Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Music / BelaBartok

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/850c4c1b9e994bb73c24623973578486.jpg]]
2
3Béla Viktor János Bartók (25 March 1881 – 26 September 1945) was a Hungarian composer, widely regarded as one of the most important musicians of the 20th century. He is widely renowned for his interest in traditional peasant's music, which he collected together with his composer friend Zoltán Kodály, while traveling in Eastern Europe and North Africa. Bartók was enarmored by the authenticity and originality of this music. While other Eastern European composers such as Music/FryderykChopin, Music/FranzLiszt and Music/AntoninDvorak had also used influences of traditional FolkMusic in their work Bartók was the first to keep the primitive rawness of peasant music intact. As a result his music sometimes sounds clangorous, but there are also moments that are so moving that it makes you cry.
4
5Although he was initially a traditionalist and nationalist (his earliest works, such as the symphonic poem ''Music/{{Kossuth}}'', show strong Lisztian influence), this changed once he discovered traditional Hungarian folk music. Bartók recorded all traditional peasant songs he could find in Hungary and elsewhere, both for folklorist purposes and to use as inspiration for his own AvantGardeMusic compositions. Some motifs and melodies in his work are recognizable peasant tunes, but other passages are his own material. He also quickly discovered that there was significant similarity between Hungarian folk music and that of other cultures, such as those of Romania and Morocco. %%Bartók mixed [[WorldMusic influences from all over the world]], including Balinese gamelan music and Chinese and Japanese influences.
6
7His most famous works are ''Music/{{Mikrokosmos}}'', ''Music/RomanianDances'', ''Theatre/DukeBluebeardsCastle'', ''Music/DanceSuite'', his three Piano Concertos, ''MusicForStringsPercussionAndCelesta'', and the Concerto for Orchestra.
8
9!! Bartók's music provides examples of:
10* AlliterativeName: "'''B'''éla '''B'''artók".
11* CallToAgriculture: His music is greatly influenced by traditional peasant's music. Bartók felt it wasn't pretentious, cheaply sentimental, or as sterile as the music he heard elsewhere.
12* CutShort: Bartók was working on his third piano concerto and his viola concerto at the time of his death from leukemia in 1945; he had finished all but the orchestration of the final 17 bars of the piano concerto, which his student Tibor Serly polished off before the work's premiere (and which are now accepted as canonical in performances of the work). The viola concerto was in a much more fragmentary state, with much of the instrumentation and texture still to be completed; although both Serly and the composer's son Peter (in collaboration with Paul Neubauer and Nelson Dellamaggiore) produced performance versions of the work, they are more speculative than the performance version of the piano concerto.
13* DarkerAndEdgier: He wasn't the first composer to be influenced by traditional music, but he was the first to maintain the harsh, rural atmosphere of the pieces he heard, not sugarcoating the sound.
14* FolkMusic: He used folk music as the basis for his own work, building up a huge collection of field recordings of authentic peasant's music from Eastern Europe, North Africa and Asia.
15%%* HeavyMeta: ''Music/ConcertoForOrchestra'' is a concerto played by an orchestra, with no featured soloist.
16* InHarmonyWithNature: Bartók's music is deeply influenced by nature, even referencing this in individual pieces, such as the "Bear Dance" movements from the Sonatina and Ten Easy Pieces (both for piano). Bartók composed several slow movements that use eerie dissonances and quiet, trance-like figuration, evoking sounds of nature at night. Musicologists gave them the nickname "Night Music." One movement from the solo piano suite ''Music/OutOfDoors'' is typical of this style and even has a movement titled "The Night's Music."
17%%* NightmareFuelStationAttendant: The ''Music/MusicForStringsPercussionAndCelesta'' and the Concerto for Orchestra's first four movements all have disturbing and haunting moments. The "Bear Dance" from the ''Music/DanceSuite'' is also creepy.
18* {{Opera}}: He wrote only work in this genre, ''Theatre/DukeBluebeardsCastle'', which was rejected by the Hungarian Fine Arts Commission as unstageworthy when Bartok submitted it for an award. It wasn't performed until five years later, but is now considered one of Bartok's most important works. Despite its unusually small cast -- it only has two main characters and three silent roles, which is a little awkward if you have a large group of performers on retainer -- it receives regular performances.
19* PublicDomainSoundtrack: His compositions frequently quote traditional folk music from Eastern Europe and Northern Africa, which he collected on countless field recordings, often accompanied by his colleague Music/ZoltanKodaly. Since this music was sufficiently ancient, he didn't have to pay royalties for it.
20* RuleOfThree: In his ballet ''Theatre/TheMiraculousMandarin'', three tramps coerce a girl into prostitution. The girl then dances to seduce three men, the last of which is the eponymous Mandarin. The tramps then attempt to kill the Mandarin in three different ways: asphyxiation, stabbing (thrice!), and hanging.
21* SpellMyNameWithAnS: His name is frequently misspelled with either the accents missing or facing the wrong side.
22* TakeThat: The fourth movement of the Concerto for Orchestra notably features a mocking parody of Music/DmitriShostakovich's Seventh Symphony, a piece that Bartók particularly disliked.[[note]] Or so it is often claimed; the composer's friends, including the pianist György Sándor, insisted that it was instead a parody of the aria "Da geh' ich zu Maxim" from Franz Lehár's operetta ''The Merry Widow'', which happened to be one of the pieces used by Shostakovich as inspiration for the "invading army" theme in the first movement of his Symphony No. 7. Shostakovich was unamused either way, and included a revenge parody of Bartók's Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion in the second movement of his Symphony No. 13.[[/note]]
23* UncommonTime: One frequently finds the composer using non-standard time signatures, often but not exclusively encountered in movements with titles referencing "Bulgarian Rhythm." He also utilizes changing meter at times.
24** The Six Dances in Bulgarian Rhythm from ''Music/{{Mikrokosmos}}'' are respectively in (4+2+3)/8, (2+2+3)/8, (2+3)/8, (3+2+3)/8, (2+2+2+3)/8 and (3+3+2)/8.
25** The Scherzo alla bulgarese from the Fifth String Quartet is in (4+2+3)/8; its trio varies between (3+2+2+3)/8, (2+3+2+3)/8 and (2+3+3+2)/8, but is really too fast for the average listener to bother counting metrical divisions.
26** The Intermezzo from the Concerto for Orchestra has a main theme alternating between 2/4 and 5/8. It rather sneakily shifts into CommonTime after a modulation, but this turns out to be the setup for a musical joke.
27%%** Szelenyi has a piece aptly titled "Changing Bars." There are only four places where it stays in the same meter for two measures in a row. The rest of the time it alternates between 2/8, 3/8, and 4/8 with no apparent logic behind it.
28%%* WorldMusic: Bartók had the ideal that all music in the world should be brought together as one. And he sure did so in his compositions.
29
30'''In popular culture'''
31* ''WesternAnimation/{{Anastasia}}'' and ''WesternAnimation/BartokTheMagnificent'' feature a white bat named Bartok. Now that we've mentioned this, forget it, for it has nothing to do with him whatsoever. In fact, the bat character is [[DubNameChange renamed to "Bartek"]] in the Hungarian dub of the films, to avoid any confusion with the composer.
32* Music/EmersonLakeAndPalmer covered ''Music/AllegroBarbaro'' as "The Barbarian," which got them in legal trouble with Bartók's widow.
33* The guitar part during "Every Breath You Take" from ''Music/{{Synchronicity}}'' by Music/ThePolice was inspired by Bartók's 44 Duos for Two Violins.
34* Music/FrankZappa's line about the "walls weeping greenish drops" during "The Torture Never Stops" from ''Music/ZootAllures'' (1976) is a reference to Bartók's ''Duke Bluebeard's Castle''. Zappa also covered Bartók's Third Piano Concerto live on "Music/MakeAJazzNoiseHere" (1988), because it was his favorite Bartók piece. He even claimed "it almost made me cry the first time I heard it."
35* ''Music/MusicForStringsPercussionAndCelesta'' was also used on the soundtrack of Creator/StanleyKubrick's horror film ''Film/TheShining'', based on Creator/StephenKing's novel of the same name.
36* At the start of the music video for "Too Much Blood" from Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}}' album ''Music/{{Undercover}}'' (1981) a small snippet from Bartok's String Quartet No. 3 can be heard.

Top