Leo Weiner

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Leo Weiner
Leo Weiner

Leo Weiner (April 16, 1885 in BudapestSeptember 13, 1960 in Budapest) was one of the leading Hungarian music educators of the first half of the twentieth century.

[edit] Education

Weiner had his first music and piano lessons from his brother, and later studied at the Landesakademie (High School) of Musical Art in Budapest. While there, he won numerous prizes, including: the Franz Liszt Stipend, the Volkmann Prize, and the Erkel Prize, all for one composition: his Serenade, Op. 3.

[edit] Compositions

As a composer, the Romantics from Beethoven through Mendelssohn most strongly affected Weiner's musical approach. His sense of orchestral color seems to relate to those French composers who were not notably affected by Wagner, especially to that of Bizet. This solid and conservative Romantic approach served the basis for his style which later was influenced by elements of Hungarian folk music. However, he did not conduct research in the area of folk music, as his contemporaries Bartók and Kodály did, but simply shared an interest in the subject and employed some elements of folk music without affecting his established harmonic language.

Among Weiner's notable compositions are a string trio, three string quartets, two violin sonatas, five divertimenti for orchestra, a symphonic poem, and numerous chamber and piano pieces. Most pianists will instantly recognize his lively "Fox Dance".

[edit] External links