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András Fejér

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Name
  
Andras Fejer


Role
  
Cellist

András Fejér Andrs Fejr College of Music University of Colorado Boulder


Education
  
Franz Liszt Academy of Music, Budapest

Albums
  
String Quintet, D. 956 / String Quartet, D. 703 "Quartettsatz"

Music group
  
Takacs Quartet (Since 1975)

Similar People
  
Karoly Schranz, Edward Dusinberre, Geraldine Walther, Gabor Takacs‑Nagy, Roger Tapping

Drei st cke aus der legende der heiligen elisabeth introduction


András Fejér (born 1955) is a Hungarian cellist. He is a member of the Takács Quartet, having founded it with three classmates at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest, Hungary, in 1975.

Contents

He was born into a musical family and became familiar with the chamber music repertoire at an early age, as his parents would spend the weekends playing music with their friends. András himself began playing the cello at age seven, and legend has it that he originally wanted to play violin but his father, unwilling to listen to the terrible scratching sounds produced by beginning violinists, forbade it.

In 1975, he entered the Franz Liszt Academy of Music, where he studied with Ede Banda, András Mihály, Ferenc Rados and György Kurtág. Notably, he studied Bartok’s music with the violinist Zoltan Szekely, to whom Bartok dedicated his Second Violin Concerto. In 1982, he and his colleagues in the Takács Quartet moved to Boulder, Colorado and took up the position of quartet-in-residence at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Songs

Dohnányi: Sextet for piano - violin - viola - cello - clarinet & horn - Op37 - 1 Allegro appassionatoDohnányi: Piano Quintet/Piano Sextet · 2008
Trio In A Minor For Viola - Violoncello and Piano - Op 114: I Allegro Poco meno allegroJohannes Brahms: Viola Sonatas Op 120 - Nos 1 & 2; Trio - Op 114 · 2013
Dohnányi: Sextet for piano - violin - viola - cello - clarinet & horn - Op37 - 2 Intermezzo: AdagioDohnányi: Piano Quintet/Piano Sextet · 2008

References

András Fejér Wikipedia