gábor Winand.
Gábor Gadó and Veronika Harcsa are two artists
who are known primarily as jazz musicians, yet their
work is increasingly shifting towards classical and
contemporary music. Another step in this direction
was their previous album Shekhinah in 2023,
receiving Citizen Jazz magazine’s ÉLU award, and
this year the dialogue between classical and jazz
musicians continues in the songs of The Language
of Flowers. But while Shekhinah features Gadó’s
recent compositions with lyrics by Veronika Harcsa,
The Language of Flowers brings to life Gadó’s
compositions from more than two decades ago to
lyrics by Eszter Molnár, and thus revives the brightest
era of Hungarian vocal jazz, hallmarked by the name
of Gábor Winand. Between 2002 and 2006, Gadó
and Winand released four albums (Corners of My
Mind, Agent Spirituel, Different Garden, and Opera
Budapest), which have taken their careers to new
heights and won prestigious French awards.
The Gadó – Harcsa Quintet has selected 11 songs
from these albums, but their aim is not to replicate,
but to approach these pieces as one would the
repertoire of jazz standards or classical songs: as
melodies and lyrics that anyone can perform, finding
their own voice in them.
Gábor Gadó has been working with BMC Records
for a quarter of a century, releasing an incredible
number of 25 albums for BMC Records, including
one of the label’s biggest hits, 2002’s Orthodoxia.
After his famous French quartet, Gadó has recorded
materials with many groups, and this quintet was
also formed on his initiative. He couldn’t have found
a more suitable vocalist partner for reinterpreting
the vocal jazz tradition than Veronika Harcsa, who is
justly the most popular Hungarian jazz singer in the
country and the most recognized abroad. Her duo
with Bálint Gyémánt, which has also participated in
the Jazzahead! festival, is already releasing its third
album out on German labels, while BMC Records
hosts her contemporary improvisational and classical
projects such as Debussy NOW!, the Modern Art
Orchestra’s Bartók album, or Different Aspects of
Silence with Kornél Fekete-Kovács, the Robert Balzar
Trio and Dan Bárta. In the Gadó – Harcsa Quintet, we
find musicians familiar from Shekhinah and Gadó’s
other projects: Belgian trumpeter Laurent Blondiau,
sound magician saxophonist János Ávéd, and the
contemporary scene’s prominent cellist Tamás Zétényi
adds defining colours to the character of the music.