Picture of author.

Zoltan Kodaly (1882–1967)

Autor(a) de 333 Reading Exercises (Choral Method)

128+ Works 310 Membros 5 Críticas

About the Author

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Séries

Obras por Zoltan Kodaly

Folk music of Hungary (1981) 15 exemplares
Psalmus Hungaricus : op. 13 (1977) 8 exemplares
Te Deum (1952) 7 exemplares
Kodály: Music for Cello (1996) 5 exemplares
Tricinia (1964) 5 exemplares
Missa Brevis [score] 5 exemplares
Duet, violin, cello, op. 7 (1995) 4 exemplares
Dances from Galanta 4 exemplares
55 Two-Part Exercises (1965) — Compositor — 4 exemplares
66 Two-Part Exercises (1964) 3 exemplares
Sonate, Op.8 (1952) 3 exemplares
Bicinia Hungarica 3 exemplares
77 two-part Exercises (1984) 3 exemplares
Marosszk Dances 2 exemplares
Kis emberek dalai 2 exemplares
Bicinia Hungarica 3 (1969) 2 exemplares
Bicinia Hungarica I 2 exemplares
Psalm 121 2 exemplares
Jesus and the traders 2 exemplares
Summer Evening 2 exemplares
Budavári Te Deum 2 exemplares
Spinning Room 2 exemplares
Vegyeskarok 1 exemplar
Soldier's Song 1 exemplar
Dg 111 - the Conductors (2017) 1 exemplar
Dancing-Song (1933) 1 exemplar
Ötfokú zene I 1 exemplar
Kodály - Veress - Kurtag [sound recording] — Compositor — 1 exemplar
Katalinka 1 exemplar
Evening Song 1 exemplar
Ave Maria 1 exemplar
Mountain Nights 1 exemplar
Genfi Zxoltar 1 exemplar
Birthday Greeting 1 exemplar
Music for Cello and Piano (2003) 1 exemplar
An ode for music 1 exemplar
Communion 1 exemplar

Associated Works

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Data de nascimento
1882-12-16
Data de falecimento
1967-03-06
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
Hungary
Local de nascimento
Kecskemét, Hungary
Local de falecimento
Budapest, Hungary
Locais de residência
Budapest, Hungary
Educação
University of Budapest
Budapest Academy of Music
Ocupações
composer
educator
philosopher
ethnomusicologist
Relações
Láng, György (student)
Kertész, István (student)
Bartok, Bela (friend)
Organizações
American Academy of Arts and Letters (Foreign Honorary, Music, 1963)

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Zoltán Kodály was born in Kecskemét, Hungary, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. He learned to play the violin and piano as a child and sang in the cathedral choir in Nagyszombat (present-day Trnava, Slovakia), where he spent part of his youth. This was where he wrote his first compositions. In 1900, he entered the University of Budapest to study languages, and at the same time enrolled at the Academy of Music to study composition. He toured the country, visiting remote villages, to gather material for his 1906 doctoral dissertation on the structure of Hungarian folk song. At around this time, Kodály met Béla Bartók, to whom he introduced some of his methods for folk song collecting. The two became lifelong friends and champions of each other's music; together they published many editions of folk songs between 1906 and 1921. Kodály became a teacher of theory and composition at the Academy of Music in 1907, a post he held until 1941. His importance as an educator extended not only to composers but also to teachers; and through his many students, he contributed greatly to the spread of music education. The "Kodály Method" he developed became a standard of music teaching all around the world. Kodály's own individual composing style was derived from Hungarian folk music, contemporary French music (he spent some time in Paris), and the religious music of the Italian Renaissance. His writings included Die ungarische Volksmusik (Folk Music of Hungary, 1956), as well as numerous articles for scholarly ethnographic and musical journals. The Selected Writings of Zoltán Kodály, edited by Ferenc Bónis and translated from the Hungarian by Lili Halápy and Fred Macnicol, was published in 1974.

Membros

Críticas

SATB and piano
 
Assinalado
mdoerries | Aug 3, 2022 |
 
Assinalado
VPALib | Mar 6, 2019 |
 
Assinalado
VPALib | Mar 6, 2019 |
 
Assinalado
VPALib | Mar 6, 2019 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
128
Also by
1
Membros
310
Popularidade
#76,069
Avaliação
4.2
Críticas
5
ISBN
26
Línguas
5

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