Holy Brotherhood: Romani Music in a Hungarian Pentecostal Church by Barbara Rose Lange (Assistant Professor of Ethnomusicology, Moores School of Music, Assistant Professor of Ethnomusicology, Moores School of Music, University of Houston)
Holy Brotherhood: Romani Music in a Hungarian Pentecostal Church is a musical ethnography of a religious community. After the end of socialism, different ethnic groups in Hungary harbored antagonism toward one another. In one Pentecostal church in Pecs, Hungary, however, both Hungarians and Roma (Gypsies) worshipped and made music together. Three musical repertoires coexisted, each with a separate historical background and complex social meanings: Romani religious song; nineteenth-century gospel hymns originally from the United States; and contemporary Christian pop from the United States. Church members accommodated cultural and musical differences by developing several distinct performance styles.