György Kósa
György Kósa (24 April 1897, Budapest – 16 August 1984, Budapest) was a Hungarian composer.
Kósa studied with Béla Bartók, Zoltán Kodály, and Victor von Herzfeld between 1905 and 1916. From 1927, he taught piano at the Budapest Conservatory.
He composed nine operas, four ballets, and incidental music for four pantomimes, as well as nine symphonies, one orchestral suite, chamber music, eleven oratorios, several cantatas, one mass, one setting of the Dies Irae, two requiems, and lieder.
His chamber works include: a string trio, a cello sonata (1965), a sonatina for cello solo (1928), a string quartet entitled "Self-portrait" (1920), a second quartet (1929), In memoriam... for solo viola (1977), a duo for violin and viola (1943), and twelve miniatures for a harp trio (1965).
External links[edit]
- György Kósa at the Budapest Music Centre
- Article on Kósa at Magyar Radio Archived 2005-09-07 at the Wayback Machine
- 1897 births
- 1984 deaths
- 20th-century classical composers
- Hungarian classical composers
- Hungarian classical pianists
- Hungarian male classical pianists
- Composers from Budapest
- Hungarian opera composers
- Hungarian male opera composers
- 20th-century classical pianists
- Pupils of Béla Bartók
- 20th-century Hungarian male musicians
- Jewish classical composers
- Hungarian composer stubs