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Béla Bartók

Béla Viktor János Bartók (/ˈblə ˈbɑːrtɒk/; Hungarian: [ˈbɒrtoːk ˈbeːlɒ]; 25 March 1881 – 26 September 1945) was a Hungarian composer, pianist, and ethnomusicologist. He is considered one of the most important composers of the 20th century; he and Franz Liszt are regarded as Hungary's greatest composers.[1] Through his collection and analytical study of folk music, he was one of the founders of comparative musicology, which later became ethnomusicology.

Béla Bartók in 1927

Biography

Childhood and early years (1881–98)

Bartók was born in the Banatian town of Nagyszentmiklós in the Kingdom of Hungary (present-day Sânnicolau Mare, Romania) on 25 March 1881.[2] On his father's side, the Bartók family was a Hungarian lower noble family, originating from Borsodszirák, Borsod.[3] His paternal grandmother was a Catholic of Bunjevci origin, but considered herself Hungarian.[4] Bartók's father (1855–1888) was also named Béla. Bartók's mother, Paula (née Voit) (1857–1939), also spoke Hungarian fluently.[5] A native of Turócszentmárton (present-day Martin, Slovakia),[6] she also had Hungarian and Slovak ancestry.[citation needed]

Béla displayed notable musical talent very early in life: according to his mother, he could distinguish between different dance rhythms that she played on the piano before he learned to speak in complete sentences.[7] By the age of four he was able to play 40 pieces on the piano and his mother began formally teaching him the next year.

In 1888, when he was seven, his father, the director of an agricultural school, died suddenly. His mother then took Béla and his sister, Erzsébet, to live in Nagyszőlős (present-day Vynohradiv, Ukraine) and then in Pressburg (Pozsony, present-day Bratislava, Slovakia). Béla gave his first public recital aged 11 in Nagyszőlős, to positive critical reception.[8][page needed] Among the pieces he played was his own first composition, written two years previously: a short piece called "The Course of the Danube".[9] Shortly thereafter, László Erkel accepted him as a pupil.[10]

Early musical career (1899–1908)

 
Bartók's signature on his high-school-graduation photograph, dated 9 September 1899

From 1899 to 1903, Bartók studied piano under István Thomán, a former student of Franz Liszt, and composition under János Koessler at the Royal Academy of Music in Budapest.[11] There he met Zoltán Kodály, who made a strong impression on him and became a lifelong friend and colleague.[12] In 1903, Bartók wrote his first major orchestral work, Kossuth, a symphonic poem which honored Lajos Kossuth, hero of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848.[13]

The music of Richard Strauss, whom he met in 1902 at the Budapest premiere of Also sprach Zarathustra, strongly influenced his early work.[14] When visiting a holiday resort in the summer of 1904, Bartók overheard a young nanny, Lidi Dósa from Kibéd in Transylvania, sing folk songs to the children in her care. This sparked his lifelong dedication to folk music.[15]

From 1907, he also began to be influenced by the French composer Claude Debussy, whose compositions Kodály had brought back from Paris. Bartók's large-scale orchestral works were still in the style of Johannes Brahms and Richard Strauss, but he wrote a number of small piano pieces which showed his growing interest in folk music. The first piece to show clear signs of this new interest is the String Quartet No. 1 in A minor (1908), which contains folk-like elements.[16] He began teaching as a piano professor at the Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest. This position freed him from touring Europe as a pianist and enabled him to work in Hungary. Among his notable students were Fritz Reiner, Sir Georg Solti, György Sándor, Ernő Balogh, Gisela Selden-Goth, and Lili Kraus. After Bartók moved to the United States, he taught Jack Beeson and Violet Archer.[17]

In 1908, he and Kodály traveled into the countryside to collect and research old Magyar folk melodies. Their growing interest in folk music coincided with a contemporary social interest in traditional national culture. Magyar folk music had previously been categorised as Gypsy music. The classic example is Franz Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsodies for piano, which he based on popular art songs performed by Romani bands of the time. In contrast, Bartók and Kodály discovered that the old Magyar folk melodies were based on pentatonic scales, similar to those in Asian folk traditions, such as those of Central Asia, Anatolia and Siberia.[citation needed]

Bartók and Kodály set about incorporating elements of such Magyar peasant music into their compositions. They both frequently quoted folk song melodies verbatim and wrote pieces derived entirely from authentic songs. An example is his two volumes entitled For Children for solo piano, containing 80 folk tunes to which he wrote accompaniment. Bartók's style in his art music compositions was a synthesis of folk music, classicism, and modernism. His melodic and harmonic sense was influenced by the folk music of Hungary, Romania, and other nations. He was especially fond of the asymmetrical dance rhythms and pungent harmonies found in Bulgarian music. Most of his early compositions offer a blend of nationalist and late Romanticism elements.[citation needed]

Middle years and career (1909–39)

Personal life

In 1909, at the age of 28, Bartók married Márta Ziegler (1893–1967), aged 16. Their son, Béla Bartók III, was born the next year. After nearly 15 years together, Bartók divorced Márta in June 1923. Two months after his divorce, he married Ditta Pásztory (1903–1982), a piano student, ten days after proposing to her. She was aged 19, he 42. Their son, Péter, was born in 1924.[18]

Raised as a Catholic, by his early adulthood Bartók had become an atheist. He later became attracted to Unitarianism and publicly converted to the Unitarian faith in 1916. Although Bartók was not conventionally religious, according to his son Béla Bartók III, "he was a nature lover: he always mentioned the miraculous order of nature with great reverence." As an adult, Béla III later became lay president of the Hungarian Unitarian Church.[19]

Opera

In 1911, Bartók wrote what was to be his only opera, Bluebeard's Castle, dedicated to Márta. He entered it for a prize by the Hungarian Fine Arts Commission, but they rejected his work as not fit for the stage.[20] In 1917 Bartók revised the score for the 1918 première, and rewrote the ending. Following the 1919 revolution in which he actively participated, he was pressured by the Horthy regime to remove the name of librettist Béla Balázs from the opera, as Balázs was of Jewish origin, was blacklisted, and had left the country for Vienna. Bluebeard's Castle received only one revival, in 1936, before Bartók emigrated. For the remainder of his life, although devoted to Hungary, its people and its culture, he never felt much loyalty to the government or its official establishments.[citation needed]

Folk music and composition

 
Béla Bartók using a phonograph to record Slovak folk songs sung by peasants in Zobordarázs[21] (Slovak: Dražovce, today part of Nitra, Slovakia)

After his disappointment over the Fine Arts Commission competition, Bartók wrote little for two or three years, preferring to concentrate on collecting and arranging folk music. He found the phonograph an essential tool for collecting folk music for its accuracy, objectivity, and manipulability.[22] He collected first in the Carpathian Basin (then the Kingdom of Hungary), where he notated Hungarian, Slovak, Romanian, and Bulgarian folk music. The developmental breakthrough for Bartok arrived when he collaboratively collected folk music with Zoltán Kodály through the medium of an Edison machine on which they would study classification possibilities (for individual folk songs) and record hundreds of cylinders. Bartok's compositional command of folk elements is expressed in such an authentic and undiluted a manner because of the scales, sounds, and rhythms that were so much a part of his native Hungary that he automatically saw music in these terms.[23] He also collected in Moldavia, Wallachia, and (in 1913) Algeria. The outbreak of World War I forced him to stop the expeditions, but he returned to composing with a ballet called The Wooden Prince (1914–16) and the String Quartet No. 2 in (1915–17), both influenced by Debussy.[citation needed]

Bartók's libretto for The Miraculous Mandarin, another ballet, was influenced by Igor Stravinsky, Arnold Schoenberg and Richard Strauss. Though started in 1918, the story's sexual content kept it from being performed until 1926. He next wrote his two violin sonatas (written in 1921 and 1922, respectively), which are among his most harmonically and structurally complex pieces.[24]

In March 1927, he visited Barcelona and performed the Rhapsody for piano Sz.26 with the Orquestra Pau Casals at the Gran Teatre del Liceu.[25] During the same stay, he attended a concert by the Cobla Barcelona at the Palau de la Música Catalana.[25] According to the critic Joan Llongueras, “he was very interested in the sardanas, above all, the freshness, spontaneity and life of our music [...] he wanted to know the mechanism of the tenoras and the tibles, and requested data on the composition of the cobla and extension and characteristics of each instrument ”.[25]

In 1927–28, Bartók wrote his Third and Fourth String Quartets, after which his compositions demonstrated his mature style. Notable examples of this period are Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta (1936) and Divertimento for String Orchestra (1939). The Fifth String Quartet was composed in 1934, and the Sixth String Quartet (his last) in 1939. In 1936 he travelled to Turkey to collect and study Turkish folk music. He worked in collaboration with Turkish composer Ahmet Adnan Saygun mostly around Adana.[26][27]

World War II and final years (1940–45)

In 1940, as the European political situation worsened after the outbreak of World War II, Bartók was increasingly tempted to flee Hungary. He strongly opposed the Nazis and Hungary's alliance with Germany and the Axis powers under the Tripartite Pact. After the Nazis came to power in 1933, Bartók refused to give concerts in Germany and broke away from his publisher there. His anti-fascist political views caused him a great deal of trouble with the establishment in Hungary. In his will recorded on 4 October 1940, he requested that no square or street be named after him until the Budapest squares Oktogon and Kodály körönd, or in fact any square or street in Hungary, no longer bear the names of Mussolini and Hitler, as they did at the time he wrote his will.[28] Having first sent his manuscripts out of the country, Bartók reluctantly emigrated to the U.S. with his wife, Ditta Pásztory, in October 1940. They settled in New York City after arriving on the night of 29–30 October via a steamer from Lisbon. After joining them in 1942, their younger son, Péter Bartók, enlisted in the United States Navy where he served in the Pacific during the remainder of the war and later settled in Florida where he became a recording and sound engineer. His elder son, by his first marriage, Béla Bartók III, remained in Hungary and later worked as a railroad official until his retirement in the early 1980s.[citation needed]

Although he became an American citizen in 1945, shortly before his death,[29] Bartók never felt fully at home in the United States.[30] He initially found it difficult to compose. Although he was well known in America as a pianist, ethnomusicologist and teacher, he was not well known as a composer. There was little American interest in his music during his final years. He and his wife Ditta gave some concerts, although demand for them was low.[31] Bartók, who had made some recordings in Hungary, also recorded for Columbia Records after he came to the US; many of these recordings (some with Bartók's own spoken introductions) were later issued on LP and CD.[32][33][34][35][36][37][38]

Supported by a research fellowship from Columbia University, for several years, Bartók and Ditta worked on a large collection of Serbian and Croatian folk songs in Columbia's libraries. Bartók's economic difficulties during his first years in America were mitigated by publication royalties, teaching and performance tours. While his finances were always precarious, he did not live and die in poverty as was the common myth. He had enough friends and supporters to ensure that there was sufficient money and work available for him to live on. Bartók was a proud man and did not easily accept charity. Despite being short on cash at times, he often refused money that his friends offered him out of their own pockets. Although he was not a member of the ASCAP, the society paid for any medical care he needed during his last two years, to which Bartók reluctantly agreed. The first symptoms of his health problems began late in 1940, when his right shoulder began to show signs of stiffening. In 1942, symptoms increased and he started having bouts of fever. Bartók's illness was at first thought to be a recurrence of the tuberculosis he had experienced as a young man, and one of his doctors in New York was Edgar Mayer, director of Will Rogers Memorial Hospital in Saranac Lake but medical examinations found no underlying disease. Finally, in April 1944, leukemia was diagnosed, but by this time, little could be done.[39]

As his body slowly failed, Bartók found more creative energy, and he produced a final set of masterpieces, partly thanks to the violinist Joseph Szigeti and the conductor Fritz Reiner (Reiner had been Bartók's friend and champion since his days as Bartók's student at the Royal Academy). Bartók's last work might well have been the String Quartet No. 6 but for Serge Koussevitzky's commission for the Concerto for Orchestra. Koussevitsky's Boston Symphony Orchestra premièred the work in December 1944 to highly positive reviews. The Concerto for Orchestra quickly became Bartók's most popular work, although he did not live to see its full impact.[40]

In 1944, he was also commissioned by Yehudi Menuhin to write a Sonata for Solo Violin. In 1945, Bartók composed his Piano Concerto No. 3, a graceful and almost neo-classical work, as a surprise 42nd birthday present for Ditta, but he died just over a month before her birthday, with the scoring not quite finished. He had also sketched his Viola Concerto, but had barely started the scoring at his death, leaving completed only the viola part and sketches of the orchestral part.

 
Béla Bartók's portrait on 1,000 Hungarian forint banknote (printed between 1983 and 1992; no longer in circulation)

Béla Bartók died at age 64 in a hospital in New York City from complications of leukemia (specifically, of secondary polycythemia) on 26 September 1945. His funeral was attended by only ten people. Aside from his widow and their son, other attendees included György Sándor.[41]

Bartók's body was initially interred in Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, New York. During the final year of communist Hungary in the late 1980s, the Hungarian government, along with his two sons, Béla III and Péter, requested that his remains be exhumed and transferred back to Budapest for burial, where Hungary arranged a state funeral for him on 7 July 1988. He was re-interred at Budapest's Farkasréti Cemetery, next to the remains of Ditta, who died in 1982, one year after what would have been Béla Bartók's 100th birthday.[42]

The two unfinished works were later completed by his pupil Tibor Serly. György Sándor was the soloist in the first performance of the Third Piano Concerto on 8 February 1946. Ditta Pásztory-Bartók later played and recorded it. The Viola Concerto was revised and published in the 1990s by Bartók's son; this version may be closer to what Bartók intended.[43] Concurrently, Peter Bartók, in association with Argentinian musician Nelson Dellamaggiore, worked to reprint and revise past editions of the Third Piano Concerto.[44]

Music

Bartók's music reflects two trends that dramatically changed the sound of music in the 20th century: the breakdown of the diatonic system of harmony that had served composers for the previous two hundred years;[45] and the revival of nationalism as a source for musical inspiration, a trend that began with Mikhail Glinka and Antonín Dvořák in the last half of the 19th century.[46] In his search for new forms of tonality, Bartók turned to Hungarian folk music, as well as to other folk music of the Carpathian Basin and even of Algeria and Turkey; in so doing he became influential in that stream of modernism which used indigenous music and techniques.[47]

One characteristic style of music is his Night music, which he used mostly in slow movements of multi-movement ensemble or orchestral compositions in his mature period. It is characterised by "eerie dissonances providing a backdrop to sounds of nature and lonely melodies".[48] An example is the third movement (Adagio) of his Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta. His music can be grouped roughly in accordance with the different periods in his life.[citation needed]

Early years (1890–1902)

The works of Bartók's youth were written in a classical and early romantic style touched with influences of popular and romani music.[49][page needed] Between 1890 and 1894 (nine to 13 years of age) he wrote 31 piano pieces with corresponding opus numbers. Although most of these were simple dance pieces, in these early works Bartók began to tackle some more advanced forms, as in his ten-part programmatic A Duna folyása ("The Course of the Danube", 1890–94), which he played in his first public recital in 1892.[50]

In Catholic grammar school Bartók took to studying the scores of composers "from Bach to Wagner",[51] his compositions then advancing in style and taking on similarities to Schumann and Brahms.[52] Following his matriculation into the Budapest Academy in 1890 he composed very little, though he began to work on exercises in orchestration and familiarized himself thoroughly with the operas of Wagner.[53] In 1902 his creative energies were revitalized by the discovery of the music of Richard Strauss, whose tone poem Also sprach Zarathustra, according to Bartók, "stimulated the greatest enthusiasm in me; at last I saw the way that lay before me." Bartók also owned the score to A Hero's Life, which he transcribed for the piano and committed to memory.[54]

New influences (1903–11)

Under the influence of Strauss, Bartók composed in 1903 Kossuth, a symphonic poem in ten tableaux on the subject of the 1848 Hungarian war of independence, reflecting the composers growing interest in musical nationalism.[55] A year later he renewed his opus numbers with the Rhapsody for Piano and Orchestra serving as Opus 1. Driven by nationalistic fervor and a desire to transcend the influence of prior composers, Bartók began a lifelong devotion to folk music which was sparked by his overhearing nanny Lidi Dósa's singing of Transylvanian folk songs at a Hungarian resort in 1904.[56] Bartók began to collect Magyar peasant melodies, later extending to the folk music of other peoples of the Carpathian Basin, Slovaks, Romanians, Rusyns, Serbs and Croatians.[57] His compositional output would gradually prune away romantic elements in favour of an idiom that embodied folk music as intrinsic and essential to its style. Later in life he would have this to say on the incorporation of folk and art music:

The question is, what are the ways in which peasant music is taken over and becomes transmuted into modern music? We may, for instance, take over a peasant melody unchanged or only slightly varied, write an accompaniment to it and possibly some opening and concluding phrases. This kind of work would show a certain analogy with Bach's treatment of chorales. ... Another method ... is the following: the composer does not make use of a real peasant melody but invents his own imitation of such melodies. There is no true difference between this method and the one described above. ... There is yet a third way ... Neither peasant melodies nor imitations of peasant melodies can be found in his music, but it is pervaded by the atmosphere of peasant music. In this case we may say, he has completely absorbed the idiom of peasant music which has become his musical mother tongue.[58]

Bartók became first acquainted with Debussy's music in 1907 and regarded his music highly. In an interview in 1939 Bartók said

Debussy's great service to music was to reawaken among all musicians an awareness of harmony and its possibilities. In that, he was just as important as Beethoven, who revealed to us the possibilities of progressive form, or as Bach, who showed us the transcendent significance of counterpoint. Now, what I am always asking myself is this: is it possible to make a synthesis of these three great masters, a living synthesis that will be valid for our time?[59]

Debussy's influence is present in the Fourteen Bagatelles (1908). These made Ferruccio Busoni exclaim "At last something truly new!".[60] Until 1911, Bartók composed widely differing works which ranged from adherence to romantic-style, to folk song arrangements and to his modernist opera Bluebeard's Castle. The negative reception of his work led him to focus on folk music research after 1911 and abandon composition with the exception of folk music arrangements.[61][62]

Inspiration and experimentation (1916–21)

His pessimistic attitude towards composing was lifted by the stormy and inspiring contact with Klára Gombossy in the summer of 1915.[63] This interesting episode in Bartók's life remained hidden until it was researched by Denijs Dille between 1979 and 1989.[64] Bartók started composing again, including the Suite for piano opus 14 (1916), and The Miraculous Mandarin (1918) and he completed The Wooden Prince (1917).[citation needed]

Bartók felt the result of World War I as a personal tragedy.[65] Many regions he loved were severed from Hungary: Transylvania, the Banat (where he was born), and Bratislava (Pozsony) where his mother had lived. Additionally, the political relations between Hungary and other successor states to the Austro-Hungarian empire prohibited his folk music research outside of Hungary.[66] Bartók also wrote the noteworthy Eight Improvisations on Hungarian Peasant Songs in 1920, and the sunny Dance Suite in 1923, the year of his second marriage.[citation needed]

"Synthesis of East and West" (1926–45)

In 1926, Bartók needed a significant piece for piano and orchestra with which he could tour in Europe and America. He was particularly inspired by American composer Henry Cowell's controversial use of intense tone clusters on the piano while touring western Europe. Bartók happened to be present at one of these concerts, and would later request Cowell's permission to use his technique without causing offence; which Cowell granted. In the preparation for writing his first Piano Concerto, he wrote his Sonata, Out of Doors, and Nine Little Pieces, all for solo piano, and all of which prominently utilize clusters.[67] He increasingly found his own voice in his maturity. The style of his last period—named "Synthesis of East and West"[68]—is hard to define let alone to put under one term. In his mature period, Bartók wrote relatively few works but most of them are large-scale compositions for large settings. Only his voice works have programmatic titles and his late works often adhere to classical forms.[citation needed]

Among Bartók's most important works are the six string quartets (1909, 1917, 1927, 1928, 1934, and 1939), the Cantata Profana (1930), which Bartók declared was the work he felt and professed to be his most personal "credo",[69] the Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta (1936),[1] the Concerto for Orchestra (1943) and the Third Piano Concerto (1945).[70][page needed] He made a lasting contribution to the literature for younger students: for his son Péter's music lessons, he composed Mikrokosmos, a six-volume collection of graded piano pieces.[1]

Musical analysis

 
Béla Bartók memorial plaque in Baja, Hungary
 
Walk of Fame Vienna

Paul Wilson lists as the most prominent characteristics of Bartók's music from late 1920s onwards the influence of the Carpathian basin and European art music, and his changing attitude toward (and use of) tonality, but without the use of the traditional harmonic functions associated with major and minor scales.[71]

Although Bartók claimed in his writings that his music was always tonal, he rarely uses the chords or scales of tonality, and so the descriptive resources of tonal theory are of limited use. George Perle (1955) and Elliott Antokoletz (1984) focus on alternative methods of signaling tonal centers, via axes of inversional symmetry. Others view Bartók's axes of symmetry in terms of atonal analytic protocols. Richard Cohn (1988) argues that inversional symmetry is often a byproduct of another atonal procedure, the formation of chords from transpositionally related dyads. Atonal pitch-class theory also furnishes the resources for exploring polymodal chromaticism, projected sets, privileged patterns, and large set types used as source sets such as the equal tempered twelve tone aggregate, octatonic scale (and alpha chord), the diatonic and heptatonia secunda seven-note scales, and less often the whole tone scale and the primary pentatonic collection.[72]

He rarely used the simple aggregate actively to shape musical structure, though there are notable examples such as the second theme from the first movement of his Second Violin Concerto, commenting that he "wanted to show Schoenberg that one can use all twelve tones and still remain tonal".[73] More thoroughly, in the first eight measures of the last movement of his Second Quartet, all notes gradually gather with the twelfth (G) sounding for the first time on the last beat of measure 8, marking the end of the first section. The aggregate is partitioned in the opening of the Third String Quartet with C–D–D–E in the accompaniment (strings) while the remaining pitch classes are used in the melody (violin 1) and more often as 7–35 (diatonic or "white-key" collection) and 5–35 (pentatonic or "black-key" collection) such as in no. 6 of the Eight Improvisations. There, the primary theme is on the black keys in the left hand, while the right accompanies with triads from the white keys. In measures 50–51 in the third movement of the Fourth Quartet, the first violin and cello play black-key chords, while the second violin and viola play stepwise diatonic lines.[74] On the other hand, from as early as the Suite for piano, Op. 14 (1914), he occasionally employed a form of serialism based on compound interval cycles, some of which are maximally distributed, multi-aggregate cycles.[75][76] Ernő Lendvai analyses Bartók's works as being based on two opposing tonal systems, that of the acoustic scale and the axis system, as well as using the golden section as a structural principle.[77]

Milton Babbitt, in his 1949 critique of Bartók's string quartets, criticized Bartók for using tonality and non-tonal methods unique to each piece. Babbitt noted that "Bartók's solution was a specific one, it cannot be duplicated".[78] Bartók's use of "two organizational principles"—tonality for large scale relationships and the piece-specific method for moment to moment thematic elements—was a problem for Babbitt, who worried that the "highly attenuated tonality" requires extreme non-harmonic methods to create a feeling of closure.[79]

Catalogues

The cataloguing of Bartók's works is somewhat complex. Bartók assigned opus numbers to his works three times, the last of these series ending with the Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 1, Op. 21 in 1921. He ended this practice because of the difficulty of distinguishing between original works and ethnographic arrangements, and between major and minor works. Since his death, three attempts—two full and one partial—have been made at cataloguing. The first, and still most widely used, is András Szőllősy's chronological Sz. numbers, from 1 to 121. Denijs Dille [nl] subsequently reorganised the juvenilia (Sz. 1–25) thematically, as DD numbers 1 to 77. The most recent catalogue is that of László Somfai; this is a chronological index with works identified by BB numbers 1 to 129, incorporating corrections based on the Béla Bartók Thematic Catalogue.

On 1 January 2016, Bartók's works entered the public domain in the European Union.[80]

Discography

Together with his like-minded contemporary Zoltán Kodály, Bartók embarked on an extensive programme of field research to capture the folk and peasant melodies of Magyar, Slovak and Romanian language territories.[57] At first they would transcribe the melodies by hand, but later they began to use a wax cylinder recording machine invented by Thomas Edison.[81][page needed] Compilations of Bartók's field recordings, interviews, and original piano playing have been released over the years, largely by the Hungarian record label Hungaroton:

  • Bartók, Béla. 1994. Bartók at the Piano. Hungaroton 12326. 6-CD set.
  • Bartók, Béla. 1995a. Bartók Plays Bartók – Bartók at the Piano 1929–41. Pearl 9166. CD recording.
  • Bartók, Béla. 1995b. Bartók Recordings from Private Collections. Hungaroton 12334. CD recording.
  • Bartók, Béla. 2003. Bartók Plays Bartók. Pearl 179. CD recording.
  • Bartók, Béla. 2003. Bartók Sonata for 2 Pianos & Percussion, Suite for 2 Pianos. Apex 0927-49569-2. CD recording.
  • Bartók, Béla. 2007. Bartók: Contrasts, Mikrokosmos. Membran/Documents 223546. CD recording.
  • Bartók, Béla. 2008. Bartók Plays Bartók. Urania 340. CD recording.
  • Bartók, Béla. 2016. Bartók the Pianist. Hungaroton HCD32790-91. Two CDs. Works by Bartók, Domenico Scarlatti, Zoltán Kodály, and Franz Liszt.

A compilation of field recordings and transcriptions for two violas was also recently released by Tantara Records in 2014.[82]

On 18 March 2016 Decca Classics released Béla Bartók: The Complete Works, the first ever complete compilation of all of Bartók's compositions, including new recordings of never-before-recorded early piano and vocal works. However, none of the composer's own performances are included in this 32-disc set.[83]

Statues

 
Statue of Bartók in Makó, Hungary
  • A statue of Bartók stands in Brussels, Belgium, near the central train station in a public square, Spanjeplein-Place d'Espagne.[84][85]
  • A statue stands outside Malvern Court, London, south of the South Kensington tube station, and just north of Sydney Place. An English Heritage blue plaque, unveiled in 1997, now commemorates Bartók at 7 Sydney Place, where he stayed when performing in London.[86][87]
  • A statue of him was installed in front of the house in which Bartók spent his last eight years in Hungary, at Csalán út 29, in the hills above Budapest. It is now operated as the Béla Bartók Memorial House (Bartók Béla Emlékház).[88] Copies of this statue also stand in Makó (the closest Hungarian city to his birthplace, which is now in Romania), Paris, London and Toronto.[89]
  • A bust and plaque located at his last residence, in New York City at 309 W. 57th Street, inscribed: "The Great Hungarian Composer / Béla Bartók / (1881–1945) / Made His Home In This House / During the Last Year of His Life".[90]
  • A bust of him is located in the front yard of Ankara State Conservatory, Ankara, Turkey, next to the bust of Ahmet Adnan Saygun.[91]
  • A bronze statue of Bartók, sculpted by Imre Varga in 2005, stands in the front lobby of The Royal Conservatory of Music, 273 Bloor Street West, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
  • A statue of Bartók, sculpted by Varga, stands near the river Seine in the public park at Square Béla Bartók [fr], 26 place de Brazzaville, in Paris, France.[92]
  • Also to be noted, in the same park, a sculptural transcription of the composer's research on tonal harmony, the fountain/sculpture Cristaux designed by Jean-Yves Lechevallier in 1980.
  • An expressionist sculpture by Hungarian sculptor András Beck in Square Henri-Collet [fr], Paris 16th arrondissement.
  • A statue of him also stands in the city centre of Târgu Mureș, Romania.[91] ( Google Maps Márton Izsák )
  • A statue (seated) of Bartók is also situated in front of Nako Castle, in his hometown, Nagyszentmiklós.[93]

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c Gillies 2001.
  2. ^ "Bela Bartok (1881–1945)". mahlerfoundation.org. 16 October 2015. Retrieved 7 February 2022.
  3. ^ Móser 2006a, p. 44.
  4. ^ Szekernyés 2017.
  5. ^ Hooker 2001, p. 16.
  6. ^ Cooper 2015, p. 6.
  7. ^ Gillies 1990, p. 6.
  8. ^ Griffiths 1988.
  9. ^ de Toth 1999.
  10. ^ Stevens 1964, p. 8.
  11. ^ 2018. "Béla Bartók". Boosey & Hawkes website (accessed 27 September 2018).
  12. ^ Rockwell 1982.
  13. ^ Stevens 2018.
  14. ^ Wilhelm 1989, p. 73.
  15. ^ Kory 2007.
  16. ^ Rodda 1990–2018.
  17. ^ "Bela Bartok | Music Appreciation". courses.lumenlearning.com. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
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Further reading

  • "Polereczky család". Arcanum.hu website (accessed 30 December 2019).
  • 2003. "". . (Accessed 25 March 2009)
  • Bartók, Béla. 1976. "The Influence of Peasant Music on Modern Music (1931)". In Béla Bartók Essays, edited by Benjamin Suchoff, 340–44. London: Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-10120-7 OCLC 60900461
  • Bartók, Béla. 1981. The Hungarian Folk Song, second English edition, edited by Benjamin Suchoff, translated by Michel D. Calvocoressi, with annotations by Zoltán Kodály. The New York Bartók Archive Studies in Musicology 13. Albany: State University of New York Press.
  • Bartók, Peter. 2002. "My Father". Homosassa, Florida, Bartók Records (ISBN 978-0-9641961-2-4).
  • Bayley, Amanda (ed.). 2001. The Cambridge Companion to Bartók. Cambridge Companions to Music. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-66010-5 (cloth); ISBN 978-0-521-66958-0 (pbk).
  • Bónis, Ferenc. 2006. Élet-képek: Bartók Béla. Budapest: Balassi Kiadó: Vávi Kft., Alföldi Nyomda Zrt. ISBN 978-963-506-649-0.
  • Boys, Henry. 1945. "Béla Bartók 1881–1945". The Musical Times 86, no. 1233 (November): 329–31.
  • Cohn, Richard, 1992. "Bartók's Octatonic Strategies: A Motivic Approach." Journal of the American Musicological Society 44
  • Czeizel, Endre. 1992. Családfa: honnan jövünk, mik vagyunk, hová megyünk? [Budapest]: Kossuth Könyvkiadó. ISBN 978-963-09-3569-2
  • Decca. 2016. "Béla Bartók: Complete Works: Int. Release 18 Mar. 2016: 32 CDs, 0289 478 9311 0". Welcome to Decca Classics: Catalogue, www.deccaclassics.com (accessed 19 August 2016).
  • Fassett, Agatha, 1958. The Naked Face of Genius: Béla Bartók's American Years. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Jyrkiäinen, Reijo. 2012. "Form, Monothematicism, Variation and Symmetry in Béla Bartók's String Quartets". Ph.D. diss. Helsinki: University of Helsinki. ISBN 978-952-10-8040-1 ().
  • Kárpáti, János. 1975. Bartók's String Quartets, translated by Fred MacNicol. Budapest: Corvina Press.
  • Kasparov, Andrey. 2000. "Third Piano Concerto in the Revised 1994 Edition: Newly Discovered Corrections by the Composer". Hungarian Music Quarterly 11, nos. 3–4:2–11.
  • Leafstedt, Carl S. 1999. Inside Bluebeard's Castle. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-510999-3
  • Lendvai, Ernő. 1972. "Einführung in die Formen- und Harmoniewelt Bartóks" (1953). In his Béla Bartók: Weg und Werk, edited by Bence Szabolcsi, 105–49. Kassel: Bärenreiter.
  • Loxdale, Hugh D., and Adalbert Balog. 2009. "Béla Bartók: Musician, Musicologist, Composer, and Entomologist!." Antenna – Bulletin of the Royal Entomological Society of London 33, no. 4:175–82.
  • Maconie, Robin. 2005. Other Planets: The Music of Karlheinz Stockhausen. Lanham, MD, Toronto, Oxford: The Scarecrow Press, Inc. ISBN 978-0-8108-5356-0.
  • Martins, José Oliveira. 2015. "Bartók's Polymodality: the Dasian and other Affinity Spaces". Journal of Music Theory 59, no. 2 (October): 273–320.
  • Móser, Zoltán. 2006b. "Bartók-õsök Gömörben". Honismeret: A Honismereti Szövetség folyóirata [permanent dead link] 34, no. 2 (April): 9–11.
  • Nelson, David Taylor (2012). "Béla Bartók: The Father of Ethnomusicology", Musical Offerings: Vol. 3: No. 2, Article 2.
  • Sluder, Claude K. 1994. "Revised Bartók Composition Highlights Pro Musica Concert". The Republic (16 February).
  • Smith, Erik. 1965. A discussion between István Kertész and the producer. DECCA Records (liner notes for Bluebeard's Castle).
  • Somfai, László. 1981. Tizennyolc Bartók-tanulmány [Eighteen Bartók Studies]. Budapest: Zeneműkiadó. ISBN 978-963-330-370-2.
  • Wells, John C. 1990. "Bartók", in Longman Pronunciation Dictionary, 63. Harlow, England: Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-05383-0

External links

  • Works by or about Béla Bartók at Internet Archive
  • Bartók Béla Memorial House, Budapest 12 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • The Belgian Bartók Archives, housed in the Brussels Royal Library and founded by Denijs Dille 28 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Discovering Bartók". BBC Radio 3.
  • Finding aid to Béla Bartók manuscripts at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.

béla, bartók, bartok, redirects, here, other, uses, bartok, disambiguation, native, form, this, personal, name, bartók, béla, viktor, jános, this, article, uses, western, name, order, when, mentioning, individuals, béla, viktor, jános, bartók, ɑːr, hungarian, . Bartok redirects here For other uses see Bartok disambiguation The native form of this personal name is Bartok Bela Viktor Janos This article uses Western name order when mentioning individuals Bela Viktor Janos Bartok ˈ b eɪ l e ˈ b ɑːr t ɒ k Hungarian ˈbɒrtoːk ˈbeːlɒ 25 March 1881 26 September 1945 was a Hungarian composer pianist and ethnomusicologist He is considered one of the most important composers of the 20th century he and Franz Liszt are regarded as Hungary s greatest composers 1 Through his collection and analytical study of folk music he was one of the founders of comparative musicology which later became ethnomusicology Bela Bartok in 1927 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Childhood and early years 1881 98 1 2 Early musical career 1899 1908 1 3 Middle years and career 1909 39 1 3 1 Personal life 1 3 2 Opera 1 3 3 Folk music and composition 1 4 World War II and final years 1940 45 2 Music 2 1 Early years 1890 1902 2 2 New influences 1903 11 2 3 Inspiration and experimentation 1916 21 2 4 Synthesis of East and West 1926 45 3 Musical analysis 4 Catalogues 5 Discography 6 Statues 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksBiography EditChildhood and early years 1881 98 Edit Bartok was born in the Banatian town of Nagyszentmiklos in the Kingdom of Hungary present day Sannicolau Mare Romania on 25 March 1881 2 On his father s side the Bartok family was a Hungarian lower noble family originating from Borsodszirak Borsod 3 His paternal grandmother was a Catholic of Bunjevci origin but considered herself Hungarian 4 Bartok s father 1855 1888 was also named Bela Bartok s mother Paula nee Voit 1857 1939 also spoke Hungarian fluently 5 A native of Turocszentmarton present day Martin Slovakia 6 she also had Hungarian and Slovak ancestry citation needed Bela displayed notable musical talent very early in life according to his mother he could distinguish between different dance rhythms that she played on the piano before he learned to speak in complete sentences 7 By the age of four he was able to play 40 pieces on the piano and his mother began formally teaching him the next year In 1888 when he was seven his father the director of an agricultural school died suddenly His mother then took Bela and his sister Erzsebet to live in Nagyszolos present day Vynohradiv Ukraine and then in Pressburg Pozsony present day Bratislava Slovakia Bela gave his first public recital aged 11 in Nagyszolos to positive critical reception 8 page needed Among the pieces he played was his own first composition written two years previously a short piece called The Course of the Danube 9 Shortly thereafter Laszlo Erkel accepted him as a pupil 10 Early musical career 1899 1908 Edit Bartok s signature on his high school graduation photograph dated 9 September 1899 From 1899 to 1903 Bartok studied piano under Istvan Thoman a former student of Franz Liszt and composition under Janos Koessler at the Royal Academy of Music in Budapest 11 There he met Zoltan Kodaly who made a strong impression on him and became a lifelong friend and colleague 12 In 1903 Bartok wrote his first major orchestral work Kossuth a symphonic poem which honored Lajos Kossuth hero of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 13 The music of Richard Strauss whom he met in 1902 at the Budapest premiere of Also sprach Zarathustra strongly influenced his early work 14 When visiting a holiday resort in the summer of 1904 Bartok overheard a young nanny Lidi Dosa from Kibed in Transylvania sing folk songs to the children in her care This sparked his lifelong dedication to folk music 15 From 1907 he also began to be influenced by the French composer Claude Debussy whose compositions Kodaly had brought back from Paris Bartok s large scale orchestral works were still in the style of Johannes Brahms and Richard Strauss but he wrote a number of small piano pieces which showed his growing interest in folk music The first piece to show clear signs of this new interest is the String Quartet No 1 in A minor 1908 which contains folk like elements 16 He began teaching as a piano professor at the Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest This position freed him from touring Europe as a pianist and enabled him to work in Hungary Among his notable students were Fritz Reiner Sir Georg Solti Gyorgy Sandor Erno Balogh Gisela Selden Goth and Lili Kraus After Bartok moved to the United States he taught Jack Beeson and Violet Archer 17 In 1908 he and Kodaly traveled into the countryside to collect and research old Magyar folk melodies Their growing interest in folk music coincided with a contemporary social interest in traditional national culture Magyar folk music had previously been categorised as Gypsy music The classic example is Franz Liszt s Hungarian Rhapsodies for piano which he based on popular art songs performed by Romani bands of the time In contrast Bartok and Kodaly discovered that the old Magyar folk melodies were based on pentatonic scales similar to those in Asian folk traditions such as those of Central Asia Anatolia and Siberia citation needed Bartok and Kodaly set about incorporating elements of such Magyar peasant music into their compositions They both frequently quoted folk song melodies verbatim and wrote pieces derived entirely from authentic songs An example is his two volumes entitled For Children for solo piano containing 80 folk tunes to which he wrote accompaniment Bartok s style in his art music compositions was a synthesis of folk music classicism and modernism His melodic and harmonic sense was influenced by the folk music of Hungary Romania and other nations He was especially fond of the asymmetrical dance rhythms and pungent harmonies found in Bulgarian music Most of his early compositions offer a blend of nationalist and late Romanticism elements citation needed Middle years and career 1909 39 Edit Personal life Edit In 1909 at the age of 28 Bartok married Marta Ziegler 1893 1967 aged 16 Their son Bela Bartok III was born the next year After nearly 15 years together Bartok divorced Marta in June 1923 Two months after his divorce he married Ditta Pasztory 1903 1982 a piano student ten days after proposing to her She was aged 19 he 42 Their son Peter was born in 1924 18 Raised as a Catholic by his early adulthood Bartok had become an atheist He later became attracted to Unitarianism and publicly converted to the Unitarian faith in 1916 Although Bartok was not conventionally religious according to his son Bela Bartok III he was a nature lover he always mentioned the miraculous order of nature with great reverence As an adult Bela III later became lay president of the Hungarian Unitarian Church 19 Opera Edit In 1911 Bartok wrote what was to be his only opera Bluebeard s Castle dedicated to Marta He entered it for a prize by the Hungarian Fine Arts Commission but they rejected his work as not fit for the stage 20 In 1917 Bartok revised the score for the 1918 premiere and rewrote the ending Following the 1919 revolution in which he actively participated he was pressured by the Horthy regime to remove the name of librettist Bela Balazs from the opera as Balazs was of Jewish origin was blacklisted and had left the country for Vienna Bluebeard s Castle received only one revival in 1936 before Bartok emigrated For the remainder of his life although devoted to Hungary its people and its culture he never felt much loyalty to the government or its official establishments citation needed Folk music and composition Edit Bela Bartok using a phonograph to record Slovak folk songs sung by peasants in Zobordarazs 21 Slovak Drazovce today part of Nitra Slovakia After his disappointment over the Fine Arts Commission competition Bartok wrote little for two or three years preferring to concentrate on collecting and arranging folk music He found the phonograph an essential tool for collecting folk music for its accuracy objectivity and manipulability 22 He collected first in the Carpathian Basin then the Kingdom of Hungary where he notated Hungarian Slovak Romanian and Bulgarian folk music The developmental breakthrough for Bartok arrived when he collaboratively collected folk music with Zoltan Kodaly through the medium of an Edison machine on which they would study classification possibilities for individual folk songs and record hundreds of cylinders Bartok s compositional command of folk elements is expressed in such an authentic and undiluted a manner because of the scales sounds and rhythms that were so much a part of his native Hungary that he automatically saw music in these terms 23 He also collected in Moldavia Wallachia and in 1913 Algeria The outbreak of World War I forced him to stop the expeditions but he returned to composing with a ballet called The Wooden Prince 1914 16 and the String Quartet No 2 in 1915 17 both influenced by Debussy citation needed Bartok s libretto for The Miraculous Mandarin another ballet was influenced by Igor Stravinsky Arnold Schoenberg and Richard Strauss Though started in 1918 the story s sexual content kept it from being performed until 1926 He next wrote his two violin sonatas written in 1921 and 1922 respectively which are among his most harmonically and structurally complex pieces 24 In March 1927 he visited Barcelona and performed the Rhapsody for piano Sz 26 with the Orquestra Pau Casals at the Gran Teatre del Liceu 25 During the same stay he attended a concert by the Cobla Barcelona at the Palau de la Musica Catalana 25 According to the critic Joan Llongueras he was very interested in the sardanas above all the freshness spontaneity and life of our music he wanted to know the mechanism of the tenoras and the tibles and requested data on the composition of the cobla and extension and characteristics of each instrument 25 In 1927 28 Bartok wrote his Third and Fourth String Quartets after which his compositions demonstrated his mature style Notable examples of this period are Music for Strings Percussion and Celesta 1936 and Divertimento for String Orchestra 1939 The Fifth String Quartet was composed in 1934 and the Sixth String Quartet his last in 1939 In 1936 he travelled to Turkey to collect and study Turkish folk music He worked in collaboration with Turkish composer Ahmet Adnan Saygun mostly around Adana 26 27 World War II and final years 1940 45 Edit In 1940 as the European political situation worsened after the outbreak of World War II Bartok was increasingly tempted to flee Hungary He strongly opposed the Nazis and Hungary s alliance with Germany and the Axis powers under the Tripartite Pact After the Nazis came to power in 1933 Bartok refused to give concerts in Germany and broke away from his publisher there His anti fascist political views caused him a great deal of trouble with the establishment in Hungary In his will recorded on 4 October 1940 he requested that no square or street be named after him until the Budapest squares Oktogon and Kodaly korond or in fact any square or street in Hungary no longer bear the names of Mussolini and Hitler as they did at the time he wrote his will 28 Having first sent his manuscripts out of the country Bartok reluctantly emigrated to the U S with his wife Ditta Pasztory in October 1940 They settled in New York City after arriving on the night of 29 30 October via a steamer from Lisbon After joining them in 1942 their younger son Peter Bartok enlisted in the United States Navy where he served in the Pacific during the remainder of the war and later settled in Florida where he became a recording and sound engineer His elder son by his first marriage Bela Bartok III remained in Hungary and later worked as a railroad official until his retirement in the early 1980s citation needed Although he became an American citizen in 1945 shortly before his death 29 Bartok never felt fully at home in the United States 30 He initially found it difficult to compose Although he was well known in America as a pianist ethnomusicologist and teacher he was not well known as a composer There was little American interest in his music during his final years He and his wife Ditta gave some concerts although demand for them was low 31 Bartok who had made some recordings in Hungary also recorded for Columbia Records after he came to the US many of these recordings some with Bartok s own spoken introductions were later issued on LP and CD 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 Supported by a research fellowship from Columbia University for several years Bartok and Ditta worked on a large collection of Serbian and Croatian folk songs in Columbia s libraries Bartok s economic difficulties during his first years in America were mitigated by publication royalties teaching and performance tours While his finances were always precarious he did not live and die in poverty as was the common myth He had enough friends and supporters to ensure that there was sufficient money and work available for him to live on Bartok was a proud man and did not easily accept charity Despite being short on cash at times he often refused money that his friends offered him out of their own pockets Although he was not a member of the ASCAP the society paid for any medical care he needed during his last two years to which Bartok reluctantly agreed The first symptoms of his health problems began late in 1940 when his right shoulder began to show signs of stiffening In 1942 symptoms increased and he started having bouts of fever Bartok s illness was at first thought to be a recurrence of the tuberculosis he had experienced as a young man and one of his doctors in New York was Edgar Mayer director of Will Rogers Memorial Hospital in Saranac Lake but medical examinations found no underlying disease Finally in April 1944 leukemia was diagnosed but by this time little could be done 39 As his body slowly failed Bartok found more creative energy and he produced a final set of masterpieces partly thanks to the violinist Joseph Szigeti and the conductor Fritz Reiner Reiner had been Bartok s friend and champion since his days as Bartok s student at the Royal Academy Bartok s last work might well have been the String Quartet No 6 but for Serge Koussevitzky s commission for the Concerto for Orchestra Koussevitsky s Boston Symphony Orchestra premiered the work in December 1944 to highly positive reviews The Concerto for Orchestra quickly became Bartok s most popular work although he did not live to see its full impact 40 In 1944 he was also commissioned by Yehudi Menuhin to write a Sonata for Solo Violin In 1945 Bartok composed his Piano Concerto No 3 a graceful and almost neo classical work as a surprise 42nd birthday present for Ditta but he died just over a month before her birthday with the scoring not quite finished He had also sketched his Viola Concerto but had barely started the scoring at his death leaving completed only the viola part and sketches of the orchestral part Bela Bartok s portrait on 1 000 Hungarian forint banknote printed between 1983 and 1992 no longer in circulation Bela Bartok died at age 64 in a hospital in New York City from complications of leukemia specifically of secondary polycythemia on 26 September 1945 His funeral was attended by only ten people Aside from his widow and their son other attendees included Gyorgy Sandor 41 Bartok s body was initially interred in Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale New York During the final year of communist Hungary in the late 1980s the Hungarian government along with his two sons Bela III and Peter requested that his remains be exhumed and transferred back to Budapest for burial where Hungary arranged a state funeral for him on 7 July 1988 He was re interred at Budapest s Farkasreti Cemetery next to the remains of Ditta who died in 1982 one year after what would have been Bela Bartok s 100th birthday 42 The two unfinished works were later completed by his pupil Tibor Serly Gyorgy Sandor was the soloist in the first performance of the Third Piano Concerto on 8 February 1946 Ditta Pasztory Bartok later played and recorded it The Viola Concerto was revised and published in the 1990s by Bartok s son this version may be closer to what Bartok intended 43 Concurrently Peter Bartok in association with Argentinian musician Nelson Dellamaggiore worked to reprint and revise past editions of the Third Piano Concerto 44 Music EditFurther information List of compositions by Bela Bartok Bartok s music reflects two trends that dramatically changed the sound of music in the 20th century the breakdown of the diatonic system of harmony that had served composers for the previous two hundred years 45 and the revival of nationalism as a source for musical inspiration a trend that began with Mikhail Glinka and Antonin Dvorak in the last half of the 19th century 46 In his search for new forms of tonality Bartok turned to Hungarian folk music as well as to other folk music of the Carpathian Basin and even of Algeria and Turkey in so doing he became influential in that stream of modernism which used indigenous music and techniques 47 One characteristic style of music is his Night music which he used mostly in slow movements of multi movement ensemble or orchestral compositions in his mature period It is characterised by eerie dissonances providing a backdrop to sounds of nature and lonely melodies 48 An example is the third movement Adagio of his Music for Strings Percussion and Celesta His music can be grouped roughly in accordance with the different periods in his life citation needed Early years 1890 1902 Edit The works of Bartok s youth were written in a classical and early romantic style touched with influences of popular and romani music 49 page needed Between 1890 and 1894 nine to 13 years of age he wrote 31 piano pieces with corresponding opus numbers Although most of these were simple dance pieces in these early works Bartok began to tackle some more advanced forms as in his ten part programmatic A Duna folyasa The Course of the Danube 1890 94 which he played in his first public recital in 1892 50 In Catholic grammar school Bartok took to studying the scores of composers from Bach to Wagner 51 his compositions then advancing in style and taking on similarities to Schumann and Brahms 52 Following his matriculation into the Budapest Academy in 1890 he composed very little though he began to work on exercises in orchestration and familiarized himself thoroughly with the operas of Wagner 53 In 1902 his creative energies were revitalized by the discovery of the music of Richard Strauss whose tone poem Also sprach Zarathustra according to Bartok stimulated the greatest enthusiasm in me at last I saw the way that lay before me Bartok also owned the score to A Hero s Life which he transcribed for the piano and committed to memory 54 New influences 1903 11 EditUnder the influence of Strauss Bartok composed in 1903 Kossuth a symphonic poem in ten tableaux on the subject of the 1848 Hungarian war of independence reflecting the composers growing interest in musical nationalism 55 A year later he renewed his opus numbers with the Rhapsody for Piano and Orchestra serving as Opus 1 Driven by nationalistic fervor and a desire to transcend the influence of prior composers Bartok began a lifelong devotion to folk music which was sparked by his overhearing nanny Lidi Dosa s singing of Transylvanian folk songs at a Hungarian resort in 1904 56 Bartok began to collect Magyar peasant melodies later extending to the folk music of other peoples of the Carpathian Basin Slovaks Romanians Rusyns Serbs and Croatians 57 His compositional output would gradually prune away romantic elements in favour of an idiom that embodied folk music as intrinsic and essential to its style Later in life he would have this to say on the incorporation of folk and art music The question is what are the ways in which peasant music is taken over and becomes transmuted into modern music We may for instance take over a peasant melody unchanged or only slightly varied write an accompaniment to it and possibly some opening and concluding phrases This kind of work would show a certain analogy with Bach s treatment of chorales Another method is the following the composer does not make use of a real peasant melody but invents his own imitation of such melodies There is no true difference between this method and the one described above There is yet a third way Neither peasant melodies nor imitations of peasant melodies can be found in his music but it is pervaded by the atmosphere of peasant music In this case we may say he has completely absorbed the idiom of peasant music which has become his musical mother tongue 58 Bartok became first acquainted with Debussy s music in 1907 and regarded his music highly In an interview in 1939 Bartok said Debussy s great service to music was to reawaken among all musicians an awareness of harmony and its possibilities In that he was just as important as Beethoven who revealed to us the possibilities of progressive form or as Bach who showed us the transcendent significance of counterpoint Now what I am always asking myself is this is it possible to make a synthesis of these three great masters a living synthesis that will be valid for our time 59 Debussy s influence is present in the Fourteen Bagatelles 1908 These made Ferruccio Busoni exclaim At last something truly new 60 Until 1911 Bartok composed widely differing works which ranged from adherence to romantic style to folk song arrangements and to his modernist opera Bluebeard s Castle The negative reception of his work led him to focus on folk music research after 1911 and abandon composition with the exception of folk music arrangements 61 62 Inspiration and experimentation 1916 21 Edit His pessimistic attitude towards composing was lifted by the stormy and inspiring contact with Klara Gombossy in the summer of 1915 63 This interesting episode in Bartok s life remained hidden until it was researched by Denijs Dille between 1979 and 1989 64 Bartok started composing again including the Suite for piano opus 14 1916 and The Miraculous Mandarin 1918 and he completed The Wooden Prince 1917 citation needed Bartok felt the result of World War I as a personal tragedy 65 Many regions he loved were severed from Hungary Transylvania the Banat where he was born and Bratislava Pozsony where his mother had lived Additionally the political relations between Hungary and other successor states to the Austro Hungarian empire prohibited his folk music research outside of Hungary 66 Bartok also wrote the noteworthy Eight Improvisations on Hungarian Peasant Songs in 1920 and the sunny Dance Suite in 1923 the year of his second marriage citation needed Synthesis of East and West 1926 45 Edit In 1926 Bartok needed a significant piece for piano and orchestra with which he could tour in Europe and America He was particularly inspired by American composer Henry Cowell s controversial use of intense tone clusters on the piano while touring western Europe Bartok happened to be present at one of these concerts and would later request Cowell s permission to use his technique without causing offence which Cowell granted In the preparation for writing his first Piano Concerto he wrote his Sonata Out of Doors and Nine Little Pieces all for solo piano and all of which prominently utilize clusters 67 He increasingly found his own voice in his maturity The style of his last period named Synthesis of East and West 68 is hard to define let alone to put under one term In his mature period Bartok wrote relatively few works but most of them are large scale compositions for large settings Only his voice works have programmatic titles and his late works often adhere to classical forms citation needed Among Bartok s most important works are the six string quartets 1909 1917 1927 1928 1934 and 1939 the Cantata Profana 1930 which Bartok declared was the work he felt and professed to be his most personal credo 69 the Music for Strings Percussion and Celesta 1936 1 the Concerto for Orchestra 1943 and the Third Piano Concerto 1945 70 page needed He made a lasting contribution to the literature for younger students for his son Peter s music lessons he composed Mikrokosmos a six volume collection of graded piano pieces 1 Musical analysis Edit Bela Bartok memorial plaque in Baja Hungary Walk of Fame Vienna Paul Wilson lists as the most prominent characteristics of Bartok s music from late 1920s onwards the influence of the Carpathian basin and European art music and his changing attitude toward and use of tonality but without the use of the traditional harmonic functions associated with major and minor scales 71 Although Bartok claimed in his writings that his music was always tonal he rarely uses the chords or scales of tonality and so the descriptive resources of tonal theory are of limited use George Perle 1955 and Elliott Antokoletz 1984 focus on alternative methods of signaling tonal centers via axes of inversional symmetry Others view Bartok s axes of symmetry in terms of atonal analytic protocols Richard Cohn 1988 argues that inversional symmetry is often a byproduct of another atonal procedure the formation of chords from transpositionally related dyads Atonal pitch class theory also furnishes the resources for exploring polymodal chromaticism projected sets privileged patterns and large set types used as source sets such as the equal tempered twelve tone aggregate octatonic scale and alpha chord the diatonic and heptatonia secunda seven note scales and less often the whole tone scale and the primary pentatonic collection 72 He rarely used the simple aggregate actively to shape musical structure though there are notable examples such as the second theme from the first movement of his Second Violin Concerto commenting that he wanted to show Schoenberg that one can use all twelve tones and still remain tonal 73 More thoroughly in the first eight measures of the last movement of his Second Quartet all notes gradually gather with the twelfth G sounding for the first time on the last beat of measure 8 marking the end of the first section The aggregate is partitioned in the opening of the Third String Quartet with C D D E in the accompaniment strings while the remaining pitch classes are used in the melody violin 1 and more often as 7 35 diatonic or white key collection and 5 35 pentatonic or black key collection such as in no 6 of the Eight Improvisations There the primary theme is on the black keys in the left hand while the right accompanies with triads from the white keys In measures 50 51 in the third movement of the Fourth Quartet the first violin and cello play black key chords while the second violin and viola play stepwise diatonic lines 74 On the other hand from as early as the Suite for piano Op 14 1914 he occasionally employed a form of serialism based on compound interval cycles some of which are maximally distributed multi aggregate cycles 75 76 Erno Lendvai analyses Bartok s works as being based on two opposing tonal systems that of the acoustic scale and the axis system as well as using the golden section as a structural principle 77 Milton Babbitt in his 1949 critique of Bartok s string quartets criticized Bartok for using tonality and non tonal methods unique to each piece Babbitt noted that Bartok s solution was a specific one it cannot be duplicated 78 Bartok s use of two organizational principles tonality for large scale relationships and the piece specific method for moment to moment thematic elements was a problem for Babbitt who worried that the highly attenuated tonality requires extreme non harmonic methods to create a feeling of closure 79 Catalogues EditThe cataloguing of Bartok s works is somewhat complex Bartok assigned opus numbers to his works three times the last of these series ending with the Sonata for Violin and Piano No 1 Op 21 in 1921 He ended this practice because of the difficulty of distinguishing between original works and ethnographic arrangements and between major and minor works Since his death three attempts two full and one partial have been made at cataloguing The first and still most widely used is Andras Szollosy s chronological Sz numbers from 1 to 121 Denijs Dille nl subsequently reorganised the juvenilia Sz 1 25 thematically as DD numbers 1 to 77 The most recent catalogue is that of Laszlo Somfai this is a chronological index with works identified by BB numbers 1 to 129 incorporating corrections based on the Bela Bartok Thematic Catalogue On 1 January 2016 Bartok s works entered the public domain in the European Union 80 Discography EditTogether with his like minded contemporary Zoltan Kodaly Bartok embarked on an extensive programme of field research to capture the folk and peasant melodies of Magyar Slovak and Romanian language territories 57 At first they would transcribe the melodies by hand but later they began to use a wax cylinder recording machine invented by Thomas Edison 81 page needed Compilations of Bartok s field recordings interviews and original piano playing have been released over the years largely by the Hungarian record label Hungaroton Bartok Bela 1994 Bartok at the Piano Hungaroton 12326 6 CD set Bartok Bela 1995a Bartok Plays Bartok Bartok at the Piano 1929 41 Pearl 9166 CD recording Bartok Bela 1995b Bartok Recordings from Private Collections Hungaroton 12334 CD recording Bartok Bela 2003 Bartok Plays Bartok Pearl 179 CD recording Bartok Bela 2003 Bartok Sonata for 2 Pianos amp Percussion Suite for 2 Pianos Apex 0927 49569 2 CD recording Bartok Bela 2007 Bartok Contrasts Mikrokosmos Membran Documents 223546 CD recording Bartok Bela 2008 Bartok Plays Bartok Urania 340 CD recording Bartok Bela 2016 Bartok the Pianist Hungaroton HCD32790 91 Two CDs Works by Bartok Domenico Scarlatti Zoltan Kodaly and Franz Liszt A compilation of field recordings and transcriptions for two violas was also recently released by Tantara Records in 2014 82 On 18 March 2016 Decca Classics released Bela Bartok The Complete Works the first ever complete compilation of all of Bartok s compositions including new recordings of never before recorded early piano and vocal works However none of the composer s own performances are included in this 32 disc set 83 Statues Edit Statue of Bartok in Mako Hungary A statue of Bartok stands in Brussels Belgium near the central train station in a public square Spanjeplein Place d Espagne 84 85 A statue stands outside Malvern Court London south of the South Kensington tube station and just north of Sydney Place An English Heritage blue plaque unveiled in 1997 now commemorates Bartok at 7 Sydney Place where he stayed when performing in London 86 87 A statue of him was installed in front of the house in which Bartok spent his last eight years in Hungary at Csalan ut 29 in the hills above Budapest It is now operated as the Bela Bartok Memorial House Bartok Bela Emlekhaz 88 Copies of this statue also stand in Mako the closest Hungarian city to his birthplace which is now in Romania Paris London and Toronto 89 A bust and plaque located at his last residence in New York City at 309 W 57th Street inscribed The Great Hungarian Composer Bela Bartok 1881 1945 Made His Home In This House During the Last Year of His Life 90 A bust of him is located in the front yard of Ankara State Conservatory Ankara Turkey next to the bust of Ahmet Adnan Saygun 91 A bronze statue of Bartok sculpted by Imre Varga in 2005 stands in the front lobby of The Royal Conservatory of Music 273 Bloor Street West Toronto Ontario Canada A statue of Bartok sculpted by Varga stands near the river Seine in the public park at Square Bela Bartok fr 26 place de Brazzaville in Paris France 92 Also to be noted in the same park a sculptural transcription of the composer s research on tonal harmony the fountain sculpture Cristaux designed by Jean Yves Lechevallier in 1980 An expressionist sculpture by Hungarian sculptor Andras Beck in Square Henri Collet fr Paris 16th arrondissement A statue of him also stands in the city centre of Targu Mureș Romania 91 Google Maps Marton Izsak A statue seated of Bartok is also situated in front of Nako Castle in his hometown Nagyszentmiklos 93 References EditCitations Edit a b c Gillies 2001 Bela Bartok 1881 1945 mahlerfoundation org 16 October 2015 Retrieved 7 February 2022 Moser 2006a p 44 Szekernyes 2017 Hooker 2001 p 16 Cooper 2015 p 6 Gillies 1990 p 6 Griffiths 1988 de Toth 1999 Stevens 1964 p 8 2018 Bela Bartok Boosey amp Hawkes website accessed 27 September 2018 Rockwell 1982 Stevens 2018 Wilhelm 1989 p 73 Kory 2007 Rodda 1990 2018 Bela Bartok Music Appreciation courses lumenlearning com Retrieved 18 February 2022 Hughes 2007 p 22 Hughes 2001 Chalmers 1995 p 93 Getting 2020 Bartok 1976 p 14 Schonberg Harold C 1997 The lives of the great composers W W Norton pp 567 569 ISBN 0 393 03857 2 OCLC 1248953993 Bela Bartok 1881 1945 Mahler Foundation 16 October 2015 Retrieved 23 May 2022 a b c Fontelles Ramonet Albert 2020 La Cobla Barcelona 1922 1938 Un projecte noucentista Doctoral Thesis PHD Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona Ozgenturk 2008 Sipos 2000 Szabo Ferenc September 1950 Bartok nem alkuszik PDF Uj Zenei Szemle 1 4 3 12 Archived from the original on 24 January 2023 Retrieved 24 January 2023 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Gagne 2012 p 28 He became a U S citizen in 1945 but by then had developed leukemia and he soon died Bela Bartok Music Appreciation courses lumenlearning com Archived from the original on 28 January 2021 Retrieved 22 January 2021 yalepress 30 June 2015 Bela Bartok in America Yale University Press Retrieved 16 August 2022 Bartok 1994 Bartok 1995a Bartok 1995b Bartok 2003 Bartok 2007 Bartok 2008 Bartok 2016 Chalmers 1995 pp 196 207 Bartok s Concerto for Orchestra a journey from darkness to light bachtrack com Retrieved 18 February 2022 2006 Gyorgy Sandor Pianist and Bartok Authority Dies at 93 The Juilliard Journal Online 21 no 5 February archive from 6 September 2010 accessed 10 June 2020 Chalmers 1995 p 214 Chalmers 1995 p 210 Somfai 1996 Griffiths 1978 p 7 Einstein 1947 p 332 Botstein amp n d 6 Schneider 2006 p 84 Citron 1963 Cooper 2015 p 11 Moreux 1974 p 18 Cooper 2015 p 14 Stevens 1993 p 12 Stevens 1993 pp 15 16 Stevens 1993 p 17 Stevens 1993 p 22 a b Moreux 1974 p 60 Fisk 1997 p 271 Moreux 1953 p 92 Bartok 1948 2 83 Gillies 1993 p 404 Stevens 1964 pp 47 49 Gillies 1993 p 405 Dille 1990 pp 257 277 Stevens 1993 p 3 Somfai 1996 p 18 Gillies 1993 p 173 Gillies 1993 p 189 Szabolcsi 1974 p 186 Cooper 2015 Wilson 1992 pp 2 4 Wilson 1992 pp 24 29 Gillies 1990 p 185 Wilson 1992 p 25 Martins 2006 Gollin 2007 Lendvai 1971 Babbitt 1949 p 385 Babbitt 1949 pp 377 378 2016 Public Domain Day 2016 Center for the Study of the Public Domain accessed 15 October 2018 Bartok 2018 Tantara 2014 Decca 2016 2014 Statue Bela Bartok Brussels Remembers Memorials of Brussels accessed 17 June 2014 Dicaire 2010 p 145 Bartok Bela 1881 1945 Plaque erected in 1997 by English Heritage at 7 Sydney Place South Kensington London SW7 3NL Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea English Heritage website Accessed 19 October 2012 Jones 2012 Tudzin 2010 Bela Bartok statue www trekearth com Matthews 2012 a b Liscia Beaurenaut Pierre 5 May 2021 Retracing Bartok s footsteps a statuesque world tour bachtrack com Archived from the original on 18 July 2022 Retrieved 27 July 2022 Square Bela Bartok in Paris Eutouring com website 2 August accessed 4 July 2014 Statuia compozitorului Bela Bartok dezvelită in fața castelului din Sannicolau Mare Ce personalități au luat parte la eveniment in Romanian 6 September 2015 Sources Edit Antokoletz Elliott 1984 The Music of Bela Bartok A Study of Tonality and Progression in Twentieth Century Music Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 04604 7 Babbitt Milton 1949 The String Quartets of Bartok Musical Quarterly 35 July 377 85 Reprinted in The Collected Essays of Milton Babbitt edited by Stephen Peles with Stephen Dembski Andrew Mead and Joseph N Straus 1 9 Princeton Princeton University Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 691 08966 9 Bartok Bela 1948 Levelek fenykepek keziratok kottak Letters photographs manuscripts scores ed Janos Demeny 2 vols A Muveszeti Tanacs konyvei 1 2 sz Budapest Magyar Muveszeti Tanacs English edition as Bela Bartok Letters translated by Peter Balaban and Istvan Farkas translation revised by Elisabeth West and Colin Mason London Faber and Faber Ltd New York St Martin s Press 1971 ISBN 978 0 571 09638 1 Bartok Bela 1976 Essays selected and edited by Benjamin Suchoff The New York Bartok Archive Studies in Musicology No 8 London Faber amp Faber New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 571 10120 7 Bartok Bela 2018 Romanian Folk Dances Sheet music London Chester Music Bartok Complete Works Decca Records 2016 OCLC 945742125 Botstein Leon n d Modernism Grove Music Online ed L Macy Accessed 29 April 2008 subscription access Chalmers Kenneth 1995 Bela Bartok 20th Century Composers London Phaidon Press ISBN 978 0 7148 3164 0 pbk Citron Pierre 1963 Bartok Paris Editions du Seuil OCLC 1577771 Cohn Richard 1988 Inversional Symmetry and Transpositional Combination in Bartok Music Theory Spectrum 10 19 42 Cooper David 2015 Bela Bartok New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 21307 2 de Toth June 1999 Bela Bartok A Biography Bela Bartok Solo Piano Works liner notes Bela Bartok Eroica Classical Recordings OCLC 29737219 JDT 3136 Archived from the original on 8 April 2007 Retrieved 14 April 2007 a href Template Cite AV media notes html title Template Cite AV media notes cite AV media notes a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Dicaire David 2010 The Early Years of Folk Music Fifty Founders of the Tradition Jefferson N C McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 5737 3 Dille Denijs 1990 Bela Bartok Regard sur le Passe French no English version available Namur Presses universitaires de Namur ISBN 978 2 87037 168 8 978 2 87037 168 8 Einstein Alfred 1947 Music in the Romantic Era New York W W Norton Fisk Josiah ed 1997 Composers on Music Eight Centuries of Writings A New and Expanded Revision of Morgenstern s Classic Anthology Boston Northeastern University Press ISBN 978 1 55553 279 6 Gagne Nicole V 2012 Historical Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Classical Music Historical Dictionaries of Literature and the Arts Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 6765 9 Getting Peter 2020 Zomieral s pocitom ze jeho praca bola daromna Nastastie nebula Bartok zanechal monumentalne dielo SME sk accessed 9 May 2020 Gillies Malcolm ed 1990 Bartok Remembered London Faber ISBN 978 0 571 14243 9 cased ISBN 978 0 571 14244 6 pbk Gillies Malcolm ed 1993 The Bartok Companion London Faber ISBN 978 0 571 15330 5 cloth ISBN 978 0 571 15331 2 pbk New York Hal Leonard ISBN 978 0 931340 74 1 Gillies Malcolm 2001 Bela Bartok The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers Also in Grove Music Online ed L Macy Accessed 23 May 2006 subscription access Gollin Edward 2007 Multi Aggregate Cycles and Multi Aggregate Serial Techniques in the Music of Bela Bartok Music Theory Spectrum 29 no 2 Fall 143 76 Griffiths Paul 1978 A Concise History of Modern Music London Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 20164 0 Griffiths Paul 1988 Bartok London JM Dent amp Sons Ltd Hooker Lynn 2001 The Political and Cultural Climate in Hungary at the Turn of the Twentieth Century In The Cambridge Companion to Bartok edited by Amanda Bayley 7 23 Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 66010 5 cloth ISBN 978 0 521 66958 0 pbk Hughes Peter 2001 Bela Bartok in Dictionary of Unitarian and Universalist Biography n p Unitarian Universalist Historical Society Archive from 7 December 2013 accessed 24 October 2017 Hughes Peter 2007 Bela Bartok Composer 1881 1945 In Notable American Unitarians 1936 1961 edited by Herbert Vetter 21 22 Cambridge Harvard Square Library ISBN 978 0 615 14784 0 Jones Tom 2012 See Bela Bartok Tired of London Tired of Life blog site 8 October accessed 4 July 2014 Kory Agnes 2007 Kodaly Bartok and Fiddle Music in Bartok s Compositions Bela Bartok Centre for Musicianship website accessed 27 September 2018 Lendvai Erno 1971 Bela Bartok An Analysis of His Music introduced by Alan Bush London Kahn amp Averill ISBN 978 0 900707 04 9 OCLC 240301 Martins Jose Antonio Oliveira 2006 Dasian Guidonian and Affinity Spaces in Twentieth century Music Ph D diss Chicago University of Chicago Matthews Peter 2012 Bartok in New York Feast of Music website accessed 26 September 2018 unreliable source Maurice Donald 2004 Bartok s Viola Concerto The Remarkable Story of His Swansong Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195348118 accessed 19 October 2017 Moreux Serge 1953 Bela Bartok translated G S Fraser and Erik de Mauny London The Harvill Press Moreux 1974 Bela Bartok translated G S Fraser and Erik de Mauny with a preface by Arthur Honegger Partial reprint of Moreux 1953 New York Vienna House Moser Zoltan 2006a Szavak feliratok kivonatok Tiszataj 60 no 3 March 41 45 Ozgenturk Nebil 2008 Turkiye nin Hatira Defteri episode 3 Istanbul Bir Yudum Insan Produksiyon LTD ȘTI Turkish CNN television documentary series Perle George 1955 Symmetrical Formations in the String Quartets of Bela Bartok Music Review 16 no 4 November 1955 Reprinted in The Right Notes Twenty Three Selected Essays by George Perle on Twentieth Century Music foreword by Oliver Knussen introduction by David Headlam 189 205 Monographs in Musicology Stuyvesant NY Pendragon Press ISBN 978 0 945193 37 1 Rockwell John 1982 Kodaly Was More Than a Composer The New York Times 12 December Rodda Richard E 1990 2018 String Quartet No 1 in A minor Op 7 Sz 40 About the Work The Kennedy Center website accessed 27 September 2018 Schneider David E 2006 Bartok Hungary and the Renewal of Tradition Case Studies in the Intersection of Modernity and Nationality California Studies in 20th Century Music 5 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 24503 7 Sipos Janos ed 2000 In the Wake of Bartok in Anatolia 1 Collection Near Adana Budapest Ethnofon Records Somfai Laszlo 1996 Bela Bartok Composition Concepts and Autograph Sources Ernest Bloch Lectures in Music 9 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 08485 8 Stevens Halsey 1964 The Life and Music of Bela Bartok second edition New York Oxford University Press ASIN B000NZ54ZS Stevens Halsey 1993 The Life and Music of Bela Bartok third edition prepared by Malcolm Gillies New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198163497 Stevens Halsey 2018 Bela Bartok Hungarian Composer Encyclopaedia Britannica online accessed 27 September 2018 Suchoff Benjamin 2001 Bela Bartok Life and Work Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 4076 8 via Google Books 2001 accessed 29 July 2019 Szabolcsi Bence 1974 Bartok Bela Cantata profana In Miert szep szazadunk zeneje Why is the music of the Twentieth century so beautiful edited by Gyorgy Kroo page needed Budapest Gondolat ISBN 978 963 280 015 8 Szekernyes Janos 2017 Bartokek Nagyszentmikloson Bartok in Nagyszentmiklos Muvelodes 70 July accessed 10 March 2019 Tudzin Jessica Taylor 2010 Schooled in Bartok Bohemian Ink blog site 2 August accessed 4 July 2014 Voices From The Past Bela Bartok s 44 Duos amp Original Field Recordings Tantara Records 2014 OCLC 868907693 Wilhelm Kurt 1989 Richard Strauss An intimate Portrait London Thames and Hudson Wilson Paul 1992 The Music of Bela Bartok New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 05111 7 Further reading Edit Polereczky csalad Arcanum hu website accessed 30 December 2019 2003 Bela Bartok 1881 1945 Websophia com Accessed 25 March 2009 Bartok Bela 1976 The Influence of Peasant Music on Modern Music 1931 In Bela Bartok Essays edited by Benjamin Suchoff 340 44 London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 10120 7 OCLC 60900461 Bartok Bela 1981 The Hungarian Folk Song second English edition edited by Benjamin Suchoff translated by Michel D Calvocoressi with annotations by Zoltan Kodaly The New York Bartok Archive Studies in Musicology 13 Albany State University of New York Press Bartok Peter 2002 My Father Homosassa Florida Bartok Records ISBN 978 0 9641961 2 4 Bayley Amanda ed 2001 The Cambridge Companion to Bartok Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 66010 5 cloth ISBN 978 0 521 66958 0 pbk Bonis Ferenc 2006 Elet kepek Bartok Bela Budapest Balassi Kiado Vavi Kft Alfoldi Nyomda Zrt ISBN 978 963 506 649 0 Boys Henry 1945 Bela Bartok 1881 1945 The Musical Times 86 no 1233 November 329 31 Cohn Richard 1992 Bartok s Octatonic Strategies A Motivic Approach Journal of the American Musicological Society 44 Czeizel Endre 1992 Csaladfa honnan jovunk mik vagyunk hova megyunk Budapest Kossuth Konyvkiado ISBN 978 963 09 3569 2 Decca 2016 Bela Bartok Complete Works Int Release 18 Mar 2016 32 CDs 0289 478 9311 0 Welcome to Decca Classics Catalogue www deccaclassics com accessed 19 August 2016 Fassett Agatha 1958 The Naked Face of Genius Bela Bartok s American Years Boston Houghton Mifflin Jyrkiainen Reijo 2012 Form Monothematicism Variation and Symmetry in Bela Bartok s String Quartets Ph D diss Helsinki University of Helsinki ISBN 978 952 10 8040 1 Abstract Karpati Janos 1975 Bartok s String Quartets translated by Fred MacNicol Budapest Corvina Press Kasparov Andrey 2000 Third Piano Concerto in the Revised 1994 Edition Newly Discovered Corrections by the Composer Hungarian Music Quarterly 11 nos 3 4 2 11 Leafstedt Carl S 1999 Inside Bluebeard s Castle New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 510999 3 Lendvai Erno 1972 Einfuhrung in die Formen und Harmoniewelt Bartoks 1953 In his Bela Bartok Weg und Werk edited by Bence Szabolcsi 105 49 Kassel Barenreiter Loxdale Hugh D and Adalbert Balog 2009 Bela Bartok Musician Musicologist Composer and Entomologist Antenna Bulletin of the Royal Entomological Society of London 33 no 4 175 82 Maconie Robin 2005 Other Planets The Music of Karlheinz Stockhausen Lanham MD Toronto Oxford The Scarecrow Press Inc ISBN 978 0 8108 5356 0 Martins Jose Oliveira 2015 Bartok s Polymodality the Dasian and other Affinity Spaces Journal of Music Theory 59 no 2 October 273 320 Moser Zoltan 2006b Bartok osok Gomorben Honismeret A Honismereti Szovetseg folyoirata permanent dead link 34 no 2 April 9 11 Nelson David Taylor 2012 Bela Bartok The Father of Ethnomusicology Musical Offerings Vol 3 No 2 Article 2 Sluder Claude K 1994 Revised Bartok Composition Highlights Pro Musica Concert The Republic 16 February Smith Erik 1965 A discussion between Istvan Kertesz and the producer DECCA Records liner notes for Bluebeard s Castle Somfai Laszlo 1981 Tizennyolc Bartok tanulmany Eighteen Bartok Studies Budapest Zenemukiado ISBN 978 963 330 370 2 Wells John C 1990 Bartok in Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 63 Harlow England Longman ISBN 978 0 582 05383 0External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bela Bartok Wikiquote has quotations related to Bela Bartok Works by or about Bela Bartok at Internet Archive Bartok Bela Memorial House Budapest Archived 12 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Belgian Bartok Archives housed in the Brussels Royal Library and founded by Denijs Dille Archived 28 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Discovering Bartok BBC Radio 3 Gallery of Bartok portraits Virtual Exhibition on Bartok Finding aid to Bela Bartok manuscripts at Columbia University Rare Book amp Manuscript Library Free scores by Bela Bartok at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Bartok plays Bartok for Don Gabor s Continental record label later reissued on Remington Records Interactive scores of Bartok s works for piano with Sir Andras Schiff Portals Classical music Music Biography Hungary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bela Bartok amp oldid 1148649621, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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