Antonia Vai

Antonia Morvai (born 24 April 1988), known professionally as Antonia Vai, is a Swedish/Hungarian artist, vocalist, songwriter, music producer, activist and podcaster. Antonia is the co-founder and hostess of the Hungarian podcast MiaFemme,[1] a feminist, anti-racist, sex positive, body positive and LGBTQ-friendly podcast aiming to create a space for diverse personal and political discussions.[2]

Antonia Vai
Antonia Vai live in Stockholm
Antonia Vai live in Stockholm
Background information
Birth nameAntonia Morvai
Born (1988-04-24) 24 April 1988
Stockholm, Sweden
GenresPop, folk-pop, soul
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter, musician, music producer
Instrument(s)Vocals, keyboard
Years active2008–present
Websiteantoniavai.com

Life and career

The daughter of Hungarian emigrants,[3] Antonia Vai was born in Stockholm, Sweden. She has been playing instruments and writing songs since her early childhood, drawing inspiration from the Legend of Zelda video game.[4][5] She attended Adolf Fredrik's Music School and the "Rock & Soul" program at Fryshusets Gymnasium. Antonia Vai also graduated from the music program at Liljeholmens folkhögskola (college) in Rimforsa, Sweden.

While she mostly writes songs and sings in English, she has written and performed several songs in both her native languages Swedish and Hungarian. In 2013, Vai moved to Budapest, Hungary to pursue her music career.[4][6]

Eurovision Song Contest 2016

Antonia Vai is participating in A dal 2016, a competition organised by the Hungarian public broadcaster Duna TV to select the Hungarian entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2016. Vai performs the song "Who we are" as vocalist with András Kállay-Saunders.

The song qualified with the highest of all scores in heat 2 on 30 January 2016. It qualified in the top 3 in Semi-final 1 on 13 February 2016, and competed again in the finals on 27 February 2016.[7]

TV and radio

Antonia Vai has been featured at several occasions in Hungarian national TV and radio stations.

  • The album release concert for "Stories after bedtime" in September 2014 was broadcast in its entirety on Hungarian national TV channel M2.[8]
  • A38 Ship presents: Antonia Vai[9]
  • "Az A38 Hajó Színpadán: Antonia Vai" (Singer-Songwriter evening on the A38 Ship.) Wednesday, 10 February 23:20 on M2.[3]
  • Antonia Vai recorded a one-hour acoustic session for the Hungarian Radio MR2 Akusztik program, which was broadcast nationwide on 27 December 2014.[10]
  • In October 2013, Antonia Vai performed a few songs live at Tilos Rádió in Budapest.[11]

Müpa, Palace of Arts, Budapest

In June 2015, Antonia Vai headlined a sold-out venue at the Müpa, Palace of Arts in Budapest with several musical guest artists, for example Sena Dagadu (Irie Maffia), the British/Ghanaian rapper M3NSA,[12] Saiid from Akkezdet Phiai and members of the gypsy-punk orchestra Bohemian Betyars.[13][14]

BalconyTV

Balcony TV Budapest hosted an episode with Antonia Vai Band feat. Sena in March 2015.[15]

Supporting performances

Antonia Vai collaborated as a support band on Quimby's national autumn tour in 2013, playing as opening act for them in five locations across Hungary.[13] On 12 May 2015 Antonia Vai was supporting act for the Belgian musician Selah Sue.[16] On 15 April 2017 Antonia Vai was supporting act for Lebanese singer Yasmine Hamdan.

Other ventures

Antonia Vai was interviewed and photographed in a six-page feature of the Hungarian September 2015 edition of Elle magazine.[17]

In 2017 Antonia appeared in the road-movie series Trip To The Moon which aired on Hungarian TV channel RTL.[18]

Discography

Albums

  • Lovers and Prophets[19]
  • Release date: September 2012
  • Format: digital download
  1. "Don't Let The Bedbugs Bite"
  2. "Macho Woman"
  3. "Confessions Of Berlin"
  4. "Moth To The Flame"
  5. "Rainy June"
  6. "The Smallest Song In The World"
  7. "Time Killer"
  8. "Waiting For War"
  9. "Snow White"
  10. "In The Early Hours"
  11. "Storms"
  12. "Down The Rabbit Hole"
  • Dirt From When The Earth Was Flat[19]
  • Release date: September 2012
  • Format: digital download
  1. "Once I knew A Boy"
  2. "Riots"
  3. "Pyromani (lek inte med elden)"
  4. "Dolinsko"
  5. "The Untold Tale Of Ikaros"
  6. "A Song For The Winter Sky (And You)"
  7. "43 Seconds To Hiroshima"
  8. "Naked And Quiet"
  9. "If You Think About It"
  10. "Just Another Nocturne To Clear My Mind"
  11. "Kittens In Trees"
  12. "It's 6 In The Morning And I Think I Love You"
  • Stories After Bedtime
  • Release date: September 2014
  • Format: CD, digital download
  1. "Intro"
  2. "Don’t Let The Bedbugs Bite"
  3. "The Pirate’s Waltz"
  4. "People"
  5. "In The Devil’s Catacomb"
  6. "Arkansas"
  7. "The Trouble With You"
  8. "Kittens in Trees"
  9. "Click and Bang"
  • Tightrope
  • Release date: March 2016
  • Format: CD, digital download
  1. "Fisherman Feat. M3NSA"
  2. "Remember How Feat. Saiid"
  3. "Don't Fall In Love With Me"
  4. "The Hand I Raise"
  • Ritual
  • Release date: September 2017
  • Format: CD, digital download
  1. "Intro"
  2. "Mantra"
  3. "Love Song for an Ex"
  4. "Mad Heart"
  5. "The Witch"
  6. "Brand Old Revolution"
  7. "The Devil Waits For Me To Slip"
  8. "Warrior Soul"
  9. "Laika's Ballad"
  10. "Secret Life"

Singles

  • Release date: August 2014
  • Format: digital download
  • Release date: May 2015
  • Format: digital download
  • Release date: May 2017
  • Format: digital download
  • Release date: April 2020
  • Format: digital download

Music videos

  • "Antonia Vai Band Feat. Saiid - Remember How (Official Video)"[23]
  • "Antonia Vai - Don't Let The Bedbugs Bite"[24]
  • "Antonia Vai - Warrior Soul (Official Video)"[25]
  • "Antonia Vai - Mad Heart (Official Video)" [26]
  • "Antonia Vai - GHOST (Official Video)[27]
  • "Antonia Vai - Exile (Official Video)"[28]
  • "Antonia Vai - Kali's Song (Official Live Video)"[29]

MiaFemme Podcast

The MiaFemme Podcast ("Girltalk Without Taboos"), was created by Luca Wilson and Antonia Vai in 2020.[30] The idea of the podcast came from the pair having Sunday brunches, sharing their honest, personal experiences with each other, while also realising their deep concern for the lack of these types of diverse discussions in Hungarian media, since main media sources are owned and controlled by the right-wing populist, national-conservative party Fidesz.[31] In a wish to change that and defy the censorship, they created their own platform. MiaFemme is a feminist, anti-racist, LGBTQIA+ friendly, sex positive, body positive podcast. In 2022 hostesses Bernadett Rack and Lucy Cadena joined the podcast.[32] They release episodes weekly, each episode based around one theme, and topics of discussions have included emotional labour, polyamory, the female orgasm, hair removal, catcalling, colourism, Black Lives Matter, queerness, male allyship, or harmful gender roles and stereotypes.[33] The podcast got positive reception, quickly creating a buzz and attracting many listeners, making it one of the biggest feminist podcasts in Hungary today.[34]

References

  1. "MiaFemme Podcast". Spotify. Retrieved 1 December 2022.
  2. "Miafemme Podcast is creating a podcast, a community and activist media". Patreon. Retrieved 1 December 2022.
  3. "Antonia Vai - Wednesday, 10 February 23:20, M2 - A38 Ship". A38 Ship.
  4. "Not just a girl who writes loads of songs but a real musician – Interview with Antonia Vai". artiq.hu.
  5. "Zene: Programajánló: Antonia Vai a CEU-ban" [Music: Program guide: Antonia Vai at the CEU]. est.hu (in Hungarian).
  6. "Antonia Vai, the Phenomenon". Raw Lines.
  7. "A dal eredmények | MédiaKlikk" [A Dal results]. MédiaKlikk (in Hungarian).
  8. "Antonia Vai - Thursday, 8 October 2015 03:15, M2 - A38 Ship". A38 Ship.
  9. "Antonia Vai - Tuesday, 12 May 2015 00:30, M2 - A38 Ship". A38 Ship.
  10. "Akusztik: Antonia Vai" [Acoustic: Antonia Vai]. Médiaklikk (in Hungarian).
  11. "Antonia Vai - The Pirate's Waltz (Live @ Tilos Radio)". youtube.com.
  12. "Pulse Music Facts: 8 facts you probably didn't know about M3nsa". pulse.com.gh.
  13. "Antonia Vai - Müpa Budapest". Müpa Budapest.
  14. "The future looks bright for Budapest-based diva Antonia Vai". WeLoveBudapest.com.
  15. "Antonia Vai Band Feat. Sena - People (BalconyTV)". balconytv.com. Archived from the original on 18 May 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  16. "Selah Sue (BE) - Reason album-release, , Antoina Vai feat Saiid - A38 Ship". A38 Ship.
  17. "Észak-déli átjáró - Interjú Antonia Vai énekesnővel" [North-South passage - Interview with singer Antonia Vai]. Elle Magyarország (in Hungarian).
  18. "Felejthetetlen élmények és elképesztő látványvilág a Trip to the moonban!". rtl.hu (in Hungarian). 3 November 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  19. "Antonia Vai". Lady Obscure.
  20. "Introducing: Antonia Vai Band". spinnup.com. Archived from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 5 February 2016.
  21. "Warrior Soul". spotify.com.
  22. "GHOST". youtube.com.
  23. "Antonia Vai Band Feat. Saiid - Remember How (Official Video)". YouTube. 9 May 2015. Retrieved 6 February 2016.
  24. "Antonia Vai - Don't Let The Bedbugs Bite". YouTube. 16 November 2012. Retrieved 6 February 2016.
  25. "Antonia Vai - Warrior Soul (Official Video)". YouTube. 29 May 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  26. Antonia Vai - Mad Heart (offical [sic] music video), retrieved 1 December 2022
  27. Antonia Vai - Ghost (Official Video), retrieved 1 December 2022
  28. Antonia Vai - Exile (Official Video), retrieved 1 December 2022
  29. Antonia Vai - Kali's Song (Official Live Video), retrieved 1 December 2022
  30. "Sokkolt minket, amikor kiderült, mennyi nő nem élvezi a szexet | nlc" (in Hungarian). 23 April 2020. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  31. Kingsley, Patrick (29 November 2018). "Orban and His Allies Cement Control of Hungary's News Media". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  32. Galentine’s Day Special, avagy Éljenek a női barátságok?!, 13 February 2022, retrieved 4 December 2022
  33. "MiaFemme Podcast". Spotify. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  34. "Tabunak számító témákat boncolgat egy (nem csak) nőknek indult podcast" (in Hungarian). 16 April 2021. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
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