György Deák-Bárdos

György Deák-Bárdos (1905 in Budapest 1991) was a Hungarian composer, organist, singer and music teacher. He was the younger brother of Lajos Bárdos.[1][2]

Works, editions and recordings

  • 10 masses
  • 70 cantatas, motets
  • Parasceve Suite:
    • 1. Hymnus De Vanitate Mundi (1930)
    • 2. Tristis Est Anima Mea (1927)
    • 3. Crucifigatur, Pater! Dimitte Illis! (1928)
    • 4. Eli, Eli! (1928)
    • 5. Consummatum Est (1928)
gollark: Many more logic gates, some of which are useful.
gollark: There are probably weird ternary logic gates too.
gollark: They have a bit of a monopolies problem I heard, though probably faster connections in some places.
gollark: Modern wired display connectors need at least gigabytes per second. The latest version of DisplayPort goes up to 80Gbps...
gollark: Here in the UK something like 30Mbps is the common available internet connection speed outside of cities, which means a lot of compression and/or low framerate and/or resolution.

References

  1. Frigyes Frideczky Magyar zeneszerzők 2000 "Deák Bárdos György (1905—1991) Orgonista, zeneszerző, ének- és zenetanár, Bárdos Lajos öccse. 1923-29 a budapesti Liszt F. Zeneművészeti Főiskolán orgona (Zalánffy Aladár) és zeneszerzés (Siklós Albert) tanulmányokat folytatott," - Organist, composer, singer and music teacher, brother of Lajos Bardos. studied at F. Liszt Academy in 1923-29 Organ Music (A. Zalánffy) and composition (Albert Siklos)..
  2. http://gemeinden.erzbistum-koeln.de/stifts-chor-bonn/service/komponisten/Deak-Bardos.html
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