Zoltán Kodály

About the composer
Zoltán Kodály was born in 1882 in Kecskemét, Hungary. He belonged to a musical family and, without much tuition learned to play the piano and string instruments. He also started composing while still in secondary school. He studied at the Budapest conservatory and graduated with a study about Hungarian folk songs. He became a teacher at this conservatory almost directly after that and stayed there until 1940.
Starting in 1905, together with Bartók, he collected folksongs from Hungary and other Eastern European countries, using them in his compositions. This great archive was lost for a large part in the second world war. He also published very interesting ideas about the musical development of children, whose education in other fields is supposed to benefit from a better musical education.
He has composed a number of works that have become very popular: the comic opera Háry János (especially the instrumental suite based on it), the Dances of Galánta, the Peacock variations and the Psalmus Hungaricus.

 About the Stabat Mater

Date 1898 (revision 1962)
Performers Mixed Choir
Length 3.30 minutes
Particulars The Stabat Mater was written for male choir, with a later adaptation for mixed choir. Apart from the changes in voices the harmonies are identical, so that both versions can be sung together.
The third line of each stanza is repeated, except for the last stanza, where the word "Amen" figures as the fourth line. The -simple - melody is the same for all stanzas.
Textual variations Probably, the "Vatican"-version of the text is used, but only 7 stanzas are sung.

Colorbar

CD information

CD Non-commercial CD: Passionsmusik aus Furth und Moosburg
About this CD A studio registration of some works, produced by the choir itself in 1999.
Choir Evangelische Kantorei Moosburg
Conductor Nico Firnkees
Other works Heinrich Schütz: Johannes-Passion
Wilhelm Keller: Oana geht um im Lande
Added Unknown (KOD 01)

 

E-mail: stabatmater@dds.nl

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