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HUNGARIAN MUSIC AND DANCE
The folk music of Hungary is one of the country’s most important expressions of national identity. Hungary’s geographic location, together with a cultural heritage that bears influences from central Asia to western Europe, has long supported diverse and lively musical traditions.
The documentation and scholarly analysis of Hungarian folk music began in the late nineteenth century and achieved spectacular results, thanks to the efforts of composers Béla Bartók (1881-1945) and Zoltán Kodály (1882-1967). They not only established scientific methods for collecting and interpreting Hungary’s folk music traditions; they also composed and disseminated folk songs. Their goal, as Kodály wrote in 1906, was to recognize “the basic layer of our folk music, the rock upon which a culture can be built.” Today the repertoire of recorded folk tunes numbers some 300,000.
In recent decades, there has been a surge of interest in folk music. The proliferation of dance houses (táncházak) in urban areas is helping to ensure the survival of traditional melodies and to maintain the vitality of folk dance and music.
DANCE
CULTURE IN HUNGARY
There
are five basic types of traditional dance found throughout the Carpathian
Basin: round dances (karikázó);
jumping dances (ugrós); men’s dances
(legényes); slow and fast couples
dances (csárdás); and stick dances (botoló), which are vestiges of weapon
dances.
Each
of these five basic dance types varies, depending on its geographic region. For
instance, the dances found in the regions of the Danube and Tisza rivers tend
to be simpler and more lighthearted than the more complex dances of
Transylvania (Romania).
Solo
dances and couples dances are typically freeform, which means there are
countless possibilities for individual improvisation. This feature
distinguishes Hungarian dance culture from that of western Europe and the
Balkans, and it accounts for its immense richness.