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Hungarian Composers of Piano Music : = From Liszt to Ligeti.
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Hungarian Composers of Piano Music :/
Reminder of title:
From Liszt to Ligeti.
Author:
Li, Szu-Yi.
Description:
1 online resource (78 pages)
Notes:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-01, Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International85-01A.
Subject:
Music. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=30312153click for full text (PQDT)
ISBN:
9798379762056
Hungarian Composers of Piano Music : = From Liszt to Ligeti.
Li, Szu-Yi.
Hungarian Composers of Piano Music :
From Liszt to Ligeti. - 1 online resource (78 pages)
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-01, Section: A.
Thesis (D.M.A.)--University of Maryland, College Park, 2023.
Includes bibliographical references
In the nineteenth century, German composers held an almost out-of-proportion importance in the classical music world. However, with the advent of nationalism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, composers in non-German countries such as Russia, Norway, Spain, Bohemia, Poland, Hungary, England, and the United States began to compose works in many genres that emphasized the particular national or ethnic qualities of their own native music. This resulted in the production of many works that greatly expanded and enriched the repertoire for the piano, beginning as far back as the Mazurkas and Polonaises of Chopin and the Hungarian Rhapsodies of Liszt in the first half of the nineteenth century. With Liszt's ethnic-inspired works written throughout his life, followed by the ethnomusicological promotion by Kodaly and Bartok in the early twentieth century, Hungary, this small country in Europe, started to play an essential role in music history.Liszt's early virtuosic pieces changed the world's approach to piano technique; moreover, his late innovations in harmonies and forms shed light on the path of modern techniques. Bartok was an innovator in developing a percussive approach to the piano, and he used folk elements in new ways that changed how later composers would write piano music. Ligeti's exploration of textures, extreme dynamic contrasts, and hyper-complicated rhythmic and metrical design, established his unique role in music history. These composers altered profoundly the development of piano music in its technique and expression. I have sought to put these Hungarian composers in historical context, and show how their legacies passed on to the next generation.What is Hungarian style? Generations of Hungarian composers tried to find their own answers through different resources. Liszt's interest in Hungarian style lay in verbunkos music - the old recruiting dance of the army from the eighteenth century, which had long been in the repertoire of Gypsy bands.Kodaly and Bartok found their answers in peasant songs, and Bartok later developed his unique style that synthesized folk music and modernism. Dohnanyi was another kind of interesting figure who insisted on German Romanticism when his colleagues tried to avoid the influence of European techniques.Post-Bartok composers like Jeno Takacs, Pal Kadosa, and Ferenc Farkas identified with the use of folk music, explored tunes from around the world, and strived to find new paths through modern techniques. Miklos Rozsa, best known as a film music composer, wrote piano music that reflects Hungarian folk elements.Gyorgy Ligeti was an influential composer of the late twentieth century who brought piano music to a new level of complexity and virtuosity with his piano etudes. His interest in extra-musical elements, combined with his knowledge of folk elements like aksak rhythm and others, helped him find his answer to the synthesis of folklorism and modernism.
Electronic reproduction.
Ann Arbor, Mich. :
ProQuest,
2023
Mode of access: World Wide Web
ISBN: 9798379762056Subjects--Topical Terms:
516178
Music.
Subjects--Index Terms:
BartokIndex Terms--Genre/Form:
542853
Electronic books.
Hungarian Composers of Piano Music : = From Liszt to Ligeti.
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In the nineteenth century, German composers held an almost out-of-proportion importance in the classical music world. However, with the advent of nationalism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, composers in non-German countries such as Russia, Norway, Spain, Bohemia, Poland, Hungary, England, and the United States began to compose works in many genres that emphasized the particular national or ethnic qualities of their own native music. This resulted in the production of many works that greatly expanded and enriched the repertoire for the piano, beginning as far back as the Mazurkas and Polonaises of Chopin and the Hungarian Rhapsodies of Liszt in the first half of the nineteenth century. With Liszt's ethnic-inspired works written throughout his life, followed by the ethnomusicological promotion by Kodaly and Bartok in the early twentieth century, Hungary, this small country in Europe, started to play an essential role in music history.Liszt's early virtuosic pieces changed the world's approach to piano technique; moreover, his late innovations in harmonies and forms shed light on the path of modern techniques. Bartok was an innovator in developing a percussive approach to the piano, and he used folk elements in new ways that changed how later composers would write piano music. Ligeti's exploration of textures, extreme dynamic contrasts, and hyper-complicated rhythmic and metrical design, established his unique role in music history. These composers altered profoundly the development of piano music in its technique and expression. I have sought to put these Hungarian composers in historical context, and show how their legacies passed on to the next generation.What is Hungarian style? Generations of Hungarian composers tried to find their own answers through different resources. Liszt's interest in Hungarian style lay in verbunkos music - the old recruiting dance of the army from the eighteenth century, which had long been in the repertoire of Gypsy bands.Kodaly and Bartok found their answers in peasant songs, and Bartok later developed his unique style that synthesized folk music and modernism. Dohnanyi was another kind of interesting figure who insisted on German Romanticism when his colleagues tried to avoid the influence of European techniques.Post-Bartok composers like Jeno Takacs, Pal Kadosa, and Ferenc Farkas identified with the use of folk music, explored tunes from around the world, and strived to find new paths through modern techniques. Miklos Rozsa, best known as a film music composer, wrote piano music that reflects Hungarian folk elements.Gyorgy Ligeti was an influential composer of the late twentieth century who brought piano music to a new level of complexity and virtuosity with his piano etudes. His interest in extra-musical elements, combined with his knowledge of folk elements like aksak rhythm and others, helped him find his answer to the synthesis of folklorism and modernism.
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click for full text (PQDT)
based on 0 review(s)
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