János Bródy

János Bródy
Born April 5, 1946
Budapest, Hungary
Occupation singer, guitarist, composer
Years active 1964-
The native form of this personal name is Bródy János. This article uses the Western name order.

János Kristóf Bródy, commonly known as János Bródy (5 April 1946, Budapest-) is a Hungarian pop singer, guitarist, composer and scriptwriter. Successful both with the bands Illés and Fonográf and in his solo career, writing lyrics for singers like Zsuzsa Koncz or for musicals like István, a király, he was a major figure of the Hungarian music scene in the 60s-90s.

Illés and Fonográf

János Bródy was born on 5 April 1946 in Budapest as the child of András Bródy, Széchenyi Award-winning economist, and Márta Vajna, a teacher.

After his graduation, in 1964 he joined beat band Illés after the advice of Zsuzsa Koncz. The band, which previously gained its Budapest-wide fame from small club concerts playing Italian and English hits (like ones from The Hurricanes, The Shadows and The Beatles) recorded its first albums Long Tall Sally and Little Richard/Chapel. The band was more and more often accompanied by the young Levente Szörényi, with whom Bródy began their acclaimed musical partnership. After many of the members finished university, the band went through multiple changes, but was getting more and more fame.

Adding to the atmosphere of playing western music, Bródy and Szörényi wrote lyrics that - embedding the possibility of multiple interpretations - criticised the communist regime, turning their increasingly crowded events to implicit protests. By 1972, Illés was increasingly under the pressure due to both passive state harassment, and the huge fan base, which demanded a more popular style compared to their original artistic goals.

In June 10, 1973 at a massive beat event in Diósgyőr, Bródy turned to fans and said "We also wish to thank for the work of the police forces. Yes, I'm serious, as there was many of you who already came here yesterday from Miskolc, many of you who couldn't sleep anywhere, wanted to spend the night out in Avas. For them, the police provided shelter, even if not as comfortable as the bed at home, and let them out today morning, asking them if they slept well, and wishing them fun for tonight." Bródy was sentenced to a one month residual ban and 5000Ft fine.

In his absence, the band started to fall apart, with members sacrificing more and more time to own projects. On November 2, 1973 the band officially split, with founder Lajos Illés re-founding it with new members, and with Bródy and Szörényi founding Fonográf. After seven years, in 1981 the band gave a final concert with the original members, and while their disagreements remained, group work manifested in talks, documentaries, and concerts in 1990, 1996, 2001 and - marked by the death of drummer Zoltán Pásztory - a last two in 2005.

Moving away from beat towards the fusion of country and rock, Fonográf, started in 1973, was virtually a workshop with numerous collaborators, notably Zsuzsa Koncz and Judit Halász, while the members also developed their own projects with the group's backing. Their lyrics still featured anti-regime ideas, often coming under heavy censorship. In 1973, discs of Koncz's album Jelbeszéd, written by Bródy was withdrawn from stores and shredded. The 80s marked successful theatrical compositions for the Bródy-Szörényi duo, like Kőműves Kelemen in 1982, cult musical István, a király in 1983, or Fehér Anna in 1988. As member projects took increasingly different paths, Fonográf dissolved after three large concerts in 1984.

Bródy's relationship with Szörényi soured after the first democratic elections in 1990 when they began to support rival political parties, restricting their joint artistic work to the few last concerts of Illés and Fonográf.

Solo career

Bródy's own performing career began with concerts in the Court Theatre and the University Stage of ELTE. His first album, Hungarian Blues, released in 1980, contained songs that were dominant throughout his later career: mellow, critical, ironical ballads about general life in the 80s, and after 1990, the disappointment in the newly democratized country. Besides giving a few larger solo concerts (notably in 1994), Bródy favors smaller, intimate club and chamber events. He also continued his work on theatrical plays, like A Kiátkozott (1997) and Volt egyszer egy csapat (2005).

Discography

Notable awards

Sources

External links