Ferenc Farkas
Ferenc Farkas was a Hungarian composer.
Biography
Born into a musical family in Nagykanizsa, Farkas began his musical studies in Budapest, at the Protestant Gymnasium and later attended the Music Academy, where he studied composition with Leó Weiner and Albert Siklós.After his graduation in 1927, he worked as a repetiteur and conductor at the Municipal Theatre of Budapest and collaborated with the Diaghilev Ballet. From 1929 to 1931, he attended Ottorino Respighi's masterclass at the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia in Rome. The years he spent in Rome had a decisive influence on him. He became acquainted with Italian and Mediterranean culture to which he felt a deep attraction. About this he said: "My principal aim has always been to attain for myself a latin clarity and proportion.".
Farkas returned to Budapest in the autumn of 1931. As he could not find any other assignments, he played the piano in various theatre orchestras. In 1932 he met the director Paul Fejos for whom he composed several film scores, first in Hungary, then in Vienna and Copenhagen. This collaboration was to be for Farkas the beginning of an impressive series of “applied” music.
In the spring of 1934 he conducted research of his own into traditional Hungarian music by collecting folk songs in Somogy County: "When I got back from my travels abroad, it became clear to me that the work and research of Bartók and Kodály raised crucial problems that we as Hungarians, had to resolve ourselves. ".
From 1935 he taught at the Budapest City Music School. From 1941-44 he was professor of composition and director at the Conservatory of Kolozsvàr and he conducted the city's Opera Chorus. At the end of 1944, because of the war, he had to go back to Hungary. During the siege of Budapest, he worked as the deputy conductor of the Opera Chorus.
In 1946, he was sent to Székesfehérvár where he founded and managed the Conservatory. He was nominated professor of composition at the Franz Liszt Music Academy of Budapest in 1949, a post he held until his retirement in 1975. As a professor he was to have his greatest influence in the second half of the century. Among his students were: György Kurtág, György Ligeti, and Miklós Kocsár.
Works
"From the beginning, I have been involved in all areas of music ; I have not wanted to create only a small corner of a room, full of atmosphere, with a personal and sophisticated taste, but spaces, large and small, arranged differently, pleasant to live in, with open windows".Farkas's works include over seven hundred opuses. He composed in all genres, opera, ballet, musicals and operettas, orchestral music, concertos, chamber music and sacred music. His wide literary culture enabled him to set words to music in 13 languages, stemming from about 130 writers and poets both ancient and modern.
Main works
Most of the works mentioned below are accompanied by an external link referring to a single source: the official website of Ferenc Farkas which provides a detailed description of the work and a musical extract.Stage music
- Az Ember tragédiája, incidental music for the play by Imre Madách
- , opera
- , ballet
- , popular romantic opera
- Piroschka, musical comedy
- Egy Úr Velencéből, Casanova, opera
Works for symphony orchestra
- Divertimento
- Preludio e fuga
- , Suite for orchestra
- Szimfonikus nyitány
- , adaptation for orchestra of the piano work by Franz Liszt
Works for string orchestra
- , 3 cycles of Hungarian dances from the 17th century
-
Concertos
- for baryton or violoncello or viola and string orchestra
- for Alphorn and string orchestra
- Concertino for trumpet and string orchestra
Chamber music
- for violoncello or viola and piano
- for violin, viola and violoncello
- for wind quintet
- Old Hungarian Dances from the 17th Century - Saxophone Quartet - Published 1991 EditionDarok
- for viola and violoncello
- for violoncello and piano
- for double-bass and wind quintet
- for wind octet
- for clarinet, basson, horn and string quintet
- Trio for violin, violoncello and piano
- for bassoon and piano
- for oboe, clarinet and bassoon
- Ricordanze for clarinet, violin, viola and violoncello
- for 2 clarinets, basset horn and 2 bass-clarinets
Works for instrumental solos
- Sonata for violoncello
- for piano
- for guitar
- for guitar
- for guitar
- for violin
- for harp
Masses
- Missa secunda in honorem Sanctae Margaritae for mixed choir and organ or string orchestra
- for mixed choir and orchestra
- for mixed choir and orchestra
Cantatas, oratorios
- , cantata for mixed choir and orchestra, Hungarian text by Jenö Dsida, German translated by Anneliese Eulau-Felsenstein
- , cantata for soprano solo, mixed choir and orchestra, text in Latin by Janus Pannonius
- edited in English, German, French, Hungarian, for narrator, mixed or children’s choir, organ and instrumental ensemble or orchestra
- , cantata for tenor and baritone solo and orchestra, text in Hungarian by Kelemen Mikes and Paul Ràday and in Latin by Francis II Rákóczi
- , cantata for tenor solo, mixed choir and orchestra, text in Portuguese by Fernando Pessoa, Hungarian translated by Ernö Hàrs
Works for mixed choir
- , Hungarian text by Sándor Petőfi
- , English, German and French version from a Hungarian text by Sándor Weöres
- , Hungarian text by Árpád Tóth
- Lupus fecit
- , Italian text by Michelangelo Buonarroti
- , German text by Rainer Maria Rilke
- , English text by William Shakespeare
- Ekkosang, Danish text by Otto Gelsted
- , text in Latin and Hungarian
Works for male choir
- Silence, French text by Charles Ferdinand Ramuz
- for double male choir, 2 trumpets, 2 trombones, piano and timpani, French text by François Villon
- , Troubadour song from the 13th century, Text in Hungarian or
- , text in Hungarian or
Works for female choir or children’s choir
- , 3 Hungarian gregorian melodies for unison female or children's choir, baritone solo and 3 guitars
- , 5 traditional songs, text in Basque and Hungarian
- for 3-part female or children’s choir and organ
Songs
- for voice and piano, Hungarian text by Sándor Weöres German translated by Marcel Rubin and Otto Horn
- , cycle of 12 melodies, text by Sándor Weöres for soprano and wind quintet
- , four songs based on old Hungarian sacred melodies from the 16th and 17th centuries for soprano or alto and piano or organ or string orchestra
- , 5 songs for voice and piano or guitar
- , cycle of 4 songs for soprano or alto and piano or harp, text by William Shakespeare
- for voice and piano, German text by Anneliese Eulau-Felsenstein
- , cycle of 3 songs for voice and piano, French text by Eugène Guillevic
- , popular Hungarian melody for voice and piano or orchestra
- , cycle of 4 melodies, German text by Paula von Preradovic
- , 4 songs for voice and piano, Hungarian texts by Benedek Virág, Dániel Berzsenyi, Mihály Babits and Endre Ady
- Orpheus respiciens, cycle of 8 songs for voice and piano, texts in Hungarian, Italien, French, Spanish, German, Portuguese, English by Sándor Csoóri, Petrarca, Charles Baudelaire, Luís de Camões, Rainer Maria Rilke, Antonio Machado, Oscar Wilde and Gérard de Nerval
Film music
- Sonnenstrahl, film by Paul Fejos
- People of the Mountains, film by István Szőts award-winning at the Venice Biennale in 1942
- Egy magyar nábob, film by Zoltán Várkonyi
- Kárpáthy Zoltán, film by Zoltán Várkonyi
- , film by Zoltán Várkonyi
- , film by Márton Keleti and Gyula Mészáros
Annexes