Before the performance, Bona will teach a master class, free of charge, at the Budapest Jazz Club.
Born in 1967 in the village of Minta in East Cameroon, Bona grew up in a home filled with music. He began to perform in public at the age of five, singing in the village church with his mother and four sisters. His earliest instruments were wooden flutes and hand percussion. Later, he built his own 12-string acoustic guitar. After moving to the bigger city of Douala, Bona began playing gigs -- at the age of 11 - on a rented electric guitar.
A major turning point came in 1980, when a Frenchman came to his town and established a jazz club in a local hotel. The club owner heard about the young local prodigy and hired him to assemble a band.
"I didn't know anything about jazz," Bona said, "but the gig paid really well, so I took it."
The hotel provided the instruments, so Bona would spend his entire day there, learning to play all the instruments and teaching himself to read and write music. The club owner also offered his collection of 500 jazz LPs as a kind of reference library for Bona to start learning the repertoire. Purely by chance, the first record he pulled out of the stacks was Jaco Pastorius, the revolutionary self-titled debut album from 1976 by the bassist from Weather Report. This single album became a kind of Rosetta Stone for Bona's entry into jazz.
"Before I heard Jaco I'd never even considered playing bass," he recalls. "But when I heard that music, and especially the tune 'Portrait of Tracy,' it changed my life".
In 1989, at age 22, Bona moved to Paris and soon began working with such leading French musicians as violinist Didier Lockwood and bassist Marc Ducret as well as such African stars as Manu Dibango and Salif Keita. During his seven years in Paris, Bona refined his writing skills while further immersing himself in the music of jazz greats like Miles Davis, Chet Baker and Ben Webster.
After relocating to New York late in 1995, he contacted former Weather Report founder Joe Zawinul, whom he had previously met and played with in Paris. Bona joined the Zawinul Syndicate, appearing on 1996's My People and following it up with a whirlwind international tour (documented on 1998's live World Tour). In 1997, Bona became the musical director for Harry Belafonte, a position he held for a year and a half. In 1998, Bona began a series of regular Tuesday night tributes to Jaco Pastorius in an intimate downtown New York club called the Izzy Bar. There he would intersperse Jaco classics like "Liberty City," "Continuum," "Opus Pocus" and "Portrait of Tracy" with his own roots-oriented African-flavored originals. He focused on the latter direction for Scenes from My Life.
Bona first played in Budapest in 2004 and he took the A38 audience by storm. He was so impressed by Hungarian cuisine and the beauty of Budapest that he has returned to Budapest regularly since and always ask his managers to allow him a few days to relax in the city. In 2007, he recorded his first live DVD in Budapest and some of the material was published on CD this spring. It is entitled Bona Makes You Sweat.
7pm, 25 November 2008, A38 (Budapest) - Richard Bona (bass guitar,vocals), Samuel Torres (percussion), Sheryl Bailey (guitar), Etienne Stadwijk (guitar), Aaron Heick (saxophone), Nathaniel Townley (drums)
Source: fidelio.hu, a38.hu