Dance Suite (Bartók)


Dance Suite (Hungarian: Táncszvit; German: Tanz-Suite), Sz. 77, BB 86a, is a well-known 1923 orchestral work by the Hungarian composer Béla Bartók. The composer produced a reduction for piano (Sz. 77, BB 86b) in 1925, though this is less commonly performed.

Composition

Béla Bartók composed the Dance Suite in 1923 in order to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the union of the cities Buda and Pest, to form the Hungarian capital Budapest. Then, after its great success, the director of Universal Edition, Emil Hertzka, commissioned from him an arrangement for piano, which was published in 1925. However, he never publicly performed this arrangement, and it was premiered in March 1945, a few months before his death, by his friend György Sándor.

Structure

This suite has six movements, even though some recordings conceive it as one single full-length movement. A typical performance of the whole work would last approximately fifteen minutes.

  1. Moderato
  2. Allegro molto
  3. Allegro vivace
  4. Molto tranquillo
  5. Comodo
  6. Finale. Allegro

This work consists of five dances with Arabic, Wallachian and Hungarian melodies, and a finale that brings together all the previous thematic sketches. There was one more movement, omitted by the composer according to his mathematical principles, which would be placed between the second and the third movement. This movement is called Slovakian Dance, and was finally dismissed and remained unorchestrated. However, the first, second and fourth movements contain thematic references to this piece towards the end of each one of them.

Recordings

Notable recordings of the orchestral version include:

Orchestra Conductor Record Company Year of Recording Format
London Philharmonic Orchestra Georg Solti Decca Records 1952 LP
RIAS Symphony Orchestra Ferenc Fricsay Deutsche Grammophon 1953 LP
Philharmonia Orchestra Igor Markevitch HMV 1954 LP
Philharmonia Hungarica Antal Doráti Mercury Records 1958 LP
Symphony Orchestra of Hungarian Radio and Television György Lehel Deutsche Grammophon 1962 LP
Orchestre de la Suisse Romande Ernest Ansermet Decca Records 1964 LP
New York Philharmonic Orchestra Pierre Boulez Columbia 1972 LP
Czech Philharmonic Orchestra Zdeněk Košler Panton 1973 LP
Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra Neville Marriner Capriccio 1994 CD
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra Marin Alsop Naxos Records 2005 CD

Notable recordings of the piano reduction include:

Piano Solo Record Company Year of Recording Format
András Schiff Denon Records / Brilliant Classics 1980 CD
Jenő Jandó Naxos Records 2002 CD

This page was last updated at 2022-01-04 09:18 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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