Leó Weiner, a contemporary of Bartók and Kodály, was a profoundly important teacher in Budapest whose own music developed from a more traditional Romantic model - exemplified by the songful Románc, Op. 29 - to an absorption of his native Hungarian folk music during the 1930s. The two Divertimentos for Strings, vibrantly orchestrated sequences of dances, are among the best-known works of this period. The later Hungarian Nursery Rhymes and Folk Songs draw on some archaic and very popular native melodies. © Naxos