He studied at the Budapest Conservatory under Zoltán Kodály. He toured as a pianist around Europe and the Pacific, then settled in the Netherlands in 1920, and worked there as a pianist, conductor and composer[1] before relocating to Paris in 1923. He helped to found the Société Triton, which organised concerts of contemporary music, and established ties with other expatriates, becoming one of the so-called Groupe des Quatre, along with Bohuslav Martinů, Marcel Mihalovici and Conrad Beck.[2] He was also one of a related group of émigré composers known as the École de Paris, which helped bring him together with other colleagues from Central and Eastern Europe, such as Alexander Tansman and Alexander Tcherepnin.[3]
List of works (chronological)
Four Pieces, for piano (1924)
Petite Suite for Children, for piano (1924)
Petite Dance Suite, for piano (1925)
Rhapsody, for piano (1925)
Sonatine, for violin and piano (1925)
Twelve Small Pieces of Average Difficulty, for piano (1926)
La Semaine, seven short piano pieces for the days of the week (1927)
Six Short Pieces, for piano (1927)
Trio, for piano, violin, and cello (1927)
Duo, for violin and cello (1928)
Five Brief Preludes, for piano (1928)
Novelette, for piano (1928)
Piece, for two pianos (1928)
Poems (5) of Robert Edward Hart, for voice and piano (1928)
Sonata, for piano (1928)
String Quartet (1928)
Three Dance Pieces, for piano (1928)
Two Burlesques, for piano (1928)
Rhythms, five inventions for piano (1929)
Sonata, for cello and piano (1929)
Suite, for orchestra (1929)
Aria-Cadence-Rondo, for cello and orchestra or piano (1930)
Baby-Dancing, for piano (1930)
Five Bagatelles, for piano (1930)
Nonet, for flute, clarinet, oboe, bassoon, horn, and string quartet (1930)
L'histoire du petit tailleur, for narrator, seven instruments and percussion (1950, based on the folktale "The Brave Little Tailor")
Cantata de Noel, for SATB, flute and strings (1951-2)
Five Rhythmic Etudes of Medium Difficulty, for piano (1952)
Three Impromptus, for piano (1952)
Three Lyrical Pieces, for piano (1952)
Sonata, for viola and piano (1953–1954)é
References
^Arthur Hoérée "Tibor Harsányi" article in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians ed. Stanley Sadie; London: Macmillan, 1980
^Arthur Hoérée/Barbara L. Kelly. "Harsányi, Tibor", Grove Music Online, Oxford Music Online, Oxford University Press, accessed 15 May 2014 (subscription required)