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  • Ez az a zene, ami életünk pillanatait oly módon tudja megörökíteni, hogy azok sosem merülnek feledésbe.

  • ez egy állat! már a jó értelemben..

  • I've removed one of your posts simply because, in my opinion, it disrespected the memory on the Jewish community and culture that once thrived in Central Europe. Israel is so far away and I'm sure F. Lajkó will not be taken away by Mossad ;)

  • @tthanmor

    I cannot steal anything, especially not music. I'm not Jewish. (Almost all Central European Jews were sent to Auschwitz or elsewhere in 1940s. The people and their culture were literally wiped off overnight.) I can only listen to music and quote experts at times. It is pitiful that many tend to value and favour their own nationalistic labels over everything. Fortunately, musicians & artists are not such ****skulls. The discussion is pointless and I'll delete the comment eventually.

  • @none4tube It's your right to feel something or know something wrong. It's your responsibility you spread it or not. Origins and motives of a music is strictly objective, not depend on taste. Wall Street Journal is not so relevant source of music reviews but day-trades. Shall I cite here what Kodály said about gypsy music? (It's not about the terrific gypsy classical musicians!)

  • @ariesmindworks I was talking about Félix Lajkó in general. The Wall Street Journal is just one of them, AND quoted on lajkofelix.hu! What I don't understand is just WHERE the problem is. You and (not just you) seem to have a problem with it and act as if Félix Lajkó is - God forbid - almost "contaminated" with something he is not even allowed to be influenced with. Best artists are usually not nationalists, they're open-minded, absorb and combine things + create their own expression.

  • @none4tube Anyway, if the WSJ would say, I'm the best xxx styled in my profession, I would be happy and I started post it as a testimonial immediately on my site. Even if they are wrong. No offenz, I won't reply anymore, I said enough. :) Cheers.

  • I feel no jazzy, Gypsy, jewish here but some parts from the North-China. There's also no mention on the artist's official website about ethnic influences. It's really dumb to mark every fast and modern violin music as jewish and gypsy. Felix and Magdi do a very geniune and distinctive music.

  • @ariesmindworks

    No one says "Hazatér és idő" is influenced by any of the styles mentioned.

  • @none4tube You said in general. But in general, I don't hear the styles you mentioned.

  • What F. Lajkó does cannot be readable from a single song. What you hear / feel is your own right. This is not a closed world. If you say his music is connected to Inner Mongolia, why not, who says anyone will disagree with you?

    "While his energetic and soulful music is said to be inspired by a fusion of folk, jazz, Gypsy & Jewish klezmer sounds, his scope makes it almost useless to define it as any particular style." Wall Street Journal Europe, lajkofelix.hu

  • @ariesmindworks If Félix Lajkó doesn't have a problem with it, I don't see a reason YOU should have it. You say the thing is strict. Yet you mention Inner Mongolia. I say - Central Europe. Félix Lajkó is an artist, that's for sure. And as far as art is concerned - things are never strict in it.

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