Forbidden Music Regained


Leo Smit Stichting
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Tien stukken voor blokfluiten op. 39

By Géza Frid

genre
Chamber music
instrumentation
Two or more Recorders (1-3rec)
duration
13 minutes
year
1951
location of manuscript
www.nederlandsmuziekinstituut.nl archive registration number 304/051-1
status
published score
order full score here
dedication

Dedicated to Frans Douwes, Marijke en Kees Otten

Details

For one, two and three recorders (SAT)

Walsje
Kleine Hongaarse rhapsodie
Canon
Dilettanten
Soldatenmars
Troost
Tarantella piccola
Wie het laatst lacht, lacht het best
Tussenspel (solo)
Lied

About Géza Frid

Géza Frid

The Hungarian Géza Frid was one of the key figures in the post-war Dutch music world. To escape the dictatorship of his country of origin, he fled to the Netherlands in 1927. He always remained true to the musical language of his roots. As of 1941, Frid as a stateless Jew, was prohibited from performing in public. He became involved in illegal activities and the artists' resistance movement, and it's a miracle he survived the war. After the liberation, he resumed his life as an artist. For years he was one of the most frequently performed composers in the Netherlands. Since the turn of the twentieth century there was even a sort of “Frid-Renaissance.”

by Arthur Frid