Tracks featured on
Most played tracks
Thanks!
Your suggestion has been successfully submitted.
Apiento, a.k.a Paul Byrne runs the invaluable Test Pressing blog and releases music on World Building, World Unknown and more. His show has that esoteric techno thing and whatever suits the mood…
Information about a Transformed Situation is the title of an Exhibition that happened this winter in Vilnius about the Group NSRD from Latvia. In this program i have some conversation with Māra Žeikare one of the curators of the exhibition and some fragments from a program also about NSRD recorded with Raivo Mihailovs at Radio Vilnius.
Sign up or log in to MY NTS and get personalised recommendations
Support NTS for timestamps across live channels and the archive
Attila Bozay (August 11, 1939 - september 14, 1999) studied composition with István Szelényi at the Béla Bartók Conservatory, then with Ferenc Farkas at the Franz Liszt Music Academy in Budapest where he was graduated in 1962. After being music teacher in Szeged, he worked for the Hungarian Radio as music editor. In 1967, he received a UNESCO scholarship and visited Paris. From 1979 he was a teacher of the Budapest Music Academy, and director of National Filharmony between 1990 and 1993. As of 1991 he was the member of the presidency of the Hungarian Music Association, chairman of the Hungarian Music Chamber and founder member of the Hungarian Art Academy. He often played his own compositions on recorder and zithern throughout Europe and Canada. When he returned home, Attila Bozay devoted all this time to composition. In 1968, he was awarded the Sandor Erkel Prize for his string Quartet and the song cycle "Outcries"; he got another one in 1979. Other awards he received were the Bartók-Pásztory Award (1988), the Lajos Kossuth Prize (1990) and an award for Hungarian Art (1992).
Attila Bozay (August 11, 1939 - september 14, 1999) studied composition with István Szelényi at the Béla Bartók Conservatory, then with Ferenc Farkas at the Franz Liszt Music Academy in Budapest where he was graduated in 1962. After being music teacher in Szeged, he worked for the Hungarian Radio as music editor. In 1967, he received a UNESCO scholarship and visited Paris. From 1979 he was a teacher of the Budapest Music Academy, and director of National Filharmony between 1990 and 1993. As of 1991 he was the member of the presidency of the Hungarian Music Association, chairman of the Hungarian Music Chamber and founder member of the Hungarian Art Academy. He often played his own compositions on recorder and zithern throughout Europe and Canada. When he returned home, Attila Bozay devoted all this time to composition. In 1968, he was awarded the Sandor Erkel Prize for his string Quartet and the song cycle "Outcries"; he got another one in 1979. Other awards he received were the Bartók-Pásztory Award (1988), the Lajos Kossuth Prize (1990) and an award for Hungarian Art (1992).
Thanks!
Your suggestion has been successfully submitted.
Thanks!
Your suggestion has been successfully submitted.