Otakar Sevcík Vídeos
violinista checo
Conmemoraciones 2024 (Muerte: Otakar Sevcík)
- violín
- música clásica
- República Checa, Checoslovaquia, Reino de Bohemia
- violinista, pedagogo, musicólogo, profesor de música, profesor universitario, concertino, compositor, profesor
Última actualización
2024-05-13
Actualizar
Čech Holub Ševčík Vavruška Blažek Maurer Navrátil Šindler Vičar Musil Novotný Svoboda Vodeničarov Štěpán Kubíček Šmídová Havlíček Reif Josef Bárta Fišer Vernerová Štěpánová Antonín Pokorný Ivan Růžička Růžička Jelínek 1971
Drama / Historický Československo, 1971, 97 min Režie: Vladimír Čech Hrají: František Vicena, Wilhelm Koch - Hooge, Zdeněk Kampf, Vlasta Vlasáková, Eva Jiroušková, Oldřich Velen, Jürgen Frohriep, Miloslav Holub, Alena Hessová, Jindřich Narenta, Oto Ševčík, Josef Hajdučík, Josef Beyvl, Zdeněk Kryzánek, Miloš Vavruška, Jana Walterová, Richard Záhorský, Gustav Heverle, Vladimír Leraus, Josef Chvalina, Zdeněk Dřevojánek, Oldřich Lukeš, Vítězslav Jandák, Jan Dejmek, Vladimír Ptáček, Milan Hlavín, Milena Kaplická, Jana Posseltová, Marta Richterová, Jaroslav Blažek, Eduard Pavlíček, Jiřina Bílá, Jitka Zelenohorská, Václav Švec, Josef Burda, Bohumil Koška, Viktor Maurer, Vladimír Navrátil, Jan Pohan, Karel Pavlík, Miloslav Šindler, Ladislav Vičar, Jiří Vondrovič, Adolf Filip, Vladimír Zoubek, Josef Žoha, Mirko Musil, Miroslav Müller, Zdeněk Braunschläger, Zdeněk Novotný, Antonín Šimon, Alexandr Ovčarič, Vladimír Svoboda, A. A. Dajmičenko, Vladimír Vodeničarov, Štěpán Bulejko, Pavel Jiras, František Kubíček, Jaromír Šnajdr, Jiří Koutný, Eugen Jegorov, Věra Kovářová, Ludvík Pozník, Petr Skarke, Vladimír Štros, Miloslav Štibich, Magdalena Šmídová, Roman Hemala, Antonín Ženíšek, Karel Voska, Karel Havlíček, Jiří Cimický, Jaroslav Kovář, Oleg Reif, Jaroslav Tomsa, Josef Bárta, Václav Fišer, Slávka Hamouzová, Jiří Havel, Václav Luks, Miroslav Rous, Jaroslav Synák, Blažena Vernerová, Jiřina Zemanová, Vlastimila Vlková, Barbora Štěpánová, Jaroslav Klenot, Otakar Rademacher, Jindřich Sejk, Antonín Pokorný, Ivan Růžička, Karel Vítek st., Milan Kindl, Jiří Němeček st., Rudolf Jelínek Heydrichiáda, temné období českých dějin. Krátce po atentátu na říšského pretektora Heydricha byly okupované Čechy vystaveny brutálnímu teroru. Během jednoho zátahu gestapo zajme těžce raněného muže , který je vedoucím činitelem českého odboje. Jediná věc, kterou se gestapákům u něj podaří nalézt je pouhý klíč. Klíč, který jak šéf gestapa tuší může být klíčem k rozbití odboje. Klíč, ke kterému je nutné najít pasující zámek. Klíč, jehož tajemství se gestapáci ze zraněného muže pokouší dostat všemi prostředky... Film byl natočen k 50. výročí založení Komunistické strany Československa.
Elgar Charles Cerné Niccolò Paganini Dvořák Mařák Otakar Ševčík Arturo Toscanini Rosé Friedrich Cerha Smetana Beethoven Josef Suk Rudolfinum Smetana Hall 1900 1920 1921 1930 1935 1936 1938 1946 1948 1950 1956 1960
Příhoda plays Elgar, with piano by Charles Cerné. From Wikipedia: Váša Příhoda (22 August 1900 – 26 July 1960) was a Czech violinist, considered a Paganini specialist, and his recording of the Violin Concerto in A minor by Dvořák is still praised. Váša Příhoda was born in Vodňany in 1900. His father, Alois Příhoda, was his first teacher and remained so for ten years. Váša studied privately with Jan Mařák (a student of Otakar Ševčík), making his first public concert at age 13, playing the 4th Violin Concerto by Mozart. At age 19 a tour of Italy proved unsuccessful; poverty-stricken, he joined the orchestra of the Café Grand’Italia in Milan to earn money. There, he was heard by chance by Arturo Toscanini, who arranged a benefit concert for him. He resumed his Italian tour, this time to great success. He was said to have been given Niccolò Paganini's own violin on which to play. He toured Brazil and the United States in 1920, and the USA again in 1921... Příhoda concertized extensively all over the world and made a number of recordings when the industry was in its infancy... He played in the U.S. many times. He married violinist Alma Rosé in 1930, but they divorced in March 1935 in Czechoslovakia. His second wife was also Jewish. He appeared in two films in 1936: A Woman Between Two Worlds and The Love of the Maharaja. During World War II he taught at the Mozarteum in Salzburg. As he had continued to perform in Germany and German-occupied territories after the Nazi invasion of Czechoslovakia, he was briefly charged with collaboration after the war, and censured by the Czech government. He later taught at the Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts in Vienna, where his students included Friedrich Cerha. His students also included the cellist Jascha Silberstein. Vienna was his base of operations for many years though he taught in Prague, Munich, and Salzburg as well. After 1950, he dedicated most of his time to teaching and he also composed small chamber works, which are no longer played. In 1946 he left Czechoslovakia with his family. He moved in 1946 to Rapallo in Italy and then, in 1948, to Turkey, taking Turkish nationality. He returned to Czechoslovakia in 1956. This comeback was received most enthusiastically in Prague. He played recitals with pianist Alfred Holeček in the Rudolfinum Music Hall, and performed Dvořák's Violin Concerto in Smetana Hall of the Municipal House during the Prague Spring Festival. Příhoda composed his own cadenzas to all the concertos he played. He gave his last concerts in April 1960 and died of heart disease on 26 July 1960, aged 59. He also wrote a number of minor pieces, such as Slawische Melodie, Caprice and Sérénade, some of which he recorded. He wrote cadenzas to the Beethoven Violin Concerto in D major, which have been recorded by Josef Suk. The transfer is made from a late Polydor pressing.
Saint Saens Hamilton Harty Fowler Otakar Ševčík Benno Moiseiwitsch John Kennedy Nigel Kennedy 1893 1911 1914 1919 1981
An impressive performance and recording of the well-known Saint-Saens composition, played by Daisy Kennedy with orchestra conducted by Hamilton Harty. From Wikipedia: Daisy Fowler Kennedy (16 January 1893 – 30 July 1981) was an Australian-born concert violinist. She was born in Burra-Burra, 160 km north of Adelaide, to parents of Scottish and Irish descent. Her father, Joseph A. Kennedy, was headmaster of Glenelg Primary School and president of the South Australian Public School Teachers' Union. For three years she was Elder scholar at the Adelaide Conservatory under Mrs. Alderman and Hermann Heinicke. She was a private pupil of Otakar Ševčík in Vienna for a year, and then studied for two years in the Meister-Schule there. She appeared in London in 1911 and toured widely in Europe and in the United States, Australia and New Zealand. On 15 April 1914 she married the Ukrainian pianist Benno Moiseiwitsch; their daughter, the theatre designer Tanya Moiseiwitsch was born in December the same year. After divorcing Moiseiwitsch, she married the English playwright and poet John Drinkwater. She was a cousin of cellist Lauri Kennedy, and thus also related to Lauri's son John Kennedy, another cellist, and grandson, the violinist Nigel Kennedy.
o
- cronología: Compositores (Europa). Intérpretes (Europa).
- Índices (por orden alfabético): S...