Bujdosó
Bujdosó, commonly known in English as The Fugitive or Song of Exile,[1] is an early vocal composition by Hungarian composer György Ligeti. It was finished in 1946 and is strongly influenced by Béla Bartók.
Composition
This composition was written in 1946. At that time, Ligeti was living in Hungary and was very interested in Hungarian folk music, as other Hungarian composers such as Béla Bartók. As most of Ligeti's juvenilia, this piece never received a formal premiere, but it has been recorded together with other early vocal compositions. It was later published by Schott Music in 1999.[2]
Analysis
This work takes approximately two minutes to perform. It is scored for a mixed choir which should consist of sopranos, altos, and baritones. The text is extracted from a Hungarian traditional poem, which is as follows:[3][4]
Fölkelt már a csillag Lengyelország felé
Magam is elmegyek, babám, arra felé
Megvetették nekem a megfogó hálót
Megfogtak engemet mint egy utonállót
Lám, megmondtam, rózsám, ne szeress engemet
mert Somogy vármegye hajszoltat engemet
A tömlöc feneke az én vetett ágyam
annak a teteje takaró vánkosom.
The piece is marked Nyugodtan (♩ = 108), which can be translated as "calmly". Tempo changes to Adagio towards the end of the piece, and time signature changes are present throughout the whole composition. The lyrics have been translated into German by Hilgen Schallehn and into English by Desmond Clayton.[5]
See also
References
- ↑ "Gyorgy Ligeti: Gyorgy Ligeti". EMI 20th Century Classics. Retrieved 9 March 2014.
- ↑ "Bujdosó – Bedrückung composer: György Ligeti English version: Desmond Clayton German edition: Hilger Schallehn "Fölkelt már a csillag" – "Schon aufgegangen die Sterne sind" (nach einem ungarischen Volkstext)". Schott Music. Retrieved 8 March 2014.
- ↑ Unknown. "Bujdosó". The Lied, Art Song, and Choral Texts Archive. Retrieved 8 March 2014.
- ↑ "Bujdoso". Panamusica. Retrieved 8 March 2014.
- ↑ Ligeti, György (1999). Bujdosó / Heimatlos / The Fugitive. Mainz: Schott Music. ISMN 979-0-001-01604-9.