Barnabás Kelemen and Péter Zombola Awarded This Year’s Bartók-Pásztory Prize
The Award Committee granted the 2020 Bartók-Pásztory Prize to violinist Barnabás Kelemen, professor at the Liszt Academy, and composer Péter Zombola. The university will hold the award ceremony on September 3.
Each year, the Liszt Academy announces the names of the two artists - an instrumental musician and a composer – awarded with the Bartók–Pásztory Prize on March 25, the birthday of Béla Bartók. The prize was founded by Ditta Pásztory, the widow of the pianist-composer in her last will and testament, and it has been granted every year to a Hungarian-speaking artist and composer since 1984.
The Award Committee is chaired by the President of the Liszt Academy, currently Dr. Andrea Vigh, and consists of faculty members: Gyula Fekete, Erkel and Bartók-Pásztory Prize-winning composer, head of department, international and academic vice president, Dr. Csaba Kutnyánszky, chorus master, head of department, vice president in charge of education, Csaba Onczay, Kossuth Prize-winning cellist, professor emeritus, Ádám Medveczky, Kossuth Prize-winning conductor and titular university professor, Gusztáv Hőna, Liszt Prize-winning trombone artist and professor emeritus, as well as Kálmán Dráfi, Liszt Prize-winning pianist and head of department.
The award ceremony will take place on September 3 in the X. Hall of the Liszt Academy headquarters on Liszt Ferenc square.
In his laudatory speech of Barnabás Kelemen, Ádám Medveczky highlighted: “I first saw him in the college student orchestra, sitting at the first desk of the second violin. We were accompanying Mozart arias and I noticed how he was completely in synch with the winds, the soloist. The very embodiment of an ideal chamber musician. He staged splendid concerts with his excellent string quartet. He is uncompromisingly fastidious, both as a professor and a fellow musician. However, his fastidiousness is not overbearing: he conveys his will with a natural joviality. Virtuosity, romance, self-confidence and humility.”
Gyula Fekete wrote the laudation for Péter Zombola, in which he praised the laureate as a remarkable figure of the middle generation of Hungarian composers. He underlined: “Zombola combines the inscrutable creative freedom and rigorous structure of his teachers, György Orbán and Zoltán Jeney; the central motif of his works in the search for the transcendent and the aspiration to give it a voice with notes. As a professor, he engages his students emotionally and strives to bridge the gap between the arts.”
Barnabás Kelemen.
Péter Zombola. Photo: Vera Éder