
Painted Flowers
Bartók meets a fellow folk song collector. Donald Macleod explores the life of one of Hungary's greatest composers, who travelled Europe recording folk songs.
Bartók meets a fellow folk song collector.
Béla Bartók was regarded as one of Hungary’s greatest composers. His fellow countryman, the pianist Andras Schiff, called him “one of the giants in the history of music.” But he was also one of the founders of what we now call ethnomusicology, spending much of his time immersed in peasant life, collecting folk songs. As around him Europe was torn apart by conflict, Bartók found relief in rural life and took inspiration from these traditional tunes, incorporating them into his own compositions.
In today's programme, Donald Macleod discovers how Bartók met Zoltán Kodály, a kindred spirit who shared Bartók's love of folk song.
3 Hungarian Folksongs from Csik, BB 45b, Sz. 35a
Víkingur Ólafsson, piano
Eight Hungarian Folksongs
Polina Pasztircsak, soloist
Aleksandra Sasha Kozlov, piano
Allegro Barbaro
Cédric Tiberghien, piano
14 Bagatelles - excerpt
Cédric Tiberghien, piano
For Children
James Ehnes, violin
Andrew Armstrong, piano
Violin Concerto No. 1, BB48a, Sz 36: Andante sostenuto
Vilde Frang, violin
Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, Mikko Franck
Produced by Alice McKee for BBC Audio Wales & West
On radio
Broadcast
- Tue 5 May 202616:00BBC Radio 3






