Jeney, Zoltán
Biography in Headwords
1943 Born in Szolnok, Hungary
1961–1968: Composition studies with Ferenc Farkas at the Ferenc Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest, postgraduate studies with Goffredo Petrassi at the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia in Rome
1968: Premiere of Soliloquium No. 1 for flute at Gaudeamus Festival in Utrecht
1970: Foundation of the New Music Studio Budapest, in collaboration with Péter Eötvös, Zoltán Kocsis, László Sáry, Albert Simon and László Vidovszky
1984: Tour in Sweden: 30 of his works performed in nine concerts, five of them as world premieres
1985: A portrait concert is given at the Experimental Intermedia Foundation in New York; Twelve Songs performed at the ISCM Festival in Amsterdam
1986: Professor at Franz Liszt Academy of Music, Department of Composition, 1995–2011 Head of Department, 1999–2013 Head of the Doctoral School
1993 Fellow of the Széchenyi Academy of Letters and Arts (founded by the Hungarian Academy of Sciences)
1996–1999 Vice-President of ISCM
1998 Premiere of Contrafactum, composed for 125th anniversary celebration of Pest-Buda-Óbuda unification
2005 First complete performance of Funeral Rite by the National Philharmonic Orchestra and Choir conducted by Zoltán Kocsis, in Budapest
2019 Died in Budapest
Awards
Bartók–Pásztory Award (1988, 2006; Kossuth Prize (2001); AEGON Art Prize (2006); Artisjus Prize (2018)
His works in our catalogue (selection)
Alef – Hommage à Schönberg (1972) for orchestra (13’)
Endgame (1973) for solo piano (8’)
Orpheus’ Garden (1974) for eight optional instruments (18’)
Twelve songs on poems by e. e. cummings, William Blake, Friedrich Hölderlin, Dezső Tandori and Sándor Weöres (1975–83) for soprano, vln, and pf (29’)
To Apollo – cantata to a hymn by Callimachus (1978) for female or mixed chamber choir, ca, org, 12 crotal (27’)
El silencio on a poem by Federico Garcia Lorca (1986) for female voice and string quintet (16’)
Funeral Rite on Hungarian vigil songs, Latin, Hebrew, Russian and Greek liturgical texts and poems by Hungarian poets (1987–2005) for vocal soloists (sopr, a, ten, bar, b), double mixed choir and orchestra (175’)
Fantasia su una nota (1984) for double chamber ensemble of optional instruments (29’)
Self-Quotations (1991) for five instruments: cl, vln, vc, mar, pf (10’)
Contrafactum on a poem by János Pilinszky (1998) for soprano and orchestra (25’)
& silence everywhere (2001) for chamber ensemble: afl, ca, cl, hn, tpt, vln, vla, vc, db (12’)