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Through
his far-reaching endeavors as composer, performer, educator,
and ethnomusicolgist, Béla Bartók emerged as one of the most
forceful and influential musical personalities of the
twentieth century. Born in Nagyszentmiklós, Hungary (now
Romania) on March 25, 1881, Bartók began his musical
training with piano studies at the age of five,
foreshadowing his lifelong affinity for the instrument.
Following his graduation from the Royal Academy of Music in
1901 and the composition of his first mature works -- most
notably, the symphonic poem Kossuth (1903) -- Bartók
embarked on one of the classic field studies in the history
of ethnomusicology. With fellow countryman and composer
Zoltán Kodály, he traveled throughout Hungary and
neighboring countries, collecting thousands of authentic
folksongs. Bartók's immersion in this music lasted for
decades, and the intricacies he discovered therein, from
plangent modality to fiercely aggressive rhythms, exerted a
potent influence on his own musical language. In addition to
his compositional activities and folk music research,
Bartók's career unfolded amid a bustling schedule of
teaching and performing. The great success he enjoyed as a
concert artist in the 1920s was offset somewhat by
difficulties that arose from the tenuous political
atmosphere in Hungary, a situation exacerbated by the
composer's frank manner. As the specter of fascism in Europe
in the 1930s grew ever more sinister, he refused to play in
Germany and banned radio broadcasts of his music there and
in Italy. A concert in Budapest on October 8, 1940, was the
composer's farewell to the country which had provided him so
much inspiration and yet caused him so much grief. Days
later, Bartók and his wife set sail for America. In his
final years Bartók was beleaguered by poor health. Though
his prospects seemed sunnier in the final year of his life,
his last great hope -- to return to Hungary -- was dashed in
the aftermath of World War II. He died of leukemia in New
York on September 26, 1945. The composer's legacy included a
number of ambitious but unrealized projects, including a
Seventh String Quartet; two major works, the Viola Concerto
and the Piano Concerto No. 3, were completed from Bartók's
in-progress scores and sketches by his pupil, Tibor Serly.
From its roots in the music he performed as a pianist --
Mozart, Beethoven, Chopin, Brahms -- Bartók's own style
evolved through several stages into one of the most
distinctive and influential musical idioms of the first half
of the twentieth century. The complete assimilation of
elements from varied sources -- the Classical masters,
contemporaries like Debussy, folk songs -- is one of the
signal traits of Bartók's music. The polychromatic
orchestral textures of Richard Strauss had an immediate and
long-lasting effect upon Bartók's own instrumental sense,
evidenced in masterpieces such as Music for Strings,
Percussion, and Celesta (1936) and the Concerto for
Orchestra (1945). Bartók demonstrated an especial concern
with form in his exploitation and refinement of devices like
palindromes, arches, and proportions based on the "golden
section." Perhaps above all other elements, though, it is
the ingenious application of rhythm that gives Bartók's
music its keen edge. Inspired by the folk music he loved,
Bartók infused his works with asymmetrical, sometimes
driving, often savage, rhythms, which supply violent
propulsion to works such as Allegro barbaro (1911) and the
Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion (1937). If a single
example from Bartók's catalogue can be regarded as
representative, it is certainly the piano collection
Mikrokosmos (1926-39), originally intended as a progressive
keyboard primer for the composer's son, Peter. These six
volumes, comprising 153 pieces, remain valuable not only as
a pedagogical tool but as an exhaustive glossary of the
techniques -- melodic, harmonic, rhythmic, formal -- that
provided a vessel for Bartók's extraordinary musical
personality. ~ Michael Rodman, All Music Guide |
