Bг©la Bartгіk -
: While often dissonant, his work rarely abandoned tonality entirely. He frequently used "axis tonality" and modes derived from folk music rather than traditional major/minor scales.
Forced to flee Europe in 1940 due to the rise of Nazism, Bartók spent his final years in New York City. Despite struggling with poor health and financial instability, he produced some of his most accessible and profound music before his death from leukemia in 1945. Today, his influence persists in the works of countless composers and the continues to be a staple of the global concert repertoire. BГ©la BartГіk
Bartók was a scientist of sound as much as an artist. Alongside colleague Zoltán Kodály, he traveled through Hungary, Romania, Slovakia, and North Africa to record and transcribe thousands of folk songs. : While often dissonant, his work rarely abandoned
: His work preserved a vast heritage of oral tradition that was rapidly disappearing due to industrialization and war. Major Works distinctive harmonic language
: These are considered the finest cycle of quartets since Beethoven, tracing his development from Romanticism to intense Modernism. Final Years and Legacy
Bartók’s music is characterized by its rhythmic complexity, distinctive harmonic language, and structural precision. Unlike many of his contemporaries who looked toward abstraction, Bartók grounded his work in the "organic" sounds of the earth.

