Rhapsodies Nos. 1 & 2 Piano Quintet

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Rhapsodies Nos. 1 & 2 Piano Quintet Rhapsodies Nos. 1 & 2 Piano Quintet Gyorgy Pauk, Violin Jeno"Jand6, Piano KodBly Quartet BCla Bart6k (1881-1945) First Rhapsody (Folk Dances) Second Rhapsody (Folk Dances) Andante (1902) Piano Quintet (1903-4) The Hungarian composer B6la Bart6k was born in 1881 in an area that now forms part of Romania. His father, director of an agricultural college, was a keen amateur musician, while it was from his mother that he received his early piano lessons. The death of his father in 1889 led to a less settled existence, as his mother resumed work as a teacher, eventually settling in the Slovak capital of Bratislava (the Hungarian Pozsony), where Bart6k passed his early adolescence, counting among his school-fellows the composer Ern6 Dohnlnyi. Offered the chance of musical training in Vienna, like Dohnlnyi he chose instead Budapest, where he won a considerable reputation as a pianist, being appointed to the teaching staff of the Academy of Music in 1907. At the same time he developed a deep interest, shared with his compatriot Zoltin Kodily, in the folk-music of his own and adjacent countries, later extended as far as Anatolia, where he collaborated in research with the Turkish composer Adnan Saygiin. As a composer Bart6k found acceptance much more difficult, particularly in his own country, which was, in any case, beset by political troubles, when the brief post-war left-wing government of B6la Kun was replaced by the reactionarv, r6~ime" of Admiral Horthv. Meanwhile his revutation abroad grew, particularly among those with an interest in contemporary music, and his success both as a pianist and as a composer, coupled with dissatisfaction at the growing associationbetween the ~oI.lh~ and National Socialist Germany, led him in 1940 to emigrate to the United States of America. In his last years, after briefly held teaching appointments at Columbia and Harvard, Bart6k suffered from increasing ill-health, and from poverty which the conditions of exile in war-time could do nothing to alleviate. He died in straitened circumstances in 1945, leaving a new Viola Concerto incomplete and a Third Piano Concerto more nearly finished. The years in America, whatever difficulties they brought, also gave rise to other important compositions, including the Concerto for Orchestra, commissioned by the Koussevitzky Foundation, a Sonata for Solo Violin for Yehudi Menuhin and, in the year before he left Hungary, Contrasts, for Szigeti and Benny Goodman. The two Rhapsodies, originally for violin and piano, were both written in 1928, the year of Bart6k'sFollrth Quartet. Both Rhapsodies appeared in versions for solo violin and orchestra, possibly the composer's final intention, and in versions for violin, viola and cello, with the first also in a version in which the solo cello replaces the solo violin. The orchestral version of theFirst Rhapsody, modestly scored, includes a cimbalom, for the first and only time in his compositions. Both works are in two movements, lassil followed byfriss, as in the standard Hungarian dances, the verb~lnkos,or recruiting-dance, and the csa'rda's. The lassil of the First Rhapsody starts with a melody that is initially based on the ascending scale in the Lydian mode. A second section is dominated by the characteristic short-long rhythm also familiar in traditional Scottish music. The movement ends with the return of the first material and a closing reference to the second. Thefuiss, after a brief introduction, turns to a melody that may seem all too familiar to American listeners. The second section, with its variations of speed, moves on to music of greater excitement, finally slowing to a reminiscence of the lassil and a brief cadenza. The work is dedicated to Joseph Szigeti. Both Rhapsodies were subject to much revision by the composer, the Second Rhapsody notably in 1945. Dedicated to Zoltin Szekely, the opening lass6 starts with a characteristic melody in D minor that re-appears twice, first in a higher register, with harmonically contradictory accompaniment, and finally in conjunction with another theme that had appeared in the second episode of what is in fact a rondo. Characteristic rhythmic accompaniment opens the friss, introducing the modal first melody. A second section, marked Molto moderato, pesante, leads to the increasing excitement expected of the dance, before an Allegro nor1 troppo and music that continues to use varied and innovative technical, harmonic and rhythmic devices. The Alldnnte of 1902 and the Piano Qtliittet written in 1903 and 1904 are works of a very different kind. In the first of these the influence of Richard Strauss can be detected. BartBk had heard in 1902 the first Budapest performance of Also sprach Zaratllllstm, a work that had a profound effect on him and led him to the study of other Strauss scores and to the transcription for piano of Eiu Heldeillebeil. The Quintet was completed in Gerlicepuszta in the Gomor district in July 1904. The following month BartBk travelled to Bayreuth to hear Parsifnl. In October he gave the first performance of the Quintet in Vienna with the Prill Quartet and the following year took it with him to Paris for the Prix Rubinstein. There, however, the work was not heard, while the Violill Sonata of 1903 and the piano Rlmpsody, Oprs 1, failed to impress a generally conservative jury, which included the violinist Leopold Auer from St Petersburg. The Qlliiltet, its movements thematically linked in a way that suggests the influence of Liszt, follows the example of Dohninyi and is romantic in tone, with suggestions of Brahms and Richard Strauss in the writing. The last two movements in particular have a distinctly Hungarian flavour, a counterpart of the traditional lassil andfriss. Bartdk did not publish the work but played it on later occasions and took it with him to the United States. It remains of more than historical interest and marks, as the composer seems to have seen it, the end of his apprenticeship as a composer. In November 1904 he completed his piano Xlzapsody, numbered Opus 1. 8.550886 4 Jend Jand6 The Hungarian pianist Jen6Jandb has won a number of piano competitions in Hungary and abroad, including first prize in the 1973 Hungarian Piano Concours and a first prize in the chamber music category at the Sydney International Piano Competition in 1977. He has recorded for Naxos all the piano concertos and sonatas of Mozart. Other recordings for the Naxos label include the concertos of Grieg and Schumann as well as Rachmaninov's Second Concerto and Paganini Rhapsody and Beethoven's complete piano sonatas. Gyorgy Pauk Gy6rgy Pauk was born in Budapest in 1936 and had his first violin lessons at the age of five. He studied at the Franz Liszt Academy and made his orchestral debut at the age of fourteen and in the 1950s won the Paganini Competition in Genoa, the Munich Sonata Competition, with the pianist Peter Frankl, and the Long-Thibaud Competition in Paris. He made his London Festival Hall debut in 1961, settling in England, his base thereafter for a distinguished international career. In addition to his command of standard solo violin repertoire Gyorgy Pauk is known for his championship of contemporary music, with first performances of works by Lutoslawski, Penderecki, Schnittke and Maxwell Davies, and for his perceptive and committed performance of the music of Bela Bartbk. He plays the 1714 Massart Stradivarius. Kodily Quartet The members of the Kodily Quartet were trained at the Budapest Ferenc Liszt Academy, and three of them, the second violinist Tamis Szab6, viola- player Gibor Fias and cellist Jhos Devich, were formerly in the Sebestyen Quartet, which was awarded the iury's special diploma at the 1966 Geneva International Quartet ~om~etitiokakdwin first phze at the 1968 Leo Weiner Quartet Competition in Budauest Since 1970. with the violinist Attila Falvav. the quartet his been known is the Kodily ~uartet,a title adopted with &; approval of the Hungarian Ministry of Culture and Education. The Kodiily Quartet has given concerts throughout Europe, in the then Soviet Union and in Japan, in addition to regular appearances in Hungary both in the concert hall and on television and has made for Naxos highly acclaimed recordings of string quartets by Ravel, Debussy, Haydn and Schubert. Rhapsodies Nos. 1 & 2 Piano Quintet Rhapsody No. 1 (Folk Dances) Andante (1902) m Piano Quintet* I "" Rhapsody No. 2 (Folk Dances) 1,M#@ '@ kM5iilm-W: bapmapi&thiwe, I@ , i@- i6ia %s .
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