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Zoltán Székely

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Name
  
Zoltan Szekely


Role
  
Composer

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Died
  
October 5, 2001, Banff, Canada

Education
  
Franz Liszt Academy of Music, Budapest

Music group
  
Hungarian Quartet (1937 – 1972)

Similar People
  
Bela Bartok, Hungarian Quartet, Sandor Vegh, Jeno Hubay, Stefi Geyer

Guitare, Op. 28


Zoltán Székely (Hungarian: Székely Zoltán; 8 December 1903 in Kocs, Hungary – 5 October 2001 in Banff, Canada) was a violinist and composer.

Contents

Bartok 2. Violin Concerto Premiere-1. Allegro non troppo (1)


Biography

Zoltán Székely forbiddenmusicregainedorgmedia101244ZoltanSze

Székely studied violin with Jenő Hubay and composition with Zoltán Kodály at the Franz Liszt Academy in Budapest. He composed mainly chamber music. Székely was a friend of Béla Bartók and was the one to request the composition of Bartók's Second Violin Concerto and its dedicatee as well as performer at its premiere in March, 1939, Mengelberg conducting. The performance was a live broadcast and was recorded by Radio Hilversum on 78 RPM acetates, the most used recording medium at the time. For several years he lived in the Netherlands and from 1940-1942 he was first violinist of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra under Willem Mengelberg. He later went to live in the USA. Zoltan Szekely joined the Hungarian String Quartet in its second year, and played the first violin from 1937 until the quartet disbanded in 1972. He was named Honorary Professor by the Franz Liszt Academy in 1981, which marked Bartók's centenary.

Székely transcribed Bartók's Romanian Folk Dances for violin and piano.

Songs

Rhapsody No 2 for Violin and Piano - BB 96a: I Lassu: Moderato
Rhapsody No 2 for Violin and Piano - BB 96a: II Friss: Allegro moderato
Violin Concerto No 2 - BB 117: I Allegro non troppo

References

Zoltán Székely Wikipedia