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Biography of Béla Bartók
Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music, 4th edition
by Michael Kennedy and Joyce Bourne


Copyright © 1996 Oxford University Press
By permission of Oxford University Press

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Bartók, Béla (b Nagyszentmiklós, Hungary (now Romania), 1881; d NY, 1945). Hung. composer, pianist, and folklorist. Parents were musical and mother gave him his first pf. lessons. In 1894 at Bratislava (then Pozsony) studied with the cond. Laszlo Erkel until 1899 when he entered Budapest Royal Acad. of Mus. In 1902 heard a perf. of Strauss's Also sprach Zarathustra which stimulated his powers of comp. to such a degree that he wrote his nationalistic tone-poem Kossuth in 1903. By this time was travelling abroad as solo pianist in mus. by Liszt and other kbd. virtuosi. In 1905 began systematic exploration of Hungarian peasant mus. and in 1906, with his fellow-composer Kodály, pubd. a coll. of 20 folk-songs. In 1907 became prof. of pf. at the Budapest RAM. For the next decade, while his mus. was badly received in his own country, continued systematic coll. of Magyár folk-songs. In 1917 his ballet The Wooden Prince was successfully prod. in Budapest and led to the staging in the following year of his 1-act opera Duke Bluebeard's Castle (1911). In 1922 and 1923 his first 2 vn. sonatas had their f.ps. in London, and in 1923 comp. the Dance Suite to celebrate the 50th anniv. of the union of Buda and Pest. During the 1920s resumed career as pianist, composing several works for his own use. In 1934 was given a salaried post in the Hung. Acad. of Sciences in order that he could prepare his folk-song coll. for publication. In the spring of 1940, in view of political developments in Hungary, emigrated to USA. This was not a happy time for him; his health began to fail, his mus. was infrequently perf., and there was little demand for his services as a pianist. Nevertheless the Koussevitzky Foundation commissioned the Concerto for Orchestra, Yehudi Menuhin a solo vn. sonata, and William Primrose a va. conc. (left unfinished but completed by Tibór Sérly). He died from leukaemia.

Bartók's mus. is a highly individual blend of elements transformed from his own admirations: Liszt, Strauss, Debussy, folk-mus., and Stravinsky. Perhaps his greatest achievement lies in his 6 str. qts. in which formal symmetry and thematic unity were successfully related. But the melodic fertility and rhythmical vitality of all his mus. have ensured its consistent success since his death. Prin. comps.:

STAGE: Duke Bluebeard's Castle (A kékszakállù herceg vára), Op.11, 1-act opera (1911, rev. 1912, 1918); The Wooden Prince (A fából fargott királyfi), Op.13, 1-act ballet (1914-17); The Miraculous Mandarin (A csodálatos mandarin), Op.19, 1-act pantomime (1918-19, orch. 1923, rev. 1924, 1926-31).

ORCH.: Kossuth, sym.-poem (1903); Rhapsody, pf., orch., Op.1 (1904); Suite No.1, Op.3 (1905, rev. c.1920), No.2 (small orch.), Op.4 (1905-7, rev. 1920, 1943); vn. conc. No.1. (1907-8; 1st movt. rev. as No.1 of 2 Portraits), No.2 (1937-8); 2 Portraits, Op.5 (No.1 1907-8, No.2 orch. 1911); 2 Pictures, Op.10 (1910); Romanian Dance, Op.11 (1911); 4 Pieces, Op.12 (1912, orch. 1921); Suite (3 dances), The Wooden Prince (1921-4); Suite, The Miraculous Mandarin (1919, 1927); Dance Suite (1923); pf. conc. No.1 (1926), No.2 (1930-1), No.3 (1945); Rhapsody, vn., orch., No.1 (1928), No.2 (1928, rev. 1944); Transylvanian Dances (1931); Hungarian Sketches (1931); Hungarian Peasant Songs (1933); Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta (1936); Divertimento, str. (1939); 2-pf. conc. (arr. of sonata for 2 pf. and perc.) (1940); Concerto for Orchestra (1942-3, rev. 1945); va. conc. (completed from draft by Sérly) (1945).

VOICE(S) & ORCH.: 3 Village Scenes, women's vv. (1926); Cantata Profana (The 9 Enchanted Stags), ten., bar., double ch., orch. (1930); 5 Hungarian Folk Songs, low v. (1933).

CHORUS: Evening, male vv. (1903); 4 Old Hungarian Folk Songs, male vv. (1910, rev. 1912); 5 Slovak Folk Songs, male vv. (1917); 5 Hungarian Folk Songs (1930); 5 Székely Songs, male vv. (1932); 27 Traditional Choruses, children's and women's vv. (1935); From Olden Times, male vv. (1935).

CHAMBER MUSIC: pf. qt. (1898); pf. quintet (1903-4, rev. ?1920); str. qt. No.1, Op.7 (1908), No.2, Op.17 (1915-17), No.3 (1927), No.4 (1928), No.5 (1934), No.6 (1939); vn. sonatas, No.1 (1921), No.2 (1922); Rhapsody No.1, vn., pf. (1928, also orch. vers.), No.2 (1928, rev. 1945, also orch. vers.); Rhapsody, vc., pf. (1928); 44 Duos, 2 vn. (1931); sonata, 2 pf., 2 perc. (1937, orch. 1940); sonata, unacc. vn. (1944); Contrasts, vn., cl., pf. (1938).

PIANO: 3 Klavierstücke, Op.13 (1897); Scherzo (Fantasie), Op.18 (1897); Scherzo in B minor (1900); 12 Variations (1900-1); 4 Pieces (1903); Rhapsody, Op.1 (1904, also orch. vers.); 14 Bagatelles, Op.6 (1908); 10 Easy Pieces (1908); 85 Pieces for Children (1908-9, rev. 1945); 2 Romanian Dances, Op.8a (1909-10, No.1 orch. 1911); 7 Sketches, Op.9b (1908-10); 4 Dirges, Op.9a (1909-10, No.2 orch. as No.3 of Hungarian Sketches, 1931); 3 Burlesques, Op.8c (1908-11, No.2 orch. as No.4 of Hungarian Sketches, 1931); Allegro barbaro (1911); sonatina (1915, orch. as Transylvanian Dances, 1931); Romanian Dances (1915, orch. 1917); Suite, Op.14 (1916); 3 Hungarian Folk Tunes (c.1914-18); 15 Hungarian Peasant Songs (1914-18, Nos. 6-12, 14-15 orch. 1933); 3 Studies, Op.18 (1918); 8 Improvisations on Hungarian Peasant Songs, Op.20 (1920); Dance Suite (1925, arr. of orch. work); sonata (1926); Out of Doors (1926); 9 Little Pieces (1926); Mikrokosmos, 6 vols. containing 153 ‘progressive pieces’ (1926, 1932-9).

Also many solo songs, editions of Italian kbd. mus., etc.

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Copyright © 1996 Oxford University Press - By permission of Oxford University Press


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