diumenge, 10 d’agost del 2025

BELICZAY, Gyula (1835-1893) - Messe in F-Dur (1867)

Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller (1793-1865) - Am Allerseelentag (1839)


Gyula Beliczay (1835-1893) - Messe in F-Dur, Op.50 (1867) (live recording)
Performers: STELLA kamarakórus; Caritas Collectio Kamarazenekar; Juhász Irén (conductor)
Further info: Masses–F major

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Hungarian composer, pianist, and music writer. His grandfather was a Lutheran pastor, and his father was a wealthy timber merchant. Beliczay began his studies in Komárom, where his musical talent was recognized by church choirmaster Gyula Csáder. From the age of 12, he attended the Lutheran lyceum in Pozsony. Excelling in mathematics, his father initially intended him for an engineering career. While in Pozsony, he also studied piano with Josef Kumlik. Fulfilling his father's wishes, he earned an engineering degree from the Vienna Polytechnic between 1851 and 1857. In 1856, he also obtained a choirmaster's diploma in Vienna. From 1858, he worked as an engineer for the Tiszavidéki Vaspályatársaság (Tisza Railway Company), then based in Vienna. He simultaneously taught at one of the city's conservatories. During his time in Vienna, his composition teachers included Jozef Hofmann, Franz Krenn, and Gustav Nottebohm, and he furthered his piano studies with Carl Czerny and Anton Halm. In the spring of 1871, when the railway company relocated its headquarters to Pest, he moved with it. From 1872, he served as the chief architectural engineer for the Hungarian Royal State Railways. In 1879, he married Anna Tarczalovits (1853–1933), one of his students. In 1888, invited by Ödön Mihalovich, he became a music theory professor at the National Academy of Music in a post he held the rest of his life. Beliczay's musical output included orchestral works, chamber music, piano pieces, sacred music, choral compositions, and songs. Among his writings is 'A zene elemei' (Budapest, 1891). He embraced the Romantic style of Robert Schumann and Felix Mendelssohn, though his uniquely Hungarian compositions were primarily his variations, four-hand piano pieces, and songs. He was recognized as the most renowned Hungarian composer abroad during the last third of the 19th century.

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