- Dajos Béla
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Dajos Béla (birth name Leon Golzmann, 19 December 1897 – 5 December 1978) was a Russian fiddle-player and band-leader.
Contents
Career
Golzmann was born in Kiev, now part of the Ukraine, of a Russian father and Hungarian mother. He served as a soldier during World War I, after which he studied music in Moscow. He then continued his studies in Berlin, where he started playing in local venues. He was contacted by Carl Lindström AG to make recordings and started his own salon orchestra, at which period he changed his name to the more Hungarian-sounding Dajos Béla, Hungarian or Roumanian music then being popular in Germany. Along with those of Paul Godwin and Marek Weber, his orchestra became one of the most popular in Germany and gained a high reputation abroad. He played a range of music, but for jazz music often recorded under different names, such as The Odeon Five, Mac’s Jazz Orchestra and the Clive Williams Jazzband.
As soon as the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933 Béla, who was Jewish, started touring abroad. In 1935 he travelled to Buenos Aires, where he remained for the rest of his life. He died in La Falda, Argentina, in 1978.
Select Discography
- Waitin´ For The Moon / Adieu, Mimi (Shimmy) (Odeon 0-1921),
- Humming / Bummel-Petrus (Intermezzo) (Odeon A 71942), 1921
- Radio-Tango / Opern-Foxtrott in Potpourri-Form (Odeon 49039), 1925
- (as Kapelle Merton): Dinah / Sevilla (Beka B.6071), 1926
- Who ? ("Du ! Wann bist du bei mir ?") / Zwei rote Rosen, ein zarter Kuss (Odeon 0-2087), Januar 1927
- Heinzelmännchens Wachtparade / Dornröschens Brautfahrt (Odeon 0-2101), 1927
- Santa Lucia / Venezia (Odeon 0-2122), 1927
- Hund och Katt / Ref. sång (Odeon D-4948), 1929
- Kennst du das kleine Haus am Michigansee / Anna Aurora (Odeon D-4975), 1929
- (as Odeon-Tanz-Orchester und Gesang): In Sanssouci, dort wo die alte Mühle steht (Odeon O-11301), 1929
- (with Leo Frank (singer)): Im Rosengarten von Sanssouci, 1930
In addition, he made around 70 records with the tenor, Richard Tauber [1891-1948] as violin soloist or orchestra director.
Sources
- Lyman, Darryl. Great Jews in Music, J. D. Publishers, 1986.
- Sadie, Stanley. The new Grove dictionary of music and musicians, Macmillan, 1980.
- Wolfram Knauer (1986, Pb.): Jazz in Deutschland. Darmstädter Beiträge zur Jazzforschung 5. Hofheim : Wolke Verlag (in German)
External links
Categories:- 1897 births
- 1978 deaths
- 20th-century musicians
- 20th-century composers
- 20th-century Russian people
- 20th-century Ukrainian people
- 20th-century German people
- 20th-century Hungarian people
- Jewish musicians
- German musicians
- Russian musicians
- Ukrainian musicians
- Hungarian musicians
- Jewish composers
- German composers
- Russian composers
- Ukrainian composers
- Hungarian composers
- Jazz composers
- Russian Jews
- Ukrainian Jews
- Ukrainian people of Hungarian descent
- Ukrainian expatriates in Germany
- German Jews
- German people of Ukrainian-Jewish descent
- German people of Russian-Jewish descent
- German people of Hungarian-Jewish descent
- Hungarian Jews
- Russian and Soviet emigrants to Argentina
- Hungarian emigrants to Argentina
- German emigrants to Argentina
- People from Kiev
- European composer stubs
- Ukrainian people stubs
- German composer stubs
- Russian composer stubs
- Hungarian composer stubs
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