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Kodály, a colleague of Bartók in the early collection of folk music in Hungary and neighbouring regions, made his later career in his own country, where the system of musical education he devised has had a profound effect, as it has abroad. His own music is imbued with the spirit and musical idiom of Hungary and is in general less astringent than is sometimes the case with the music of Bartók. He was active as a composer until his death in 1967. Stage Works Kodály wrote relatively little for the stage. His Singspiel or musical play Hary Janos, more widely known in the orchestral excerpts heard frequently in the concert hall, deals with the alleged exploits of an old soldier, Janos, who has a vivid imagination and no regard for truth or probability. These include his single-handed defeat of Napoleon and the French armies. Orchestral Music In addition to the orchestral suite derived from Hary Janos, Kodály's Marosszk and Galanta Dances, with the Peacock Variations, make powerful use of Hungarian folk material. Choral Music Kodály wrote a great deal of choral and vocal music, much of it for his choral method, an essential element in his plan for general musical education. He won his greatest early success with Psalmus hungaricus in 1923, and in 1936 celebrated the 250th anniversary of the reconquest of Buda from the Turks with a Te Deum. His Missa brevis was written during the later years of the 1939-45 war. His unaccompanied choral work Jesus and the Traders has always proved effective. Kodály, a colleague of Bartók in the early collection of folk music in Hungary and neighbouring regions, made his later career in his own country, where the system of musical education he devised has had a profound effect, as it has abroad. His own music is imbued with the spirit and musical idiom of Hungary and is in general less astringent than is sometimes the case with the music of Bartók. He was active as a composer until his death in 1967. |