Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Miklós Rózsa (Hungarian: [ˈmikloːʃ ˈroːʒɒ]; April 18, 1907 – July 27, 1995) was a Hungarian-American composer trained in Germany (1925–1931) and active in France (1931–1935), the United Kingdom (1935–1940), and the United States (1940–1995), with extensive sojourns in Italy from 1953 onward.

  2. Miklós Rózsa. Music Department: Ben-Hur. A child prodigy, Miklos Rózsa learned to play the violin at the age of five and read music before he was able to read words.

  3. Jul 22, 2020 · Throughout his career, Miklós Rózsa led an artistic “double life” between concert music and film scoring. On Monday, we heard Rózsa’s high-flying Violin Concerto. Now, let’s listen to excerpts from eight of his most celebrated film scores: Ben-Hur (1959)

  4. Chamber versions of concertante works. Rhapsody for cello and piano, Op. 3. Variations on a Hungarian Folk Song for violin and piano, Op. 4. North Hungarian Peasant Songs and Dances for violin and piano, Op. 5. Violin Concerto for violin and piano, Op. 24.

  5. Dec 1, 2001 · Far more people have heard the music of Miklós Rózsa than that of his countryman and fellow modernist Béla Bartók, but far fewer know his name. For more than four decades, Rózsa divided his time between writing concert music and scoring commercial films.

  6. Mini Bio. A child prodigy, Miklos Rózsa learned to play the violin at the age of five and read music before he was able to read words. In 1926, he began studying at the Leipzig Conservatory where he was considered a brilliant student. He obtained his doctorate in music in 1930.

  7. Regarded for more than forty years as one of the absolute masters of music in cinema, Miklós Rózsa is also one of the most outstanding composers of this century. I met him last August in Detroit. He was taking part in the Meadow Brook Music Festival, where he conducted the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in a concert of his works.

  8. Miklós Rózsa, an intellect and a gentleman of the old school, was an artist with an enormous contribution to the art of film music. His music has been both light in tone and heavily dramatic in feeling, and he was one of very few film composers highly regarded enough to be accepted to the classical stage as well as in the motion picture studio.

  9. Jul 28, 1995 · Miklos Rozsa, the award-winning composer of the score to "Ben-Hur" and dozens of other films, died here today. He was 88.

  10. Jul 29, 1995 · Miklos Rozsa, whose opulent scores for some of Hollywood's most lavish epics earned him three Academy Awards, died at Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles on Thursday. He was 88.

  1. People also search for