The Relationship Between Poetry and Music Takes Center Stage at This Year’s Debrecen Literary Days
At the scientific forum held on Tuesday as part of the 55th edition of the cultural event series, participants explored how lyrics and melody intertwine—from old Hungarian sung poems to modern rap.
Writers, poets, and literary scholars gathered at the Méliusz Central Library to discuss the art and value of songwriting.
Literary historian István Rumen Csörsz not only analyzed old Hungarian sung poems but also performed a few at the library. Music historian Gergely Fazekas presented a talk titled “Scenes from a Marriage”, illustrating how text and music have merged in the past and present. “I borrow this metaphor from Richard Wagner, the great 19th-century opera composer, who viewed music as a woman, essentially fertilized by dramatic text,” he explained.
The theme of the 55th Debrecen Literary Days revolves around the genre of song and its lyrics. “Poetry was once a sung genre—we didn’t read poems alone at home, but experienced them through musical performance. In Balassi’s time, they even noted which melody a poem should be sung to. The genre of song, and lyrics in general, live on in folk songs and today’s folk music—rap,” Péter Szirák, curator of the event, emphasized.
Deputy Mayor István Puskás described the Debrecen Literary Days as a tradition capable of constant renewal, always raising contemporary and relevant questions. “I truly hope many of us feel we couldn’t do without the Literary Days anymore. Fifty-five years is more than a lifetime—many of us awakened, grew up, and socialized through these literary gatherings,” he noted.
The closing event of the Debrecen Literary Days will take place on Wednesday, when the Alföld Awards will be presented at the Kölcsey Art Café.
Source and photo credit: debrecen.hu
