Classical and contemporary music Many composers have written for the cimbalom.
Zoltán Kodály made extensive use of the instrument in his orchestral suite
Háry János which helped make the cimbalom known outside
Eastern Europe.
Igor Stravinsky was also an enthusiast.
Franz Liszt used the cimbalom in his
Ungarischer Sturmmarsch (1876) and in the orchestral version of his
Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6.
Béla Bartók used it in his
Rhapsody No. 1 for violin and orchestra (1928). More recently, other composers including
Pierre Boulez,
Peter Maxwell Davies,
Peter Eötvös,
György Kurtág,
Miklós Kocsár,
Richard Grimes,
Louis Andriessen, and
Peter Machajdík have made a great use of cimbalom in their works.
Henri Dutilleux used it extensively in ''Mystère de l'Instant
for chamber orchestra, and L'arbre des songes'' for violin & orchestra.
Elvis Costello's orchestral ballet score
Il Sogno includes several extended cimbalom passages.
Harrison Birtwistle's operas
Gawain
(1991) and
The Minotaur
(2008) each utilize the cimbalom.
John Adams uses the instrument prominently in his large 2012 symphonic oratorio
The Gospel According to the Other Mary as well as in his 2014 dramatic symphony
Scheherazade.2. Cimbalom is used in a popular arrangement of
Debussy's
La plus que lente which the composer approved but did not actually score. (
La plus que lente with cimbalom saw renewed popularity with its inclusion in world tours of the
Hundred Gypsy Violins starting in 1985.)
Film and television The cimbalom has occasionally been used in film scores, especially to introduce a "foreign" feel. The cimbalom appears in
Christmas in Connecticut (1945) in a scene in Felix's (
S. Z. Sakall) Hungarian restaurant in
Manhattan. It was also featured in the films
Captain Blood (1935),
The Divorce of Lady X (1938), and
Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon (1943). The cimbalom was used in the film score for the movie
In the Heat of the Night (1967). Composer
Carmine Coppola made heavy use of the cimbalom in his soundtrack for
The Black Stallion (1979) to accentuate the Arabian heritage of the majestic horse.
Miklós Rózsa used the cimbalom in the main theme and throughout the score for the science-fiction thriller
The Power (1968).
John Barry used it in the title theme for the film
The Ipcress File (1965), as well as in the main theme of the
ITC TV series
The Persuaders! (1971); in both examples the performer was
John Leach.
James Horner made use of the instrument in his "Stealing the Enterprise" cue from
Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984). In addition,
John Williams has made less prominent use of the instrument in scores such as
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981).
Howard Shore used the cimbalom as well to express Gollum's sneaky nature in
Peter Jackson's film
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002). The cimbalom is also featured prominently in
Hans Zimmer's scoring of
Sherlock Holmes (2009).
Alexandre Desplat uses cimbalom in works such as
The Golden Compass (2007),
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008), and
The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014). In television, composer
Lalo Schifrin made use of the cimbalom in several scores he wrote for the original
Mission: Impossible television series, from which several cues were regularly recycled throughout the series' run. Composer
Debbie Wiseman used the cimbalom, played by Greg Knowles, in her score for the BBC television series 'Dickensian' (2015–16). The cimbalom, played by
John Leach, features prominently in the score of the BBC television drama serial from 1988, 'Babylon Bypassed' by
Gareth Glyn.
Rock )The cimbalom was used by
Alan Parsons on his "I Robot" and
Tales of Mystery and Imagination albums and is included in the guest musician acknowledgments. The experimental rock group
Mr. Bungle made use of the cimbalom on
Disco Volante and
California. It is included in the guest musician acknowledgments. The experimental performance organization
Blue Man Group has used a cimbalom in its productions. American progressive chamber group,
cordis, uses electric and acoustic cimbalom as a centerpiece in their music. Romanian rock group
Spitalul de Urgență has frequently used cimbalom, including a full-time player in some line-ups of the band. New York multi-instrumentalist
Rob Burger used a cimbalom on the album ''L'Entredeux
(2008) by Tucson chanteuse Marianne Dissard. Alternative rock band Garbage incorporated cimbalom into their track "The Trick Is to Keep Breathing" from their 1998 album Version 2.0''.
Portishead track "
Sour Times" includes samples from
Lalo Schifrin's "
Danube Incident" that has cimbalom in its arrangement. ==Schools of performance==