Hungarian Gypsy music is often represented as "the music of the Gypsies[?]", though multiple forms of Gypsy music are common throughout Europe and are unrelated to Hungarian forms. In the 19th century, verbunkos[?] was the most popular style among Hungarian Gypsies, especially the virtuoso János Bihari[?]. Bihari and others after his death helped invent the nota[?], a popular form written by composers like Lóránt Fráter[?], Árpád Balázs[?], Pista Dankó[?], Béni Egressy[?], [[Mark Rózsavölgyi]] and Imre Farkas[?]. Rózsavölgyi's invention of the csárdás[?] makes him especially important. Verbunkos, nota and csárdás are sometimes collectively called cigányzene[?], misrepresented as "Gypsy music".
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