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Miklós Rózsa (1907–1995) Overture • Cello Rhapsody • Notturno ungherese • Three Hungarian Sketches. Since his death fifteen years ago, the concert music of Miklós Rózsa has held its place in the recital halls, concert stages and recording studios of the world.
Miklós Rózsa: Orchestral Works, Volume 1 The Hungarian composer Miklós Rózsa was born in Budapest on 18 April 1907. His father was a land owning industrialist hailing from the countryside whilst his mother, born in Budapest, was a pianist to whom the composer owed his love of music. The family owned an estate north of Budapest,
The spirit of his native Hungary is seldom far away from the concert music of Miklós Rózsa, in spite of some 55 years spent in Hollywood and his long association with music for the cinema. His Viola Concerto, the later of the two works presented here, was written in 1979 – at the
29 mar 2022 · Onto the stage of Rózsa's double life walk Ravel and Toscanini, Adolf Hitler and Winifred Wagner, Marlene Dietrich, Robert Donat and Ginger Rogers, Sir Robert Vansittart, the flamboyant Kordas, the Oliviers, the great Richard Strauss and the infuriating Hedda Hopper, Alain Resnais and Alfred Hitchcock; Ralph Richardson, Moira ...
IKLÓS RÓZSA was a man and musician who knew few borders, and his thirst for knowledge and his need to communicate were not restricted to music, nor even to art or culture in the wider sense.
Finally, Dr. Rózsa explained to us recently the curious Italian credits of EL CID. It seems that producer Samuel Bronston, after engaging Rózsa and installing him in palatial living quarters in Spain, required a small favor of the composer. The film was a Spanish-Italian co-production; it
In Rózsa, no matter what the piece, the music is always distinctly his and the style and personal voice is unmistakable. The second movement begins with a long-spanned cadenza for the cello alone, a dark-toned, improvisatory and highly expressive statement that builds with considerable passion.