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László Tihanyi
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・ László Vadnay (sport shooter)
・ László Vadász
・ László Varga
・ László Varga (footballer)
・ László Varga (politician, 1936)
・ László Varga (politician, 1979)
・ László Vasali


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László Tihanyi : ウィキペディア英語版
László Tihanyi

László Tihanyi (born 21 March 1956) is a Hungarian composer and conductor.
==Biography==
László Tihanyi was born in Budapest, Hungary on 21 March 1956 and pursued musical studies at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music, Budapest, where he studied composition with Rezső Sugár and conducting with András Kórodi. Since 1979 has Tihanyi himself been a devoted professor at the Academy of Music, where he acted also as vice-rector between 2000 and 2005.
He regularly conducts at home and abroad, typically 20th century classical and contemporary programmes. He appeared with all major Hungarian orchestras and significant European contemporary music ensembles, as Ensemble Modern, Contrechamps and MusikFabrik. In 1991 he participated in the production of Maderna's ''Hyperion'' at the Festival D'Automne à Paris and the subsequent European tour. In 2002 Péter Eötvös asked him to be second conductor of his opera ''Three Sisters'' for the 2002 production for the Wiener Festwochen (besides Eötvös being first conductor himself).
In 1985 founded his own instrumental ensemble, the ''Intermodulation'', dedicated to 20th and 21st century music, and has been the artistic director since then.
Tihanyi is the winner of prestigious awards, including the Erkel prize and the Bartók-Pásztory prize.
Beside being the "composer-in-residence" of the ''Ensemble Intermodulation'', his works are performed all over Europe: the Hungarian Radio commissioned ''Irrlichtspiel'', for violin and ensemble (a "pocket" concerto) in 1991. Then the Componensemble premiered ''Winterszenen'' (a work based on Schubert’s Winterreise). In 1992. Summer Music was dedicated to and premiered by the Ensemble Contrechamps in 1992, one of the as yet most performed chamber setting by Tihanyi. In 1994 ''L’Épitaph du Soldat'' (a short sequel to Stravinsky's A Soldier's Tale) was commissioned by Radio France, and ''Serenata for four instruments'' by Rainbow over Bath in 1996. ''Schattenspiel'' was composed for members of the Forrás Chamber Music Workshop in 1997, and premiered in its original, four-movement version in the same year in Vienna. In 1998 two Swiss foundations, Pro Helvetia and the Zuger Kulturstiftung Landis & Gyr commissioned ''Matrix'' for four hands. ''Atte'' was premiered in 1999 in Berlin by the UMZE Ensemble. The soloists were Csaba Klenyán (clarinet) and György Déri (cello). In 2002 Musikfabrik premiered ''Kosmos'', and a number of further commissions followed, one of which was the ''20 Night Meditations'' for 8 soloists and orchestra with double strings, that had its western hemisphere premiere in February 2007 at The Juilliard School, New York.
His commission by the Opéra National de Bordeaux and the French state for his first opera Genitrix, based on the novel by François Mauriac, premiered on 25 November 2007 in Bordeaux.

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