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Bartók's Melodies in the Style of Folk Songs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2019

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Extract

It is known that Bartók had a high opinion of the aesthetic value of folk songs. We find the following passage in his work (Bartók, 1931): “In their small way, they are as perfect as the grandest masterpieces of musical art. They are, indeed, classical models of the way in which a musical idea can be expressed in all its freshness and shapeliness … with the simplest of means.” This was written by an artist whose compositions very rarely included melodies as rounded off as those of folk songs. Surfeited with the over-ripe melodic style and the exaggerated cult of harmonies of the romantic school, Bartók—like his contemporaries—made rhythm and tone-colour effects predominant in his works.

Type
Folk and Traditional Music as a Creative Element in Modern Music
Copyright
Copyright © International Council for Traditional Music 1964

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References

Note

1. Bartók, B., The Hungarian Folk Music, London, 1931, p. 3.Google Scholar