270
A
lthough heavily influenced
by German music, Béla
Bartók’s individual voice
became increasingly evident after
he began to collect music from his
native Hungary in 1904. There is a
clear evolution of style between the
First Quartet (1909), which included
elements of folk music but was
influenced by Richard Strauss and
Debussy, and his Fifth Quartet
(1934), which premiered in 1935.
Musical journey
In 1912, lack of interest in his works
from his publishers led Bartók to
devote his time to studying folklore
and collecting thousands of Eastern
European folk songs. In 1913, he
also visited North Africa, again
finding themes to incorporate in his
music. When his health rendered
him unfit for military service in
World War I, he again began to
compose. The success of his
fairytale ballet The Wooden Prince
(1917) led to renewed interest in his
opera Bluebeard’s Castle (1911).
A Transylvanian village receives
Bartók (fourth from left) during one
of his tours to record folk songs. His
interest coincided with a growing
pride in traditional national culture.
IN CONTEXT
FOCUS
Reconciling folk music
and modernism
BEFORE
1853 Liszt composes his Piano
Sonata in B minor, which had
a profound influence on Bartók.
1895 Hungarian composer
Ernö Dohnányi writes his
Piano Quintet, No. 1, Op. 1.
1896 Richard Strauss writes
Also sprach Zarathustra, a
work Bartók studied closely
after attending its Budapest
premiere in 1902.
AFTER
1953–1954 Györg y Ligeti’s
String Quartet No. 1 is strongly
influenced by Bartók’s works.
1959 György Kurtág
completes his String Quartet,
Op. 1, effectively continuing
the Hungarian tradition of
string quartet writing.
A NATION CREATES MUSIC.
THE COMPOSER ONLY
ARRANGES IT
STRING QUARTET NO. 5 ( 1934 ),
BÉLA VIKTOR JÁNOS BARTÓK
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