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Born: 16 December
1882, Kecskemét, Hungary
Died: 6 March 1967, Budapest, Hungary
Kodály,
Zoltán
Hungarian
composer, Kodály taught himself to play different instruments, and
only later began studying music in a more orderly way. He
became Bartok's
friend, and together they studied and recorded Hungarian and neighbouring
regions' folk music. They traveled from village to village, notating folk
songs and dances. Eventually, they published a survey and a collection
of all the material they had gathered. Kodály wrote music that was
influenced by Debussy
and Brahms ,
but also by the folk materials he researched.
Among his important pieces, the "Hungarian
Psalm" ("Psalmus Hungaricus"),
written for the celebration of the cities Buda and Pest's unification (together
named... Budapest). The opera "Háry János"![Prelude from 'Háry János Suite' - Kodaly](../play.gif) ,
and the famous suite based on the opera, published later and made him more
famous.
In addition to the research of folk music, Kodály
was also considered the greatest of Hungary's musical educators. He
developed a teaching methodology based on singing and the development of
musicality by means of the human voice. It was a substitute to prior
techniques, that based the teaching process mostly on playing various instruments,
like Carl Orff's
technique. The "Kodály's system"
had a profound effect and became the most successful music educational
method in the western world; millions of children learn music by his system.
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Kodály on the WWW
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Description
He Was
A teacher and music educational expert
He Lived in the
Twentieth Century
In
Hungary
Visit the
Kodaly
Memorial Museum in Budapest
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