| Coming
from a small town in Western Hungary, Anima Sound System are a group of musicians
from varying musical and intellectual backgrounds and generations. Together, live,
they create a true meltdown of all the dance music genres and styles of Middle-East
Europe across the ages.
Anima Sound System takes leading role in civic actions
against racism and homophobia. They initiated a now infamous campaign against
an extreme right wing radio station, forbidding them to play their music, and
their stance was followed by 60 other Hungarian bands. Independence, action and
experimentation are key words for the band: they have said "no!" to
moneybags who wanted to market them as the Hungarian Deep Forest. Their creativity
in sample manipulation, using everything from Hapsburg-era folk 78s to old Hungarian
Communist speeches, is a perfect illustration of their irreverent humour and ironic
take on their history. It is their desire to keep the music live, recording with
some of the most respected Hungarian and Gypsy artists, and their refusal to use
folk music as a token that keeps their sound so consistently innovative and successful.
Since the release of their debut album (Shalom, 1995) Anima Sound System
has become one of the most popular Hungarian bands of the new generation. Headlining
most of the Hungarian festivals, Anima Sound System regularly play to crowds of
between two and forty thousand. During their extensive live performances in Hungary,
Austria and Germany they have shared the stage with Kruder & Dorfmeister,
Dub Syndicate, Faithless, Goldie, Asian Dub Foundation, John Carter, the Space
DJz, Transglobal Underground, Freddy Fresh, David Holmes and DJ Krust. Their third
(untitled) album was released late 1997. Bartók meets King Tubby in Transsylvania,
Gypsyland. Asked about their stylistic versatility, they refer to Bela Bartok,
quoting his oft-repeated comment that racial impurity has a definitely positive
and fruitful effect. The Hungarian press called their third album "the dance
record of the year". The leading daily Népszabadság called
Anima Sound System "most promising, normal and worth to be loved act of the
local dance music scene of our time". Their single entitled ´68 and
its low budget trash video was an immediate success and were on heavy rotation
on most Hungarian TV and radio channels. The German SFB radio called their live
contribution the most interesting and promising act of the "Fete de la Musique"
three years ago in Berlin. In the week of its release, ´68 remixes (by Bassface
Sascha and De-Phazz) went straight number one on the official Hungarian single
sales charts. Rising international interest is proven by the fact, that
several Anima Sound System tracks have been licensed to various respected compilation
series in Germany (MOLE / Listening Pearls), France (Pschent / Buddha Bar - besides
Faithless and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan) and Switzerland (Energetic / Science Fiction
Jazz vol. 4). Both volumes of the internationally respected compilation series
Future Sound of Budapest feature one of their recent tracks each. Anima Sound
System has produced the full soundtrack to a Hungarian movie (Close to Love) that
has been premiered at the 30th Budapest Film Festival in February 1999. The soundtrack
was released by the Under Cover Music Group Hungary and is distributed worldwide
by interGROOVE Germany. A compilation album Mariguana cha-cha-cha (that includes
the remake of a forty year old Hungarian radiohit by Stefi Ákos) was released
in Germany. Thanks to Juci's (Judit Németh) sweet and gorgeous singing,
Mariguana cha-cha-cha went straight number one at the official domestic single
sales charts in Hungary within the week of release. At the end of 1999 Transglobal
Underground made a remix of their track called Bujdosó (Exile). The single
Bujdosó includes this and the remix of the Hungarian national Anthem. The
latter became a national scandal because the extreme right wing party sued Anima
for "offending a national symbol". In the spring of 2000, the most succesful
of all the albums so far, came out called Gipsy Sound Clash, that smashed all
previous records in the Hungarian dance music scene. In 2001 Zsolt Prieger and
Gergely Nemeth - the two leading figures of Anima - finished the first album of
their new project called Dubcity Fanatikz. In 2001 before their joint gig with
Asian Dub Foundation in Budapest, Anima recorded the anti-racist track "Enough"
with MC Spex and MC Aktarvata of Asian Dub Foundation. This track together with
2 of its remixes will be released soon on EP.
A compilation of Anima's
first three albums was released in the US under the title Hungarian Astronaut.
For their album, Gypsy Sound Clash, they won the "Golden Giraffe" award
-Hungary's most prestigious musical prize in the non classical music business-
as the best Hungarian world music band of the year in 2001.
Web site
: www.nyugat.hu
Contact
: WIZARt Andrea Gancs, Gabriella Mora E mail : info@wizart.hu Website
: www.wizart.hu c/o Bahia
MusicH-1091 Budapest, Ülloi út 23. Tel/Fax: +36 1 217 4354, 217
4302
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