Composer Biographies: Bartók
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Béla Bartók (1881 - 1945)
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Béla Bartók, the greatest Hungarian composer, was one
of the most significant musicians of the twentieth century. He shared
with his friend Zoltán Kodály, another leading Hungarian
composer, a passion for ethnomusicology. His music was invigorated by
the themes, modes, and rhythmic patterns of the Hungarian and other
folk music traditions he studied, which he synthesized with influences
from his contemporaries into his own distinctive style.
Bartók grew up in the Greater Hungary of the Austro-Hungarian
Empire which was partitioned by the Treaty of Trianon after World War
I. His birthplace, Nagyszentmiklós (Great St Nicholas), became
Sînnicolau Mare, Romania. After his father died in 1888, Béla's
mother, Paula, took her family to live in Nagyazöllös, later
Vinogradov, Ukraine, and then to Pozsony, or Bratislava, in her native
Slovakia. When Czechoslovakia was created Béla and his mother
found themselves on opposite sides of a border.
A smallpox inoculation gave the infant Béla a rash that persisted
until he was five years old. Because of this he spent his early years
in isolation from other children, often listening to his mother playing
the piano. Béla showed precocious musical ability and began to
compose dances at the age of nine. The frequent moves of the family
were motivated, in part, by Paula Bartók's desire to obtain the
best possible musical instruction for her son.
At Pozsony Bartók studied piano under distinguished teachers.
He taught himself composition by reading scores. Under the influence
of composer Ernö Dohnányi, four years ahead of him in his
school, teenage Bartók wrote chamber music in the style of Brahms.
In 1899 Bartók followed Dohnányi to the Academy of Music
in Budapest. While at the Academy Barták heard a performance
of Richard Strauss's Also Sprach Zarathustra, which showed him, as he
later recalled, "there was a way of composing which seemed to hold
the seeds of a new life." Combining his new enthusiasm for Strauss
with his youthful Hungarian nationalism, in 1903 Bartók produced
his first major work, the symphonic poem, Kossuth, honoring Lajos Kossuth,
hero of the Hungarian revolution of 1848.
After graduating from the Academy Bartók began a career as a
concert pianist. During his adult life Bartók performed in 630
concerts in 22 countries. In 1907 he became a piano instructor at the
Budapest Academy. Although he did not especially care for teaching,
he remained in this post for more than twenty-five years. His most notable
contributions to pedagogy were the teaching editions he made of the
works of Bach, Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven and the pieces he composed
for children.
In 1904, while staying in the Slovakian countryside in order to practice
and compose, Bartók overheard Lidi Dósa, a Székely
Hungarian woman from Transylvania, sing the song Piros alma ("Red
Apple"). He then interviewed her to find out what other songs she
knew. This encounter was the beginning of Bartók's lifetime fascination
with folk music. Two years later Bartók was introduced to Kodály,
who soon became his closest friend. Kodály had already begun
to collect recordings of Hungarian folk music using an Edison cylinder.
Bartók began his collecting in Hungary's Békés
County in 1906.
Unlike Kodály, Bartók also became interested in other
folk traditions, studying the folk music of Romanians, Slovakians, Serbs,
Croatians, Bulgarians, Turks, and North Africans as well as Hungarians.
In 1906, while visiting Algeria, Bartók had a vision of how he
might begin to order scattered folk tunes of the world. This, as he
recalled, ended any desire on his part for the kind of career others
had projected for him, as "the future master of the most charming
salon music." Afterwards, the main task of his life was to collect,
analyze, and catalogue major portions of the world's folk music.
This multi-ethnic interest caused Bartók trouble, especially
after World War I when Slovakians and Romanians were no longer part
of Hungary. Areas in which Bartók had previously been free to
explore and do research were no longer open to him. Moreover, he endured
much criticism at home for his "unpatriotic" interest in the
peoples of nations hostile to Hungary. Nostalgic for the ethnic diversity
of the old Austro-Hungarian Empire, Bartók dreamed of the "brotherhood
of people, brotherhood in spite of all wars and conflicts."
In 1907 Bartók made his first trip to Transylvania to study
the Székely people who had developed in isolation from other
Hungarians and might, thus, have preserved some of the more ancient
traditions. While he was staying amongst these people, Bartók
first became acquainted with the Unitarian Church.
Although a declared Unitarian (1916), Bartók's personal philosophy
was stoic and pessimistic. He held himself apart from others, independent
of the ambitious struggle after "trifles." As a consequence
he felt lonely. In his first mature work, the opera Bluebeard's Castle,
Bartók translated his own sense of profound spiritual isolation
into music. He pursued the same theme in the fairy-tale ballet The Wooden
Prince, 1917, and the ballet-pantomime The Miraculous Mandarin.
Written in a more dissonant musical style than his earlier dramatic
works, The Miraculous Mandarin tells a sordid modern story of prostitution,
robbery, and murder. After its première in 1926 the audience
stormed out in a rage and further performances were banned. The conservative
Hungarian musical establishment, who preferred music more in the vein
of Brahms and Liszt, resisted Bartók's music. In his dramatic
works, Bartók collaborated with writers out of favor with the
government. This fact, too, contributed to his lack of acceptance.
By this time, however, Bartók's international reputation was
secure. His two violin sonatas, 1921 and 1922, and the Dance Suite,
written in 1923 for the fiftieth anniversary of the unification of the
city of Budapest, helped to establish him as an important modern composer.
In 1926 he composed a series of major works for piano, including the
first of his three piano concertos. His third and fourth string quartets,
from 1927 and 1928, in Bartók's most abstract and concentrated
style, are among the works most often cited as masterpieces by music
critics.
In 1923 Bartók and his first wife Márta were divorced.
Bartók immediately married a piano student, Ditta Pásztory.
They had a son, Péter, born in 1924. For Péter's music
lessons Bartók began composing a six-volume collection of graded
piano pieces, Mikrokosmos.
Bartók did not like the fascist régime that governed
Hungary during the inter-war period. In 1919 he and Kodály were
temporarily suspended from their Academy posts for political reasons.
In the 1930s Bartók refused to perform or to have his works broadcast
in Nazi Germany or Fascist Italy. He even largely avoided playing in
Budapest. In 1931 he went to the French Embassy to accept the Légion
d'honneur but, when awarded the Corvin Medal that same year, stayed
away from the award ceremony because he would have had to accept it
from the hand of Hungary's dictator, Admiral Horthy.
Much of the music for which Bartók is remembered was written
in the 1930s, often in response to commissions from abroad. He wrote
his fifth string quartet, 1934, for the American Elisabeth Sprague Coolidge.
For the Swiss conductor Paul Sacher he composed Music for Strings, Percussion,
and Celesta, 1936, the Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion, 1937, and
Divertimento, 1939. Clarinetist Benny Goodman commissioned Contrasts,
for clarinet, violin, and piano, 1938. Two other major works of this
period were a violin concerto, 1938, and the last string quartet, 1939.
As the European political situation worsened, Bartók was increasingly
tempted to flee Hungary. Having first sent his manuscripts out of the
country, in 1940 Bartók sailed for America with his wife. Péter
Bartók joined them in 1942 and later enlisted in the United States
Navy. Béla Bartók, Jr. remained in Hungary. Although he
became an American citizen in 1945, Bartók thought of his stay
in the U.S. less as emigration than exile. One attraction of the U.S.
for him was the opportunity to study a collection of Serbo-Croatian
folk music at Columbia University in New York City.
There are reports that the Bartóks lived in abject poverty during
their New York years. Although this is not strictly true, they did live
in obscurity and were by no means comfortably well-off. When Bartók
became ill with leukemia, the American Society for Composers, Authors,
and Publishers (ASCAP) paid his medical expenses and helped him to get
better treatment. To ease Bartók's financial burden the conductor
Fritz Reiner and violinist József Szigeti convinced the conductor
Serge Koussevitzky to have his foundation commission an orchestral piece
from Bartók. The result was Concerto for Orchestra, 1943, Bartók's
most popular piece. In 1944 he composed a sonata for solo violin, written
for Yehudi Menuhin. Bartók's last two major works, a third piano
concerto, which includes bird calls and sounds of nature, and a viola
concerto, both left unfinished at his death, were completed by his Hungarian
colleague, Tibor Serly.
These late pieces caught the spirit of the times. One 1946 review claimed
"the music of Bartók ennobles all of music. And the contemporary
world will soon be proud to say, 'We lived in the time of Bartók.'"
Many of his works entered and have remained in the orchestral and chamber
repertoires.
On September 26, 1945, Bartók died in a New York hospital with
his wife Ditta and his son Péter each holding one of his hands.
The funeral was conducted by Rev. Laurence I. Neale, minister of New
York's All Souls Unitarian Church. He was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery
in New York. In 1988, as the "iron curtain" separating Eastern
Europe from the West was being lifted, Béla Bartók, Jr.,
then lay president of the Hungarian Unitarian Church, was able to have
his father's remains transferred to Budapest. A statue of Bartók
stands in front of the Second Unitarian Church in Budapest.
Bartók documents edited by Janús Demény have been
published in Zenetudományi tanulmányok (1954, 1955, 1959,
and 1962). Demény also edited Bartók Béla levelei/Béla
Bartók Letters (1948-71, English translation, 1971). Other letter
and document collections are József Ujfalussy, editor, Bartók
breviárium (1958, rev. 1980) and Denis Dille, Laszlo Somfai,
and Vera Lampert, editors, Documenta Bartókiana (1964-1982).
Béla Bartók, Jr. prepared Bartók Béla családi
levelei/Bartók's family letters (1981). See also Victor Bator,
The Béla Bartók Archives: History and Catalogue (1963).
A large collection of photographs of Bartók is available in Ferenc
Búnis, editor, Béla Bartók: His Life in Pictures
(1964, English translation, 1972). Benjamin Suchoff's, Béla Bartók
Essays (1976) is a major collection of Bartók's articles. Suchoff
also edited Bartók's The Hungarian Folk Song (1981) and Béla
Bartók: Rumanian Folk Music (1967-75).
In addition to the pieces mentioned in the article above, the list
of Bartók's significant orchestral compositions includes Piano
Rhapsody (1904), two suites (1905, 1907), an early violin concerto (1908),
Two Pictures (1910), Four Pieces (1912, orchestrated 1921), and Divertimento
for String Orchestra (1939). His Two Piano Concerto (1940) is an arrangement
of the Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion. Further chamber works include
two rhapsodies for violin and piano (1928), which Bartók also
arranged for violin and orchestra. For piano Bartók wrote 14
Bagatelles (1908), Allegro barbaro (1911), Romanian Christmas Carols
(1915), a suite (1916), 15 Hungarian Peasant Songs (1918), a piano sonata
(1926), and Out of Doors (1926). A major piece for voice and orchestra,
Cantata profana (1930), is based upon one of the epic Romanian Christmas
songs (colinde) Bartók had studied. He also wrote art songs and
arranged numerous folk songs. Each of Bartók's major works have
been recorded many times. His own performances on record (and released
on CD) include Contrasts with Goodman and Szigeti, the rhapsodies with
Szigeti, the Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion with Ditta Bartók,
folk songs with Maria Basilides, and many piano works, collectively
packaged on CD as Bartók at the Piano. On his recordings Bartók
also performs Beethoven, Debussy, Bach, Mozart, Kodály, Liszt,
and Chopin.
Sheet music
A recent biography is Kenneth Chalmers, Béla Bartók (1995).
Other biographies include Lajos Lesznai, Bartók (1961, Eng. version,
1973) and József Ujfalussy, Béla Bartók (1965,
Amer ed., 1972). Béla Bartók, Jr. wrote Apám életének
krónikája/Chronicle of my father's life (1981) and Bartók
Béla mühelyében/In Bartók's workshop (1982).
Béla Bartók: The Man and His Music (Halsey Stevens, c.
1972). The last years of Bartók's life are covered by Agatha
Fassett, Béla Bartók's American Years: The Naked Face
of Genius (1958) -- [not recommended because of it's undocumented anecdotal
and often sentimental accounts of incidents in the life of Bartók
-- WDL].
Some particulars of the end of Bartók's life are in the third
volume of the history of All Souls Church, New York, Safely Onward (1991),
by Walter Kring. The biographical monograph "Béla Bartók,"
by Vera Lampert and Lászlú Somfai in The New Grove Modern
Masters (1984), also includes a complete list of Bartók's works
and a detailed bibliography. Collections of essays on Bartók
include Malcolm Gillies, editor, The Bartók Companion (1993);
Peter Laki, Bartók and His World (1995); and Amanda Bayley, editor,
The Cambridge Companion to Bartók (2001). An interview by Laszlo
Somfai, "Béla Bartók Jun. on his Father," New
Hungarian Quarterly (Winter 1976), is also included in Malcolm Gillies,
editor, Bartók Remembered (1991). There is a tremendous literature
on Bartók's music, including works devoted to single compositions.
Among these are Elliot Antokoletz, The Music of Béla Bartók
(1984); John McCabe, Bartók's Orchestral Music (1974); Stephen
Walsh, Bartók Chamber Music (1982); Mátyás Seiber,
The String Quartets of Béla Bartók (1945); and Benjamin
Suchoff, Guide to Bartók's 'Mikrokosmos' (1983).
Article by Peter Hughes (with some editing by WDL)
Material from UUHS
2003