László Somogyi

The native form of this personal name is Somogyi László. This article uses the Western name order.

László Somogyi (25 June 1907, Budapest, Austria-Hungary 20 May 1988, Geneva, Switzerland) was a Hungarian conductor.

Biography

Somogyi received his musical training under Zoltán Kodály and Leo Weiner at the Ferenc Liszt Academy at Budapest, where he was later to become leading professor of the Conductor's Class. While in Hungary he founded and led the Symphonia Orchestra, was Chief Conductor of the Hungarian Broadcasting, and guested with the Hungarian State Opera.[1] He conducted in Poland, East Germany, Rumania, Yugoslavia and Bulgaria, as well.

In 1956 he left Hungary and was active all over the world, including South America. His American debut in March 1961 with the Houston Symphony was a great success. From 1964-68 he served as Chief Conductor of the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra. His recordings include Haydn symphonies (including the famous and disputed Toy Symphony), the Dvořák piano concerto with Firkusny on the Westminster label, and Beethoven's Chorale Fantasy with a very young Daniel Barenboim on MCA in 1960.

References


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