Hungarian opera
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Music of Hungary: Topics | |||||
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| History: (Timeline and Samples) | |||||
| Genres | Classical - Folk - Hardcore - Hip hop - Opera - Operett - Pop - Reggae - Rock - Wedding pop - Wedding rock | ||||
| Organisations | Mahasz | ||||
| Awards | Golden Giraffe | ||||
| Charts | MAHASZ TOP 40 album, MAHASZ Kislemez TOP 10, Dance TOP 40 | ||||
| Festivals | Sziget Festival, Táncháztalálkozó, Mayday, Miskolc Opera Festival, Kaláka Folk Festival | ||||
| Media | Radio Petőfi, Hungaroton, VIVA, Danubius Rádió, Sláger Rádió, Tilos Radio | ||||
| National anthem | "Himnusz" | ||||
| Hungarian minorities' music abroad | |||||
| Transylvania, Vojvodina, Slovakia, Transcarpathia | |||||
Pressburg produced the first music drama experiments in the country, though the work of Gáspár Pacha and József Chudy; it was the latter's 1793 Prince Pikkó and Jutka Perzsi that is generally considered the first Hungarian opera. The text of that piece was translated from Prinz Schnudi und Prinzessin Evakathel by Philipp Hafner. This style was still strongly informed by the Viennese Zauberposse style of comedic play, and remained thus throughout the 19th century. Though these operas used foreign styles, the "idyllic, lyric and heroic" parts of the story were always based on Verbunkos, which was becoming a symbol of the Hungarian nation during this time [2]. It was not until the middle of the 19th century that Ferenc Erkel wrote the first Hungarian language opera, using French and Italian models, thus launching the field of Hungarian opera [3].
References
- ^ In Broughton, Simon and Ellingham, Mark with McConnachie, James and Duane, Orla (Ed.) (2000). World Music, Vol. 1: Africa, Europe and the Middle East. Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books . ISBN 1-85828-636-0.
- ^ "Hungarian Music". Stephen Sisa: The Spirit of Hungary. http://www.hungarian-history.hu/lib/hunspir/hsp51.htm. Retrieved September 3, 2005.
See also
Category:Hungarian-language operas
