Amphitrio - What Freedom Sounds Like

The Sound Archive's project "Jazz and Social Life under Communism" explores this year the rich history of Romanian jazz during the socialist period. After a documentation of the Sibiu Jazz Festival between 1974-1989 and a recent exhibition dedicated to it in the same city, we now turn our attention to jazz in Timișoara.

What was the jazz scene in Timișoara like in the period before 1990?
What impact did it have on the city's social and cultural life?
What were its international connections?

Wednesday, october 16, 7 pm, National Museum of Art, Baroque Hall
Concert Amphitrio - What Freedom Sounds Like

Amphitrio releases his latest album, Timelines, which features eight compositions influenced by the folklore of eight former communist countries (Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, Serbia, Slovakia, Czech Republic, Poland, Germany, Hungary, Bulgaria, Serbia, Czech Republic, Poland and Germany).

Tickets for the Amphitrio concert at the National Museum of Art can be found online: https://muzeul-national-de-arta-timisoara.booktes.com or at the museum's box office, Wednesday - Sunday: 10:00 - 18:00.

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Organizer: Centrul Dialectic

Partners: Union of Croatian Composers, Minitremu Association, Jazz Updates, Casa Artelor - Timis County Department for Culture

Media partners: Radio Romania Cultural, Scena 9

The project "Jazz and Social Life in Communism" is developed by Centrul Dialectic and is part of the national cultural program "Timisoara - European Capital of Culture in 2023", financed by the Legacy Timisoara 2023 program, implemented by the Center of Projects of the Municipality of Timisoara with funds allocated from the state budget, through the budget of the Ministry of Culture. Project co-financed by AFCN. The project does not necessarily represent the position of the funders.

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Jazz and Social Life in Communism

Jazz and Social Life in Communism