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Endre Szervánszky (27 December 1911 – 25 June 1977) was a Hungarian composer.
Biography
Szervánszky was born in Kistétény and studied the clarinet at the Budapest Academy of Music (1922–27). He played in various orchestras before returning to the academy to study composition with Albert Siklós (1931–36). He then worked as an orchestrator for the Hungarian Radio and taught musical theory. He was appointed professor of composition at the Budapest Academy in 1948.
Szervánszky first came to public attention with his First String Quartet (1936–38) and his works of this period were influenced by his compatriots, Zoltán Kodály and Béla Bartók. Works for this time include the Clarinet Serenade (1950) and the Flute Concerto (1952–53).
From the early 1950s Szervánszky embarked on a series of larger compositions, one of the longest being the Concerto for Orchestra in memory of Attila József. Each of the concerto's five movements is based on a quotation from József. The fourth has folk music elements and the whole demonstrates the influence of Bartók. Both the String Quartet no.2 (1956–57) and the Wind Quintet no.2 (1957) also demonstrate the composer's increasing interest in serialism.
For his Six Orchestra Pieces, composed in 1959, Szervánszky employed 12-note serialism and the piece is particular in its use of percussion. Szervánszky did not compose another major work until 1963 – the oratorio Requiem, based on a text by János Pilinszky which takes the concentration camp of Auschwitz as its theme. Works which followed include the Variations (1964) and the Clarinet Concerto (1965).
Endre Szervánszky was given the "Righteous Among the Nations" award by the State of Israel to honour non-Jews who risked their lives to save Jews from the Nazis.
He was the brother of artist Jenö Szervánszky and violinist Peter Szervánszky and the uncle of Valeria Szervánszky.
He died in Budapest.
Notable students
Works
Stage and vocal works
- Napkeleti mese – “Oriental Tale”, (a "dance play") 1948–9
- Népdalszvit – “Folksong Suite”, 1949
- Honvédkantáta – “Soldier’s Cantata”, 1949
- Tavaszi Szél – “Spring Breeze” (cantata), 1950
- 8 Petőfi Songs, 1951
- 3 Petőfi Choruses, 1953
- 3 Songs, 1956–7
- 3 Male Choruses (ancient China), 1958
- Requiem – “Dark Heaven” to words by János Pilinszky (oratorio), 1963
- Az éj – “The Night” (cantata), 1974–5
Orchestra
- 3 divertimentos, 1939, 1942, 1943
- Serenade, strings, 1947–8
- Rhapsody, 1950
- Serenade for clarinet and orchestra, 1950
- Flute Concerts, 1952–3
- Concerts for Orchestra, 1954
- 6 Orchestral Pieces, 1959
- Variations, 1964
- Clarinet Concerto, 1965
Chamber
- String Quartet no.1, 1936–8
- 20 Little Duos for 2 violins, 1941
- Sonata for violin and piano, 1945
- 25 Duos for 2 violins, 1946
- Trio for flute, violin and viola, 1951
- Sonatina for flute, and piano, 1952
- Wind Quintet no.1, 1953
- 5 Koncert etűd – “5 Concert Etudes” for flute, 1956
- Suite for 2 flutes, 1956
- String Quartet No.2, 1956–7
- Wind Quintet no.2, 1957
- 2 Duos for 2 flutes, 1972
- 7 Studies for flute, 1974–5
Piano
- Folksong Suite, 4 hands, 1935
- Little Suite, 1939
- Sonatina, 1941
- Sonatina, 4 hands, 1950
Films
- For Whom the Larks Sing, 1959
- Be True Until Death, 1960
References
- Endre Szervánszky – his activity to save Jews' lives during the Holocaust, at Yad Vashem website
- Don Randel, The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Harvard, 1996, p. 895.
- 1911 births
- 1977 deaths
- 20th-century Hungarian classical composers
- Hungarian male classical composers
- Artists of Merit of the Hungarian People's Republic
- Hungarian Righteous Among the Nations
- 20th-century Hungarian male musicians
- Hungarian film score composers
- Hungarian male film score composers
- Szervánszky family