Marián Varga
Marián Varga | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Skalica, Czechoslovakia | 29 January 1947
Died | 9 August 2017 Bratislava, Slovakia | (aged 70)
Genres | Classical |
Occupation(s) | Composer, organist |
Instruments | Organ |
Marián Varga (29 January 1947 – 9 August 2017[1]) was a Slovak musician, composer and organist.
Biography[]
He played the piano from the age of six. He studied piano and composition at the conservatory in Bratislava. He left the conservatory after three years to become a member of the group Prúdy, and contributed to the legendary album Zvoňte zvonky. He left Prúdy as suddenly as he had left conservatory only to establish the first Czechoslovak art rock band Collegium Musicum.
The repertoire of Collegium Musicum, comprising mostly instrumental pieces, included reinterpretations of the themes of classics such as Joseph Haydn, Béla Bartók and Igor Stravinsky, complemented by original compositions. Already at this stage his work bore signs of postmodernism (Eufónia of the album Konvergencie), which later became the basic principle of his work.
When Collegium Musicum disbanded in 1979, Varga started a solo career. Among other achievements, he became a pioneer of absolute improvisation (real-time composition) in Slovakia. In the meantime he continued to contribute to popular music. His ongoing collaboration with Pavol Hammel led to five successful albums and to the first rock musical in Slovakia.
Discography[]
with Prúdy[]
- 1968: Zvoňte, zvonky
Collegium Musicum[]
- 1970: "Hommage à J.S.Bach / Ulica plná plášťov do dažďa" (SP)
- 1971: Collegium Musicum
- 1971: Konvergencie
- 1973: Collegium Musicum Live
- 1975: Marián Varga & Collegium Musicum
- 1978: Continuo
- 1979: On a Ona
- 1981: Divergencie
- 1997: Collegium Musicum '97 (Live)
with Pavol Hammel[]
- 1972: Zelená pošta
- 1976: Na II. programe sna (along with Radim Hladik)
- 1978: Cyrano z predmestia
- 1989: Všetko je inak
- 1993: Labutie piesne
with Vladimír Merta[]
- 1992: Cestou k ... Stabil - Instabil
Solo albums[]
- 1984: Stále tie dni
- 2003: Solo in Concert (Live)
- 2006: Marián Varga & Moyzesovo kvarteto
Anthology[]
- 2006: Hommage à Marián Varga
Awards[]
- Hall of Fame ZAI Award – Grand Prix[2]
- Aurel Award – Lifetime Achievement[3]
- Pribina Cross – 2nd Class[4]
See also[]
- The 100 Greatest Slovak Albums of All Time
- 2003: Zostane to medzi nami
References[]
- ^ "Vo veku 70 rokov zomrel Marián Varga, hudobník, skladateľ a jedna". Denník N (in Slovak). Retrieved 2017-08-09.
- ^ "História > Výročné ceny ZAI > Víťazi pre rok 1992". ZAI (in Slovak). ZAI. 2001. zai.eu.sk. Archived from the original on 2014-09-03. Retrieved 2015-04-14.
- ^ "Aurel > Víťazi Aurel 2002". Národná skupina IFPI Slovenskej republiky (in Slovak). SNS IFPI. 2003. ifpi.sk. Archived from the original on 2003-04-16. Retrieved 2015-04-14.
- ^ "Varga, Vilikovský, Zemko. Prezident Kiska udelil svoje prvé vyznamenania > Marián Varga". SME (in Slovak). Petit Press. 2015-01-13. sme.sk. Retrieved 2015-04-14.
External links[]
- 1947 births
- 2017 deaths
- People from Skalica
- Slovak musicians
- Czechoslovak Big Beat groups and musicians
- Recipients of the Pribina Cross