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György Kurtág

György Kurtág

György Kurtág has been played on NTS in shows including RVNG Intl. Presents Friends & Fiends, featured first on 28 February 2015. Songs played include Grabstein Für Stephan (Op. 15c), 12 Microludes For String Quartet Op.13 "Hommage à András Mihály" and Ligatura ‎– Message To Frances-Marie (The Answered Unanswered Question), Op. 31/b, Für 2 Violoncelli, 2 Violinen Und Celesta, Version 1.

György Kurtág was born on 19th February 1926 at Lugoj in Romania, not far from the birthplace of fellow Hungarian György Ligeti. Both young composers hoped to study with Béla Bartók in Budapest in 1945, but Bartók died in America and Kurtág went on to study piano, composition and chamber music with other teachers at the Budapest Academy. Among his early works was a Korean Cantata which expressed solidarity with the North Koreans in the Korean War against the US, but he reached the age of thirty-three before he was willing to give any of his works opus numbers.

In the early 1950s the Stalinist regime in Hungary proscribed Bartók's later works, and immediately his music became a rallying call for artists taking a stand against authoritarianism. Also banned in Hungary until the mid-1950s was the music of Arnold Schoenberg, and the middle and late-period works of Igor Stravinsky. To escape this creative straitjacket Kurtág moved to Paris in 1957 to study music with Olivier Messiaen, Darius Milhaud and Max Deutsch. He also had consultations with the Hungarian art psychologist Marianne Stein, and it was her advice that would prove most influential on his future development. While in Paris he wrote his first String Quartet, designating it 'opus 1' to mark a decisive break from his compositions to date. He returned to Budapest in 1958, stopping for a few days in Cologne where he first heard recordings of Karlheinz Stockhausen's Gruppen and Ligeti's recent electronic music. This experience would also prove important in formulating his new compositional voice.

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György Kurtág

György Kurtág has been played on NTS in shows including RVNG Intl. Presents Friends & Fiends, featured first on 28 February 2015. Songs played include Grabstein Für Stephan (Op. 15c), 12 Microludes For String Quartet Op.13 "Hommage à András Mihály" and Ligatura ‎– Message To Frances-Marie (The Answered Unanswered Question), Op. 31/b, Für 2 Violoncelli, 2 Violinen Und Celesta, Version 1.

György Kurtág was born on 19th February 1926 at Lugoj in Romania, not far from the birthplace of fellow Hungarian György Ligeti. Both young composers hoped to study with Béla Bartók in Budapest in 1945, but Bartók died in America and Kurtág went on to study piano, composition and chamber music with other teachers at the Budapest Academy. Among his early works was a Korean Cantata which expressed solidarity with the North Koreans in the Korean War against the US, but he reached the age of thirty-three before he was willing to give any of his works opus numbers.

In the early 1950s the Stalinist regime in Hungary proscribed Bartók's later works, and immediately his music became a rallying call for artists taking a stand against authoritarianism. Also banned in Hungary until the mid-1950s was the music of Arnold Schoenberg, and the middle and late-period works of Igor Stravinsky. To escape this creative straitjacket Kurtág moved to Paris in 1957 to study music with Olivier Messiaen, Darius Milhaud and Max Deutsch. He also had consultations with the Hungarian art psychologist Marianne Stein, and it was her advice that would prove most influential on his future development. While in Paris he wrote his first String Quartet, designating it 'opus 1' to mark a decisive break from his compositions to date. He returned to Budapest in 1958, stopping for a few days in Cologne where he first heard recordings of Karlheinz Stockhausen's Gruppen and Ligeti's recent electronic music. This experience would also prove important in formulating his new compositional voice.

Original source Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

Grabstein Für Stephan (Op. 15c)
Karlheinz Stockhausen, György Kurtág, Berliner Philharmoniker, Claudio Abbado
Deutsche Grammophon1996
12 Microludes For String Quartet Op.13 "Hommage à András Mihály"
Cuarteto Casals, Bartók, Ligeti, Kurtág
Harmonia Mundi2010
Ligatura ‎– Message To Frances-Marie (The Answered Unanswered Question), Op. 31/b, Für 2 Violoncelli, 2 Violinen Und Celesta, Version 1
György Kurtág, Keller Quartett
ECM Records, ECM New Series1996
Gottes Zeit Ist Die Allerbeste Zeit (BWV 106) (Sonatina Aus "Actus Tragicus")
György Kurtág, Márta And György Kurtág
ECM New Series1997
Perpetuum Mobile A
György Kurtág
Mode2011
Rozsnyai Ilona In Memoriam
Heinz Holliger, György Kurtág
ECM Records, ECM New Series2019