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György Ligeti

György LigetiHungarian composer György Ligeti was born in 1923. Living under two dictators—Hitler and Stalin—Ligeti’s musical approach was heavily influenced by the hardship and oppression that he faced during those years of his life. After World War II, which he spent at a labor camp, Ligeti studied and taught at the Budapest Academy, quickly developing his distinctive “micropolyphoniality.” This technique, as Ligeti described, “means such a dense tissue that the individual parts become inaudible and only the resulting intermingling harmonies are effective as a form.” Even in his early works, such as Apparitions (1958–59) Ligeti’s distinctive style can be detected.
After the crushing of Hungary’s anti-Soviet uprising in 1956, Ligeti fled to Cologne, where he was exposed the advancements in music and technology from which he had previously been cut off. In Germany, he studied the music of Stockhausen, Kagel, and Boulez, influences that can be seen in Artikulation (1958), a work that, with Atmosphères (1961), granted him international renown. In the decades following, he developed new polyrhythmic techniques by incorporating African drumming patterns—patterns that were integral for his Ètudes pour piano. Ligeti’s original and unorthodox ideas, as well as his sense of humor, are present throughout his works, which are characterized by radical turning points, and the possession of exceptional musical quality and individuality.

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