Andre Hajdu


André Hajdu was a Hungarian-born Israeli composer and ethnomusicologist.

Biography

Hajdu studied at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest with Endre Szervánszky and Ferenc Szabó, Erno Szégedi, and Zoltán Kodály. As a Kodály disciple, he was involved for two years in research about Gypsy musical culture and published several articles on this subject.
After the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, Hajdu escaped to Paris and continued his studies at the Paris Conservatoire with Darius Milhaud and Olivier Messiaen, obtaining the 1st prize in the discipline. Among his class mates were Gilbert Amy, William Bolcom, Philip Corner and Paul Méfano. In Paris he met a variety of stimulating people from the playwright Samuel Beckett to Prof. Israel Adler of the Hebrew University, who brought him on his first visit to Israel in 1966.
in Jerusalem, in 2009
Hajdu took up residence in Jerusalem in 1966. He taught at the Tel Aviv Music Academy from 1966 to 1991 and at Bar-Ilan University since 1970. He served as chairman in the Music Department there and founded a composition department. His notable students have included Aharon Razel, Gil Shohat, Yonatan Razel, Yoni Rechter, Matti Kovler and Matan Porat.
Hajdu composed many pedagogical works, particularly for piano and theory through a creative approach e.g. Milky Way, Art of Piano-playing, Book of Challenges, Concerto for 10 young pianists. All this is connected with the practice of creative teaching in the Israel Arts & Science Academy in Jerusalem, an experimental school for a new approach to music teaching. He also studied Jewish Klezmer and Hassidic repertories and published several articles on this subject. He was deeply involved in Jewish topics, not only on the usual folkloristic or liturgical levels, but also confronted more abstract subjects of Jewish thought as well as Jewish History. In 2005 he received the title of Doctor Honoris Causa of Jerusalem Hebrew University.
Hajdu died in Jerusalem at age 84.

Awards

;For the Stage
;Orchestral
;Strings
;Chamber
;Piano
;Songs
;Vocal-orchestral
;Choral