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The major composers associated with bringing their country's folk music into the classical vein were Bela Bartok and Zoltan Kodaly. Franz Liszt wrote Hungarian Rhapsodies among his music, but didn't tend to use them as base material like the first two. Erno Dohnanyi is another Hungarian composer who sometimes wrote in the idiom of Hungarian folk music.
An American composer Joe Hungarian. Stupid question. Who invented Japanese language? Who ate the turkey for thanx givin for the first time?
Lajos. Vargyas has written: 'Folk music research in Hungary' -- subject(s): Historiography, Folk music, History and criticism, Music 'Magyar vers-magyar nyelv' -- subject(s): Hungarian language, Versification 'Researches into the mediaeval history of folk ballad' -- subject(s): Ballads, Folk songs, French, Folk songs, Hungarian, French Folk songs, French ballads and songs, History and criticism, Hungarian Folk songs, Hungarian songs and ballads
It can be all of them. Traditional folk music is usually singers and instrumentalists and generally has an unknown composer, but 20th century folk music is very similar, except we know of the composers.
Gica Petrescu was a Romanian music composer best known for composing music in the style of folk music. He was also a performer and he joined his first band when he was eighteen.
The composer of the Tagalog folk song "Nabasag ang Banga" is Lucio San Pedro, a renowned Filipino composer known for his contributions to Philippine music.
Béla Viktor János Bartók (pronounced /ˈbɑrtɒk/ (Wells 1990), Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈbeːlɒ ˈbɒrtoːk]) (March 25, 1881 - September 26, 1945) was a Hungarian composer and pianist. He is considered to be one of the greatest composers of the 20th century and is regarded, along with Liszt, as his country's greatest composer (Gillies 2001). Through his collection and analytical study of folk music, he was one of the founders of ethnomusicology
That his research identified the distinct expression and independent origins of Romanian folk music in general and of its persistence in Transylvania is the significance of the work on Romanian musical expressions by Béla Viktor János Bartók [March 25, 1881-September 9, 1945]. The Hungarian composer was born in the town of Nagyszentmiklos, in what was Hungarian controlled Transylvania. As a Hungarian musician living in an area of mixed cultures, he researched both Hungarian and Romanian folk traditions. His work on Romanian musical expressions in folk songs and dances was left unfinished with wartime interruptions. But what he did do was enough to show that Hungarian controlled Transylvania and Hungarian free Romania were united in a common cultural heritage.
Hejre Kati is a famous Hungarian tune, probably from a Hungarian folk tune made famous by the Hungarian composer and violinist Jeno Hubay and the virtuoso Hungarian Gypsy violinist Janos Bihari in the twentieth and the nineteenth century respectively. Although this piece originally a typical Hungarian Gypsy music piece, made its international career as well thanks to Eddie South, Rafael Mendez, just a few to mention. The meaning of the word hejre is pretty, Kati is the short of Katalin the Hungarian equivalent of Catherine.
By incorporating folk tunes from their country would be my best answer.
Béla Bartók
nina nai nai is folk music. It might be of assyrian origin but there is no known composer.